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Predicting the bioavailability of sediment-bound uranium to the freshwater midge (Chironomus dilutus) using physicochemical properties.

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Assessment of uranium (U)-contaminated sediment is often hindered by the inability to accurately account for the physicochemical properties of sediment that modify U bioavailability. The present goal was to determine… Click to show full abstract

Assessment of uranium (U)-contaminated sediment is often hindered by the inability to accurately account for the physicochemical properties of sediment that modify U bioavailability. The present goal was to determine whether sediment-associated U bioavailability could be predicted over a wide range of conditions and sediment properties using simple regressions and a geochemical speciation model, the Windermere Humic Aqueous Model (WHAM7). Data from a U-contaminated field sediment bioaccumulation test, along with previously published bioaccumulation studies with U-spiked field and formulated sediments, were used to examine the models. Observed U concentrations in Chironomus dilutus larvae exposed to U-spiked and U-contaminated sediments correlated well (r2  > 0.74, p < 0.001) with the WHAM-calculated concentration of U bound to humic acid, indicating that humic acid may be a suitable surrogate for U binding sites (biotic ligands) in C. dilutus larvae. Subsequently, the concentration of U in C. dilutus was predicted with WHAM7 by numerically optimizing the equivalent mass of humic acid per gram of organism. The predicted concentrations of U in C. dilutus larvae exposed to U-spiked and U-contaminated field sediment compared well with the observed values, where one of the regression models provided a slightly better fit (mean absolute error = 18.1 mg U/kg dry wt) than WHAM7 (mean absolute error = 34.2 mg U/kg dry wt). The regression model provides a predictive capacity with a minimal number of variables, whereas WHAM7 provides additional complementary insight into the chemical variables influencing the speciation, sorption, and bioavailability of U in sediment. The present results indicate that physicochemical properties of sediment can be used to account for variability in U bioavailability as measured through bioaccumulation in chironomids exposed to U-contaminated sediments. Environ Toxicol Chem 2018;37:1146-1157. © 2017 SETAC.

Keywords: bioavailability sediment; bioavailability; physicochemical properties; sediment; chironomus dilutus

Journal Title: Environmental toxicology and chemistry
Year Published: 2018

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