Effect of coexposure to DDT and manganese on freshwater invertebrates: Pore water from contaminated rivers and laboratory studies
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An environmental survey of several rivers of the southern Huasteca area of Mexico revealed high concentrations of manganese (Mn) and the presence of DDT in the sediments and pore water. Therefore, acute (48-h) toxicities of Mn and DDT were assessed both independently and as a combination on 24-h-old neonates of Daphnia magna Strauss and Lecane quadrldentata Ehrenberg. Daphnia magna showed high sensitivity to both toxicants, whereas L. quadridentata was highly resistant to DDT and less susceptible to Mn. For D. magna, the Mn and DDT coexposure was significantly more toxic than any of the singly tested compounds. When D. magna was exposed to sediment pore water, no association was found between the Mn content in the samples and the observed toxicity. Preliminary particle analysis of pore water showed different compounds of Mn, which apparently were not in bioavailable form. © 2005 SETAC.
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Dichlorodiphenylthrichloroethane; Invertebrate acute toxicity; Manganese; Pore water; Toxicant coexposure Association reactions; Concentration (process); Environmental impact; Manganese; Sediments; Water pollution; DDT; Invertebrates; Pore water; Toxicants; Toxicity; chlorphenotane; fresh water; manganese; DDT; macroinvertebrate; manganese; pollution effect; river pollution; toxicity; acute toxicity; article; controlled study; Daphnia; Mexico; nonhuman; priority journal; river; sediment; sensitivity analysis; water contamination; Animals; DDT; Invertebrates; Manganese; Particle Size; Water Pollutants, Chemical; Mexico [North America]; North America; Western Hemisphere; World; Daphnia magna; Invertebrata; Lecane; Lecane quadridentata
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