Ecotoxicity test data for total petroleum hydrocarbons in soil: Plants and soil-dwelling invertebrates

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Abstract

Ecotoxicity benchmarks for petroleum mixtures can be used in a screening-level ecological risk assessment. Data from studies evaluating the toxicity of total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) to plants and soil invertebrates were reviewed for possible application to soil benchmark development. Toxicity data included LOAECs; estimated EC25s, EC20s, and LC50s; effective concentrations that caused greater than a 20% level of effect; and NOAECs. The variabilities in petroleum material, chemical analytical methodology, age of hydrocarbon-soil contact, nutrient amendment, and measured effects levels did not permit much meaningful aggregation of the data. Tenth, twenty-fifth, and fiftieth percentiles of toxicity and no-effects data are presented for unaggregated results within studies. Effects on invertebrates often occurred at concentrations of TPH lower than those associated with effects on plants. Lighter mixtures generally were associated with lower ranges of effects concentrations than heavier crude oil. Few aged and non-aged samples were available from the same study, and these did not show obvious trends regarding toxicity. Similarly, the addition of nutrients to promote bioremediation was not observed across studies to alter effective or nontoxic concentrations in a systematic way. Existing toxicity data are not sufficient to establish broadly applicable TPH ecotoxicity screening benchmarks with much confidence, even for specific mixtures.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)207-231
Number of pages25
JournalHuman and Ecological Risk Assessment
Volume10
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2004

Funding

This research was sponsored by the National Petroleum Technology Office, U.S. Department of Energy, under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 with UT-Battelle, LLC. We thank F. Dexter Sutterfield, Nancy Comstock, and Kathy Stirling, project managers at the DOE National Petroleum Technology Office in Tulsa, OK, for their support of this project. Ann Saterbak of Rice University (formerly of Equilon Corp.) provided data. The following people reviewed an earlier draft of this manuscript: five anonymous petroleum industry reviewers; Ann Saterbak, Rice University; and Gary K. Jacobs, Daniel S. Jones, James M. Loar, Harry D. Quarles, and Arthur J. Stewart, Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Glenn W. Suter II of the USEPA National Center for Environmental Assessment, formerly of Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), served as a project advisor.

Keywords

  • Ecological risk assessment
  • Ecotoxicity
  • Petroleum
  • Phytotoxicity
  • Soil invertebrate
  • TPH

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