Daniel Seburn Advisor: Dr. Mark Hanson ENVR 4500 – Project Proposal
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Transcript of Daniel Seburn Advisor: Dr. Mark Hanson ENVR 4500 – Project Proposal
Daniel SeburnAdvisor: Dr. Mark Hanson
ENVR 4500 – Project ProposalCourse Co-ordinator: Dr. Rick Baydack
Characterizing the toxicity of surface water salinity contamination to emergent
macrophytes using a laboratory cattail (Typha spp.) seedling germination and growth assay
1) Develop laboratory Typha spp. germination and root/shoot elongation assay to generate useful experimental data regarding salinity impairment of ecologically important emergent macrophytes
2) Perform experimental outdoor in-situ mesocosm assays as a supplement to laboratory data
3) Review local environmental monitoring data to make recommendations for further investigations
Purpose of Research
Typha spp. (cattail)
Characterize salinity toxicity
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• Aquatic Macrophytes important for:
Background Summary
• SETAC Global Plants Advisory Group recently identified the need to develop standardized methods for aquatic macrophyte assays, other than Lemna spp. assays (Arts et al., 2010)
• Use Typha seedling bioassays to characterize salinity impairment to rooted, emergent macrophytes
• Nutrient removal (cleaning up Lake Winnipeg algae bowl)
• Provide food/habitat for variety of fauna• Used for phytoremediation of organic and
inorganic pollutants in treated wetlands
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Salinity Hazards to Wetlands
• Excess salinization to wetlands typically occurs as a result of:• Saline sewage effluents • Road salt de-icing compounds in runoff water• Poor hydraulic engineering in coastal lagoon areas
• Raney and Eimers (2014) recently analyzed trends in water quality data in southern Ontario over the past 30+ years
• They found that 58 of the 64 sites had significantly increasing chloride concentrations, with the highest concentrations always occurring during spring melt near urban centers
(coinciding with road salt applications)
• Similar trends found in surface waters in northeast USA (Kaushal et al. 2005)
• In response to the environmental hazards posed by road salts, a code of practice for the proper management of road salts was developed under CEPA in April 2004
• Goal to improve the reporting and management of road salt usage among municipalities, provincial governments, and other frequent applicators (Environment Canada, 2012)
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Materials and Methods • Typha assay – Seed Preparation Method
• Based on methods from McNaughton (1968) and recent studies
• Female flowering spikes collected from Oak Hammock Marsh, Manitoba in Fall 2013
• 1 litre Technicon Commercial Blender• 700ml RO water • 40g Fisher Brand Sparkleen powder soap• 5 ml Sodium Hypochlorite (bleach)
• Added in order to separate seeds from debris and remove any residual chemicals left on seeds
• Blended for 30 seconds, then mixture added to dilution vessel
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Seed Preparation– Flow Diagram6
Background Germination and Growth
• 15 individual seeds added to split petri dishes, 4 reps/treatment
• Used seeds from Oak Hammock Marsh as well as imported seeds from plant-world-seeds.com (UK)
• Seeds left in Conviron growth chamber for seven or fourteen days under varying temperatures and photoperiods
• Germination success counted and root/shoot growth measured with Infinity1 microscope and image analysis software
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Measuring Germination and Growth
• Infinity Analyze Software – Calibration and Measuring
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Background Germination Results
• Similar germination success between seeds we collected (MB) and ordered seeds (UK)
• Significantly less germination success without light, lower temp
• Germination success (52 to 71%) comparable to other studies assessing Typha germination:
• 60 to 90% (Burgeois et al., 2012)
• 80 to 90% (Moore and Lock, 2012)
• 79 to 93% (Muller et al., 2000)
A = No light exposure @ 25°C for 7 days B = 12 hours light/day @ 20°C for 7 days C = 12 hours light/day @ 25°C for 7 days
Exposure Condition *
A B C D E
Ger
min
atio
n S
ucce
ss (%
)
0
20
40
60
80
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MB Sourced SeedsUK Sourced Seeds
D = 18 hours light/day at 25°C for 7 daysE = 18 hours light/day at 25°C for 14 days
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Preparing Exposure Solutions• UK sourced Typha latifolia seeds exposed to:
• Three different laboratory grade salts• NaCl, CaCl2 * 2H2O, and KCl
• Three different commonly used road salt compounds• No Name Road Salt (RS#1), Sifto Safe Step (RS#2), and
Meltz All (RS#3)• Greatest concentration 32g/L, subsequent solutions prepared by serial dilution
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Conductivity of Exposure Solutions
Target Concentration NaCl CaCl2 KCl RS#1 RS#2 RS#3
1 g/L 1.105 1.145 1.134 1.145 0.584 1.653
2 g/L 2.085 2.205 2.101 2.012 1.304 2.831
4 g/L 3.985 4.036 3.996 3.781 2.174 4.753
8 g/L 7.925 7.545 7.689 7.154 4.002 8.801
16 g/L 15.834 13.641 14.609 13.084 7.685 15.371
32 g/L 26.625 25.134 26.013 25.863 14.865 24.194
Table 1: Measured conductivity (mS/cm) of each stock solution used in experiment. Control stock solution had a measured conductivity value of 0.014 mS/cm.
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Environmental Chamber Conditions
• Seeds left in Conviron growth chamber for seven days at 25°C and 18 hour light to six hour dark photoperiod
• Photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) levels were measured at five random locations in the growth chamber with an Apogee Quantum Flux Photometer (Model MQ-200)
• 243 to 285 µmol m-2 s-1
• Study Design:• Six different
compounds • Six concentrations of
each compound (plus controls)
• Five repetitions per concentration
• Twenty seeds per repetition
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Salinity Impairment – Germination
Treatment
Control 1 g/L 2 g/L 4 g/L 8 g/L 16 g/L 32 g/L
Ger
min
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n S
ucce
ss (%
)
0
20
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NaClCaClKClRoad Salt #1Road Salt #2Road Salt #3
Figure 2: Average germination success for Typha seeds exposed to increasing concentrations of laboratory grade salts and common road salt compounds.
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Salinity Impairment – Shoot Growth
Figure 3: Average shoot length for Typha seeds exposed to increasing concentrations of laboratory grade salts and common road salt compounds.
Treatment
Control 1 g/L 2 g/L 4 g/L 8 g/L 16 g/L 32 g/L
Ave
rage
Sho
ot L
engt
h (m
m)
0
5
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15
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NaClCaClKClRoad Salt #1Road Salt #2Road Salt #3
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Salinity Impairment – Root Growth
Figure 4: Average root length for Typha seeds exposed to increasing concentrations of laboratory grade salts and common road salt compounds.
Treatment
Control 1 g/L 2 g/L 4 g/L 8 g/L 16 g/L 32 g/L
Ave
rage
Roo
t Len
gth
(mm
)
0
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NaClCaClKClRoad Salt #1Road Salt #2Road Salt #3
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Comparing Compounds and Endpoints
Control CaCl – 1 g/L NaCl – 4 g/L
RS#1 – 8 g/L RS#2 – 8 g/L RS#3 – 1 g/L
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Calculating Dose-Response Curves
• Four parameter log- logistic concentration -response curves were generated for each compound and each endpoint using the Rstudio statistical software program (R Core Team, 2011) and our experimental data
• Ten and fifty percent inhibition concentrations (EC10 and EC50, respectively) with standard error and 95% confidence intervals were subsequently calculated from the concentration-response curves
Dose-Response Curve generated for RS#2 Shoot Length Inhibition
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In-Situ Floating Typha spp. Assays
Days After Treatment
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Num
ber o
f Em
erge
nt T
ypha
Pla
nts
0
2
4
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10Control25 g/L50 g/L100 g/L250 g/L500 g/L
Figure 5: Typha emergence rates for in-situ mesocosm assays performed with 18 identical simulated wetland systems.
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Hazards to Local Wetlands
• Many herbicides and other potentially phytotoxic compounds are frequently applied/released and detected in local surface waters
Figure 2: Calculated hazard quotients for pesticides detected in Lake Winnipeg between the years of 1999 to 2012. Numbers indicate total number of detections and dashed line indicates HQ > 1. (Manitoba Conservation, unpublished data)
• Due to widespread eutrophication issues, characterizing phytotoxicity and changes to nutrient uptake dynamics are very important
• Much work remains to be done
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Discussion• Comparison of our compounds and endpoints (with calculated
EC50’s)
• Comparing our results to other experiments • Studies assessing salinity impairment in other macrophytes
• Compare to the Scientific Criteria Document for the Development of the Canadian Water Quality Guidelines for the Protection of Aquatic Life – Chloride Ion (CCME, 2011)• Guideline currently recommended for short term exposures at 640 mg
Cl- * L-1 and long term exposures at 120 mg Cl- * L-1
• Recommendations for further investigations of emergent macrophyte toxicity based on monitoring data and governmental reports• Widely used herbicides in Manitoba include 2-4D, atrazine, bromacil,
dicamba, and glyphosate (Currie and Williamson, 1995)
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Questions?21
ReferencesArts G, Davies J, et al. 2010. AMEG: the new SETAC advisory group on aquatic macrophyte ecotoxicology. Environ Sci Pollut Res 17:820–823.
Bourgeois, B. r., S. Hugron, et al. 2012. Establishing a moss cover inhibits the germination of Typha latifolia, an invasive species, in restored peatlands. Aquatic Botany 100(0): 76-79.
Carlson JC. Anderson JC, et al. 2013. Presence and hazards of nutrients and emerging organic micropollutants from sewage lagoon discharges into Dead Horse Creek, Manitoba, Canada. Science of the Total Environment 445-446: 64-78.
CCME. 2011. Canadian water quality guideline for chloride: Scientific criteria document (draft). Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Currie RS, Williamson DA. 1995. An assessment of pesticide residues in surface waters of Manitoba, Canada. Manitoba Environment, Water Quality Management Section, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Environment Canada. 2012. Five-year Review of Progress: Code of Practice for the Environmental Management of Road Salts. Environment Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Kaushal S, Groffman P, et al. 2005. Increased salinization of fresh water in the northeastern United States. PNAS 102(38): 13517-13520.
Manitoba Conservation. Unpublished Data. Water Quality Management Section. Manitoba Conservation and Water Stewardship123 Main Street, Suite 160 Winnipeg MB R3C 1A5.
McNaughton SJ. 1968. Autotoxic Feedback in Relatin to Germination and Seedling Growth in Typha Latifolia. Ecology 49(2): 367-369.
Moore, M. T. and M. A. Locke . 2012. Phytotoxicity of Atrazine, S-Metolachlor, and Permethrin to Typha latifolia (Linneaus) Germination and Seedling Growth. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 89(2): 292-295.
Muller SL, Huggett DB, et al. 2001. Effects of Copper Sulfate on Typha latifolia Seed Germination and Early Seedling Growth in Aqueous and Sediment Exposures. Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 40(2): 192-197.
Raney S, Eimers C. 2014. Unexpected declines in stream phosphorus concentrations across southern Ontario. Rapid Communication 71: 337–342.