Mjm. Wells et al., TEXTILE WASTE-WATER EFFLUENT TOXICITY IDENTIFICATION EVALUATION, Archives of environmental contamination and toxicology, 27(4), 1994, pp. 555-560
The need to control toxic substances in industrial and municipal waste
water effluents has led to the inclusion in National Pollutant Dischar
ge Elimination System-(NPDES) per mits of requirements for testing tox
icity to aquatic species. Recently, permitted wastewater effluents fro
m particular textile dyeing and finishing operations exhibited a low d
egree of toxicity to the freshwater Cladoceran Daphnia pulex in acute,
static, 48-h testing. An extensive effort was launched to determine c
omponents contributing to effluent toxicity. The toxicity identificati
on evaluation combined three elements: fractionation of wastewater eff
luents, testing for aquatic toxicity, and analyses for specific chemic
als. An anionic, speciated form of zinc was implicated as a major cont
ributor to the toxicity. Water hardness was a principal determinant of
zinc toxicity to Daphnia pulex.