4.4 Article

Aquatic Toxicity of Chemical Road Dust Suppressants to Freshwater Organisms

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00244-020-00806-y

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Funding

  1. U.S. Federal Lands Highway Refuge Roads Program through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  2. U.S. Federal Lands Highway Coordinated Technology Implementation Program (CTIP) through the U.S. Forest Service
  3. U.S. Geological Survey Environmental Health Program

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Unpaved roads make up a significant portion of the global road network and contribute large volumes of runoff to roadside aquatic habitats. A study on the aquatic toxicity of 27 commercially available dust control products revealed varying levels of toxicity, with no clear prediction based on product category. Testing on juvenile rainbow trout indicated their suitability as surrogates for assessing the toxicity of these products on other aquatic organisms.
Unpaved roads make up at least 14 million kilometers of the worldwide road network. Although investigations of road runoff often are focused on paved roads, unpaved roads contribute large volumes of runoff to roadside aquatic habitats and introduce unique constituents to runoff, such as chemical dust suppressants. At least 200 products across five chemical categories are commercially available for road dust suppression and are typically applied at rates up to 4.5 L/m(2). Many of these products are poorly described and are lacking basic information on environmental transport, fate, and potential toxicity to roadside organisms. We characterized the aquatic toxicity of 27 commercially available dust control products, including 13 biobased products from the U.S. Department of Agriculture BioPreferred catalog, using juvenile rainbow trout. Acute toxicity varied by more than 1000-fold among products, with 96-h LC50 values ranging from 1.7 to > 16,000 mg/L. Toxicity was not well-predicted by product category. Testing with selected products after simulated weathering under UV radiation did not provide evidence of photoenhanced toxicity. Additional tests with freshwater mussels, juvenile crayfish, pond snails, and amphibian larvae indicated that juvenile rainbow trout were reasonable surrogates for these organisms for a subset of products. This effort represents one of the first comparative studies of dust suppressant toxicity and provides important information for assessing risk to aquatic resources from a widely used but understudied class of contaminants in road runoff.

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