Ammonia Spatiotemporal Distribution and Risk Assessment for Freshwater Species in Aquatic Ecosystem in China
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Toxicology
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Ammonia has been of concern for its high toxicity to aquatic species and frequent detection in waters worldwide. This study calculated the national aquatic life criteria for ammonia in China. The temporal and spatial distributions were investigated and the multi-tier ecological risks were assessed for ammonia and un-ionized ammonia (NH) during 2014-2018 based on a total of 18989 ammonia monitoring data from 110 monitoring sites in seven river basins. The sensitivity comparison of different species taxa to ammonia showed that Perciformes fish should be listed as a priority protected species in the derivation of ammonia criteria. The participation of introduced aquaculture species have no significant impact on the final criteria values (t-test, p > 0.05). The final criterion maximum concentration (CMC) and criterion continuous concentration (CCC) were 10.24 and 3.31 mg/L for ammonia (pH 7.0 and 20 °C). The interannual variation showed that decreasing trends were observed for ammonia and NH pollutions in the past five years. However, the increasing trends were observed for ammonia in Liao River basin, for NH in Yangtze River and Pearl River basins (2014-2018). The significant seasonal and geographical differences of ammonia and NH pollution were found. Moreover, the pollutions of ammonia and NH in some monitoring points of Huai River, Yellow River and Songhua River basins at the provincial borders were significant. The result of ecological risk assessment showed that the average exceedance probability for 5% affected species by NH in long-term exposure was 28.96% in the past five years.
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