Title of article
Brine-induced mortality of non-indigenous invertebrates in residual ballast water
Author/Authors
Michael Bradie، نويسنده , , Johanna N. and Bailey، نويسنده , , Sarah A. and van der Velde، نويسنده , , Gerard and MacIsaac، نويسنده , , Hugh J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
7
From page
395
To page
401
Abstract
All transoceanic vessels entering the Great Lakes are required to manage ballast water and ballast tank residuals with ballast water exchange and tank flushing, respectively. While these management procedures effectively reduce the density and richness of biota in ballast waters and thereby reduce the risk of transferring non-indigenous species, some ships are unable to uniformly manage all tanks. Laboratory experiments were conducted to evaluate sodium chloride brine as an emergency treatment for ballast tanks with non-compliant residuals. Invertebrate communities collected from i) Detroit River, ii) exchanged ballast tanks arriving in the Great Lakes, and iii) North Sea ports, were exposed to a range of brine concentrations (15–115‰) until complete mortality was reached. Results indicate that a 1-h exposure to 115‰ brine is a broadly effective treatment (>99.9% mortality) regardless of treatment temperature, taxonomic group, or species’ source habitat salinity. A median of 0.00% (range 0.00–5.33) of individuals are expected to survive treatment and the expected number of viable individuals released after treatment is within Canadian and proposed international discharge standards. Before implementation, validation with ship-scale trials is recommended.
Keywords
Sodium chloride brine , Non-indigenous species , Acute toxicity , Salinity , Zooplankton , Introduced species , Great Lakes , Ballast water treatment
Journal title
Marine Environmental Research
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Marine Environmental Research
Record number
2255546
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