We assessed the toxicity of ammonia ions to Stentor coeruleus and Coleps hirtus (Protozoa) isolated from activated sludge taken from two municipal wastewater treatment plants in southern Poland. Stentor coeruleus is a rarely occurring species in activated sludge, unlike the widespread Coleps hirtus. The mean LC50 values (concentration causing 50 % mortality) calculated for the 24 h tests differed hugely between the tested species: 43.03 mg NH 4+ dm-3 for Stentor coeruleus and 441.12 mg NH 4+ dm-3 for Coleps hirtus. The ammonia ion concentration apparently is an important factor in the occurrence of these protozoan species in activated sludge. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Klimek, B., Fyda, J., Pajdak-Stós, A., Kocerba, W., Fiałkowska, E., & Sobczyk, M. (2012). Toxicity of ammonia nitrogen to ciliated protozoa Stentor coeruleus and Coleps hirtus isolated from activated sludge of wastewater treatment plants. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 89(5), 975–977. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00128-012-0816-3
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