A Comparison of acute toxicity of biodiesel, biodiesel blends, and diesel on aquatic organisms

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Abstract

The increased demand of alternative energy sources has created interest in biodiesel and biodiesel blends; biodiesel is promoted as a diesel substitute that is safer, produces less harmful combustion emissions, and biodegrades more easily. Like diesel spills, biodiesel can have deleterious effects on the aquatic environments. The effect of neat biodiesel, biodiesel blends, and diesel on Oncorhynchus mykiss and Daphnia magna was evaluated using acute toxicity testing. Static nonrenewal bioassays of freshwater organisms containing B100, B50, B20, B5, and conventional diesel fuel were used to compare the acute effects of biodiesel to diesel. Mortality was the significant end point measured in this study; percent mortality and lethal concentration (LC50) at different exposure times were determined from the acute toxicity tests performed. Trials were considered valid if the controls exhibited >90% survival. Based on percentage of mortality and LC50 values, a toxicity ranking of fuels was developed. © 2007 Air & Waste Management Association.

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Khan, N., Warith, M. A., & Luk, G. (2007). A Comparison of acute toxicity of biodiesel, biodiesel blends, and diesel on aquatic organisms. Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association, 57(3), 286–296. https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.2007.10465333

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