An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae

Heavy metals in industrial effluents are of particular concern because of their ability to bioaccumulate in the food chain, making it possible for toxic levels to reach higher animals and plants. Chromium is widely used in processes such as leather tanning, electroplating, pigmentation and in corros...

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Main Authors: Murphy, Catherine, Hughes, Helen, Mc Loughlin, Peter, O'Donovan, Orla
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.wit.ie/5279/
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spelling ftwit:oai:repository.wit.ie:5279 2023-05-15T17:22:53+02:00 An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae Murphy, Catherine Hughes, Helen Mc Loughlin, Peter O'Donovan, Orla 2016 https://repository.wit.ie/5279/ unknown Murphy, Catherine and Hughes, Helen and Mc Loughlin, Peter and O'Donovan, Orla (2016) An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae. PhD thesis, Waterford Institute of Technology. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2016 ftwit 2023-02-02T23:58:59Z Heavy metals in industrial effluents are of particular concern because of their ability to bioaccumulate in the food chain, making it possible for toxic levels to reach higher animals and plants. Chromium is widely used in processes such as leather tanning, electroplating, pigmentation and in corrosion inhibitors. Trivalent and hexavalent are the most common species used in industry, with hexavalent being widely understood to be the most toxic. It is important, therefore, to understand the mechanisms of how chromium and other metals accumulate in the environment. The aim of this project was to investigate metal, and in particular chromium uptake, by live seaweeds. This was done by characterising the seaweed (ICP-OES, Kjeldahl, FTIR), using the seaweed as a biomonitor, and looking at the surface morphology of the seaweed (AFM, SEM-EDX). A set of bioaccumulation experiments under many different conditions was carried out in order to determine the effect of seaweed species (Fucus vesiculosus, Palmaria palmata, Ulva lactuca), metal species (Cr(III) vs. Cr(VI)), season (May/June versus Feb/Mar), and temperature (7 ˚C vs. 16 ˚C) on metal uptake. To the author’s knowledge, this was the first study to look at bioaccumulation by live seaweed of these two chromium species. Characterisation confirmed the presence of sulphate, carboxylate, amide, and phosphorus containing groups. Seasonal and inter-species differences in seaweed composition were also identified. A biomonitoring study, carried out on F. vesiculosus and A. nodosum sampled in Ireland and Newfoundland, showed that both seaweeds are suitable biomonitors. Metal contents reflected the levels of pollution which were likely to be present in the sampling areas. Surface microscopy showed that a biofilm was present on the surface of U. lactuca. A time course study on Cr(III) binding showed that the biofilm was disrupted and reduced as metal exposure continued. Further experiments using AFM, SEM-EDX and total viable surface counts did not show differences between blank ... Thesis Newfoundland Waterford Institute of Technology: WIT Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Waterford Institute of Technology: WIT Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftwit
language unknown
description Heavy metals in industrial effluents are of particular concern because of their ability to bioaccumulate in the food chain, making it possible for toxic levels to reach higher animals and plants. Chromium is widely used in processes such as leather tanning, electroplating, pigmentation and in corrosion inhibitors. Trivalent and hexavalent are the most common species used in industry, with hexavalent being widely understood to be the most toxic. It is important, therefore, to understand the mechanisms of how chromium and other metals accumulate in the environment. The aim of this project was to investigate metal, and in particular chromium uptake, by live seaweeds. This was done by characterising the seaweed (ICP-OES, Kjeldahl, FTIR), using the seaweed as a biomonitor, and looking at the surface morphology of the seaweed (AFM, SEM-EDX). A set of bioaccumulation experiments under many different conditions was carried out in order to determine the effect of seaweed species (Fucus vesiculosus, Palmaria palmata, Ulva lactuca), metal species (Cr(III) vs. Cr(VI)), season (May/June versus Feb/Mar), and temperature (7 ˚C vs. 16 ˚C) on metal uptake. To the author’s knowledge, this was the first study to look at bioaccumulation by live seaweed of these two chromium species. Characterisation confirmed the presence of sulphate, carboxylate, amide, and phosphorus containing groups. Seasonal and inter-species differences in seaweed composition were also identified. A biomonitoring study, carried out on F. vesiculosus and A. nodosum sampled in Ireland and Newfoundland, showed that both seaweeds are suitable biomonitors. Metal contents reflected the levels of pollution which were likely to be present in the sampling areas. Surface microscopy showed that a biofilm was present on the surface of U. lactuca. A time course study on Cr(III) binding showed that the biofilm was disrupted and reduced as metal exposure continued. Further experiments using AFM, SEM-EDX and total viable surface counts did not show differences between blank ...
format Thesis
author Murphy, Catherine
Hughes, Helen
Mc Loughlin, Peter
O'Donovan, Orla
spellingShingle Murphy, Catherine
Hughes, Helen
Mc Loughlin, Peter
O'Donovan, Orla
An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae
author_facet Murphy, Catherine
Hughes, Helen
Mc Loughlin, Peter
O'Donovan, Orla
author_sort Murphy, Catherine
title An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae
title_short An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae
title_full An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae
title_fullStr An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae
title_full_unstemmed An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae
title_sort investigation into the bioaccumulation of chromium by macroalgae
publishDate 2016
url https://repository.wit.ie/5279/
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation Murphy, Catherine and Hughes, Helen and Mc Loughlin, Peter and O'Donovan, Orla (2016) An Investigation into the Bioaccumulation of Chromium by Macroalgae. PhD thesis, Waterford Institute of Technology.
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