ASTM-E1191 Historical Revision Information
Standard Guide for Conducting Life-Cycle Toxicity Tests with Saltwater Mysids

ASTM-E1191 - 2003A R08 EDITION - SUPERSEDED
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Standard Guide for Conducting Life-Cycle Toxicity Tests with Saltwater Mysids
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Scope

1.1 This guide describes procedures for obtaining laboratory data concerning the adverse effects of a test material added to dilution water, but not to food, on certain species of saltwater mysids during continuous exposure from immediately after birth until after the beginning of reproduction using the flow-through technique. These procedures will probably be useful for conducting life-cycle toxicity tests with other species of mysids, although modifications might be necessary.

1.2 Other modifications of these procedures might be justified by special needs or circumstances. Although using appropriate procedures is more important than following prescribed procedures, results of tests conducted using unusual procedures are not likely to be comparable to results of many other tests. Comparison of results obtained using modified and unmodified versions of these procedures might provide useful information on new concepts and procedures for conducting life-cycle toxicity tests with saltwater mysids.

1.3 These procedures are applicable to all chemicals, either individually or in formulations, commercial products, or known mixtures, that can be measured accurately at the necessary concentrations in water. With appropriate modifications, these procedures can be used to conduct tests on temperature, dissolved oxygen, and pH and on such materials as aqueous effluents (see also Guide E 1192), leachates, oils, particulate matter, sediments, and surface waters.

1.4 This guide is arranged as follows:

Section
Referenced Documents2
Terminology3
Summary of Guide4
Significance and Use5
Hazards7
Apparatus6
Facilities6.1
Construction Materials6.2
Metering System6.3
Test Chambers6.4
Cleaning6.5
Acceptability6.6
Dilution Water8
Requirements8.1
Source8.2
Treatment8.3
Characterization8.4
Test Material9
General9.1
Stock Solution9.2
Test Concentration(s)9.3
Test Organisms10
Species10.1
Age10.2
Source10.3
Brood Stock10.4
Food10.5
Handling10.6
Harvesting Young10.7
Quality10.8
Procedure11
Experimental Design11.1
Dissolved Oxygen11.2
Temperature11.3
Beginning the Test11.4
Feeding11.5
Cleaning11.6
Duration of Test11.7
Biological Data11.8
Other Measurements11.9
Analytical Methodology12
Acceptability of Test13
Calculation14
Documentation15
Keywords16
Appendix
X1. Statistical Guidance

1.5 This standard does not purport to address all of the safety concerns, if any, associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this standard to establish appropriate safety and health practices and determine the applicability of regulatory limitations prior to use. Specific hazard statements are given in Section 7.

Significance and Use

Protection of a species requires prevention of unacceptable effects on the number, weight, health, and uses of the individuals of that species. A life-cycle toxicity test is conducted to determine what changes in the numbers and weights of individuals of the test species result from effects of the test material on survival, growth, and reproduction. Information might also be obtained on effects of the material on the health and uses of the species.

Results of life-cycle tests with mysids might be used to predict long-term effects likely to occur on mysids in field situations as a result of exposure under comparable conditions.

Results of life-cycle tests with mysids might be used to compare the chronic sensitivities of different species and the chronic toxicities of different materials, and also to study the effects of various environmental factors on results of such tests.

Results of life-cycle tests with mysids might be an important consideration when assessing the hazards of materials to aquatic organisms (see Guide E 1023) or when deriving water quality criteria for aquatic organisms (1).3

Results of a life-cycle test with mysids might be useful for predicting the results of chronic tests on the same test material with the same species in another water or with another species in the same or a different water (2). Most such predictions take into account results of acute toxicity tests, and so the usefulness of the results from a life-cycle test with mysids is greatly increased by also reporting the results of an acute toxicity test (see Guide E 729) conducted under the same conditions.

Results of life-cycle tests with mysids might be useful for studying the biological availability of, and structure-activity relationships between, test materials.

Results of life-cycle tests with mysids might be useful for predicting population effects on the same species in another water or with another species in the same or a different water (3).

Keywords

flow-through test; life cycle; mysids; toxicity test; Aqueous environments; Biological data analysis; Brood stock tanks; Chamber; Contact stock solutions; Flow-through test chambers; Fresh water; Life cycle (of aquatic organisms); Marine environments; Metering system; Microbiological water quality; Mysids; Saltwater; Testing methods--environmental analysis; Toxicity/toxicology--water environments; ICS Number Code 13.300 (Protection against dangerous goods)

To find similar documents by ASTM Volume:

11.05 (Pesticides and Alternative Control Agents; Environmental Assessment; Hazardous Substances and Oil Spill Response)

11.06 (Biological Effects and Environmental Fate; Biotechnology)

To find similar documents by classification:

13.300 (Protection against dangerous goods Including performance requirements for dangerous goods, their handling, storage, transportation, marking, labelling, etc. Nuclear fissile materials, see 27.120.30 Explosives, see 71.100.30)

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Document Number

ASTM-E1191-03a(2008)

Revision Level

2003A R08 EDITION

Status

Superseded

Modification Type

Reapproval

Publication Date

Jan. 1, 2008

Document Type

Guide

Page Count

17 pages

Committee Number

E50.47