United States Environmental Protection Agency Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory Cincinnati, OH 45268 Research and Development EPA/600/SR-92/184 October 1992 EPA Project Summary Toxicity Reduction Evaluation: Case Histories at High Point and Fayetteville, North Carolina Francis A. DiGiano, Marilyn Maerker, Tory Champlin, and Maria Frey This research focused on investiga- tion of two important elements of the toxicity reduction evaluation (TRE) protocol proposed by the U.S. Environ- mental Protection Agency (EPA): (1) toxicity identification evaluation (TIE) and (2) toxicity source evaluation (TSE). The specific objectives of this research were to challenge the TIE protocol with target compounds to determine whether toxic agents could be properly classi- fied, apply the TIE and TSE protocols to two case studies (High Point and Fayetteville, NC) where pass-through toxicity was highly variable, and inves- tigate the potential for return activated sludge to desorb acutely toxic com- pounds. Testing of the TIE Phase I protocol with five target compounds showed that false positive and false negative re- movals of toxicity can occur. Elution of the C18 solid phase extraction (SPE) column with methanol/water fractions (TIE Phase II) showed that a single toxic compound is eluted in several fractions. Only a weak relationship was found between the polarity of compounds and the elution fractions they appeared in. Identification of the sources or nature of acutely toxic compounds when events were sporadic was not solved in the High Point study. Modifications were made to the refractory toxicity assessment (RTA) protocol to simplify its use. Also, the RTA protocol was modified to use chronic toxicity as the end-point rather than acute toxicity. Four TIEs at the Fayetteville, NC facility showed that passage of samples through a C18 SPE column completely eliminated acute toxicity. Other tests implied that ammonia contributed tox- icity, but the presence of toxicants other than ammonia was indicated by removal of toxicants by the C18 column. In three TIEs, most of the toxic substances ap- peared in the 80% to 85% methanol fractions from the C18 column. RTA tests suggested that five industries potentially contributed toxic substances to the waste stream. Return activated sludge was not found to be more toxic than whole effluent in the case histories examined. However, a sample from an- other treatment facility indicated con- centration and release of toxic agents by biomass. The TIE Phase I protocol can provide the proper direction for further narrowing of potential toxicants but more data are needed with mixtures of target compounds to show reliability. The RTA protocol should be stream- lined to make it more practical to apply. The development of "real-time" mea- sures of aquatic toxicity is essential if sporadic sources of toxic compounds are to be eliminated. This Project Summary was developed by EPA's Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH, to announce key findings of the research project that is fully documented in a separate report of the same title (See Project Report ordering information at back). Introduction Effluent biomonftoring is the cornerstone of water-quality-based permitting of wastewater discharges as mandated by Printed on Recycled Paper ------- Francis A. DiGlano, Marilyn Maerker, ToryL Champlin, and Maria V. Freyare with the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7400. Richard A. Dobba is the EPA Project Officer (see below). The complete report, entitled "Toxicity Reduction Evaluation: Case Histories at High Point and Fayetteville, NC," (Order No. PB92-222 231/AS; Cost: $26.00, subject to change) will be available only from: National Technical Information Service 5285 Port Royal Road Springfield, VA 22161 Telephone: 703-487-4650 The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at: Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Cincinnati, OH 45268 United States Environmental Protection Agency Center for Environmental Research Information Cincinnati, OH 45268 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 EPA/600/SR-92/184 BULK RATE POSTAGE & FEES PAID EPA PERMIT No. G-35 ------- |