A new index to assess chemicals increasing the greenhouse effect based on their toxicity to algae

Publication date: Available online 4 September 2015 Source:Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology Author(s): Ting Wang, Xiaoxian Zhang, Dayong Tian, Ya Gao, Zhifen Lin, Ying Liu CO2, as the typical greenhouse gas causing the greenhouse effect, is a major global environmental problem and has attracted increasing attention from governments. Using algae to eliminate CO2, which has been proposed as an effective way to reduce the greenhouse effect in the past decades, can be disturbed by a growing number of artificial chemicals. Thus, seven types of chemicals and Selenastrum capricornutum (algae) were examined in this study, and the good consistency between the toxicity of artificial chemicals to algae and the disturbance of carbon fixation by the chemicals was revealed. This consistency showed that the disturbance of an increasing number of artificial chemicals to the carbon fixation of algae might be a “malware” worsening the global greenhouse effect. Therefore, this study proposes an original, promising index to assess the risk of deepening the greenhouse effect by artificial chemicals before they are produced and marketed.
Source: Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology - Category: Environmental Health Source Type: research