Determination of the soil hazardous concentrations of bisphenol A using the species sensitivity approach

J Hazard Mater. 2018 Feb 15:344:390-397. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2017.10.048. Epub 2017 Oct 25.

Abstract

This study describes the determination of the species sensitivity distribution (SSD)-based soil hazardous contamination of bisphenol A for environmental risk assessment. We conducted a battery of bioassays, including acute assays using eight species from six different taxonomic groups and chronic assays using five species from four different taxonomic groups. We determined that our dataset satisfied Australia & New Zealand's guidelines for applying the SSD methodology. Finally, the chronic soil HC5 and HC50 values for bisphenol A were estimated to be 13.7 and 74.7mg/kg soil, respectively, for soil ecosystem protection against chronic exposure using the data generated from this and previous studies. Because the soil standard values of bisphenol A for protection of the soil ecosystem are not currently available, the HC values of bisphenol A that we suggested based on the SSD approach would be applied as fundamental data to establish soil standards of bisphenol A for soil ecosystem protection. To our knowledge, this is the first study reporting the soil hazardous concentration of bisphenol A for environmental risk assessment.

Keywords: Bisphenol A; Endocrine-disrupting chemical; Hazardous concentration; Species sensitivity distribution.