A rapid, simple screening toxicity test using desiccated bdelloid rotifers: Rotifer Activity Inhibition Test (RAIT)

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int. 2021 Jan;28(4):3810-3819. doi: 10.1007/s11356-020-09255-5. Epub 2020 May 27.

Abstract

A protocol for an ultra-rapid screening toxicity test is described using the rotifer Philodina acuticornis/roseola. The test can be executed in 30 min starting from the rehydration of desiccated life stages called tuns. Philodina tuns remain viable for years when maintained dry and at low temperature. They are very useful for conducting toxicity tests because the test animals do not require cultivation and are available to initiate tests anytime and anywhere. The swimming/crawling activity of rehydrated Philodina tuns is used as an endpoint to compare activity in control dilution water with inhibition of activity in an environmental sample. The Rotifer Activity Inhibition Test (RAIT) estimates toxicity semi-quantitatively using four toxicity categories: non-toxic, slightly toxic, very toxic, and 100% toxic. As proof of principle, RAIT has been tested on environmental samples from a variety of habitats and RAIT results have been compared with those obtained from traditional toxicity tests with bacteria, algae, Daphnia, and fish. Broad congruence between the effect signals of the rapid RAIT screening test and traditional assays has been found for river surface waters, industrial wastewaters, and sludge leachates from waste water treatment plants. Rotifers are an important group of animals in aquatic and soil food webs, and RAIT is a welcome new method for simple, ultra-rapid, and low-cost toxicity screening with a representative of this ecologically important group.

Keywords: Desiccation; Philodina reactivation test; Rapid toxicity test; Rotifer toxicity test; Toxicity test method; Wastewater toxicity test.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Daphnia
  • Fishes
  • Fresh Water
  • Rotifera*
  • Toxicity Tests