Evaluating Radium Exposure in E. dilatata: Insights from Controlled Laboratory Studies of Oil and Gas Produced Water

IF 4.8 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Katharina Pankratz,  and , Nathaniel R. Warner*, 
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Abstract

Radium maypose a risk to aquatic organisms, such as freshwater mussels, living downstream of facilities that discharge oil and gas produced water (OGPW). Exposed freshwater mussels incorporate radium as a calcium substitute, accumulating it in their soft tissue or carbonate shell. Here, in a 25 day controlled laboratory setting, Eurynia dilatata were dosed with radium-laden Marcellus OGPW to mimic exposures that occurred in river systems downstream of the OGPW discharges. Soft tissue from dosed mussels produced distinct 226Ra activities (mean = 2.22 pCi/g) and 228Ra/228Ra isotopic signatures (mean = 0.33) when compared to control samples (0.73 pCi/g; 0.73) with a strong linear correlation with water 226Ra activities, a direct indicator of the volume of OGPW to which freshwater mussels were exposed. Shell from dosed tanks produced similar results with distinct 226Ra activities (mean = 0.16 pCi/g) and 228Ra/228Ra isotopic signatures (mean = 0.29) when compared to control samples (0.09 pCi/g; 0.54); however, no linear trend was observed, indicating adsorption mechanisms over a short duration study. Bioconcentration factors in both the tissue and shell produced a strong negative correlation (R2 = 0.82; 0.80 respectively) with water 226Ra/Ca ratios indicating high calcium concentrations in OGPW may inhibit excessive radium bioaccumulation.

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