Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1247328 | Talanta | 2006 | 7 Pages |
Acceptance of toxicity bioassays as effective analytical tools in environmental areas needs guarantees of standardization but also validation. Ten European laboratories took part in an inter-laboratory study using different commercial devices based on bioluminescence inhibition of bacteria Vibrio fischeri. Reproducibility and stability by short toxicity endpoints, effective concentration that gives 10%, 50% and 80% of inhibition (EC10, EC50 and EC80) is evaluated. Parametric and non-parametric statistic is applied and performance of participant laboratories is addressed by z-scores calculated by non-parametric statistic. z-Score classification was based on harmonised protocol for proficiency testing of analytical laboratories (satisfactory |z| ≤ 2; questionable 2 < |z| ≤ 3; unsatisfactory |z| > 3). Tested samples were phenol, 3,5-dichlorophenol and influent wastewater. Based on z-score classification, more than 70% of the laboratories showed a satisfactory performance for phenol, 3,5-dichlorophenol and influent wastewater (86%, 90% and 70%, respectively). Reproducibility and stability was observed in toxicant references and in wastewater samples. EC80 determination appears to be more robust that EC10 and EC50. EC determinations can be considered favorable at 5 and 15 min of exposition, in particular for EC80. The use of different commercial devices can not be considered an additional source of variation.