Toxicity of elemental sulfur in sediments

Elemental sulfur occurs naturally in marine and limnic sediments. Elemental sulfur, brought in solution in aqueous media by using organic solvents such as methanol as carrier solvent, was toxic in a bacterial luminescence test, known as the Microtox test. Previously, it has been shown that the toxicity in the luminescence test of whole sediments also was correlated to i.a. elemental sulfur using multivariate statistical analysis. Organic solvent extracts of sediments obtained in receiving waters of effluents from a pulp and paper mill was toxic in the luminescence test, and using a toxicity evaluation procedure, the toxic substance was identified as octameric cyclic sulfur, S8. The substance dominated the toxicity in extracts of both a contaminated sediment and a sediment from a control area. Since the toxicity in the Microtox test of aqueous solutions of S8 decreased upon storage, a conversion process of the toxic form was indicated. Acute toxicity of S8 was not limited to the luminescent bacteria in the Microtox test, but was observed in tests with fish larvae if tested with the transient form of elemental sulfur. Tests of acute toxicity with zebra fish and perch larvae were responsive to elemental sulfur. Probably, the toxic form of elemental sulfur is the single cyclic octamer, that due to low aqueous solubility, binding to particulate sediment material or aggregation is converted into a nontoxic form. Acute toxic effects may occur in sulfur containing sediments of varying redox potentials or where elemental sulfur deposits are turbated. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Environ Toxicol Water Qual 13: 217–224, 1998