(EXAMPLE OF AN ABSTRACT)
Effects of Marine Engine
Exhaust Water on Algae
Jones, Mary E.
123 Main St., Hometown, AK 99999
Hometown High School, Hometown, AK
This project in its present form is the result of bioassay
experimentation on the effects of two-cycle marine engine
exhaust water on certain green algae. The initial idea was
to determine the toxicity of outboard engine lubricant. Some
success with lubricants eventually led to the formulation of
"synthetic" exhaust water, which, in turn, led to the use of
actual two-cycle engine exhaust water as the test substance.
Toxicity was determined by means of the standard bottle or
"batch" bioassay technique. Scenedesmus quadricauda and
Ankistrodesmus sp. decrease in the maximum standing crop.
The effective concentration - 50% (EC 50) for Scenedesmus
quadricauda - was found to be 3.75% exhaust water; for
Ankistrodesmus sp. 3.1% exhaust water using the bottle
technique.
Anomalies in growth curves raised the suspicion that
evaporation was affecting the results; therefore, a
flow-through system was improvised utilizing the
characteristics of a device called a Biomonitor. Use of the
Biomonitor lessened the influence of evaporation, and the EC
50 was found to be 1.4% exhaust water using Ankistrodesmus
sp. as the test organism. Mixed populations of various algae
gave an EC 50 of 1.28% exhaust water.
The contributions of this project are twofold. First, the
toxicity of two-cycle marine engine exhaust was found to be
considerably greater than reported in the literature (1.4%
vs. 4.2%). Secondly, the benefit of a flow-through bioassay
technique utilizing the Biomonitor was demonstrated.