Registration Dossier

Data platform availability banner - registered substances factsheets

Please be aware that this old REACH registration data factsheet is no longer maintained; it remains frozen as of 19th May 2023.

The new ECHA CHEM database has been released by ECHA, and it now contains all REACH registration data. There are more details on the transition of ECHA's published data to ECHA CHEM here.

Diss Factsheets

Ecotoxicological information

Endpoint summary

Currently viewing:

Administrative data

Description of key information

Studies on the aquatic toxicity of potassium thiosulfate are not available, and thus, read-across to thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances is applied.Upon contact with water, salts of sulfur oxyacids including potassium thiosulfate dissociate into sulfur oxyacid anions and the respective counterions. Only the properties of the thiosulfate anion are considered a relevant determinant of environmental toxicity since the potassium cations are essential and have a very low potential for acute toxicity to freshwater and marine fish. Please refer to the respective endpoint summary for potassium (K) for further details.

Thiosulfate anions are unstable under environmentally relevant conditions, will disproportionate to sulfite and will further be oxidized to sulfate or reduced to sulfide (please refer to the endpoint summary on environmental fate and behaviour).

Acute and chronic toxicity studies with thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances are available for three trophic levels. In studies with controlled oxygen concentrations and pH, acute toxicity for all three trophic levels (freshwater fish and algae and freshwater and marine invertebrates) is only observed at concentrations above the respective OECD test limit of 100 mg/L.

In chronic studies with controlled oxygen concentrations and pH, effect values are unbounded (D. rerio, D. magna, P. subcapitata) or above the chronic OECD test limit of 10 mg/L (D. subspicatus, C. vulgaris, C. reinhardtii).

Effects of thiosulfate and sulfite substances on the respiration of activated sludge were not observed at the OECD test limit of 1000 mg/L, respectively.

It is thus concluded that thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances, including potassium thiosulfate, are not toxic to freshwater fish, invertebrates, algae and microorganisms.

Additional information

Thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances - Summary of acute toxicity data

Reliable acute toxicity data are available for several aquatic freshwater species covering three trophic levels (primary producers, primary and secondary consumers) and one saltwater species (invertebrates). The table below provides an overview of the effect values for the acute toxicity of thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances applied in a weight of evidence approach.

Table: Overview of reliable acute toxicity data for thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances

Species

Parameter

Endpoint

EC [mg SO32-/L]

Observed interference

Test substance

Reference

Oncorhynchus mykiss

mortality

96 h LC50

149.6

pH decrease*

disodium disulfite

BASF, 1981

Leuciscus idus

mortality

96 h LC50

200.5

oxygen depletion**

sodium sulfite

BASF, 1989

Leuciscus idus

mortality

96 h LC50

159.7

oxygen depletion**

potassium sulfite

BASF, 1989

Danio rerio

mortality

96 h LC50

490

oxygen depletion**

dipotassium disulfite

BASF, 1995

Lepomis macrochirus

mortality

96 h LC50

275.5

oxygen depletion**

ammonium thiosulfate

Springborn Binomics Inc, 1986

Oncorhynchus mykiss

mortality

96 h LC50

416

oxygen depletion**

ammonium thiosulfate

Springborn Binomics Inc, 1986

Daphnia magna

mobility

48 h EC50

74.9

oxygen depletion**

disodium disulfite

BASF, 1990

Daphnia magna

mobility

48 h EC50

124.2

none

ammonium thiosulfate

Springborn Binomics Inc, 1986

Mysidopsis bahia

mortality

96 h LC50

41.6

oxygen depletion**

ammonium thiosulfate

Springborn Binomics Inc, 1994

Desmodesmus subspicatus

growth rate

72 h EC50

36.8

pH decrease*

disodium disulfite

BASF, 1989

Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata

growth rate

72 h EC50

>54

none

ammonium thiosulfate

ECT, 2010

 *pH decrease: solution pH at “toxic” test concentrations is outside OECD test criteria

**oxygen depletion: oxygen concentration of medium at “toxic” test concentrations is outside OECD test criteria

 

In tests with ammonium thiosulfate and without experimental interferences (e.g., oxygen depletion in the test medium), the effect concentration was either above the OECD test limit of 100 mg/L (test with ammonium thiosulfate and D. magna; 48h EC50 =124.4 mg/L), or above the highest tested concentration of 100 mg ammonium thiosulfate/L (corresponding to 54 mg SO32-/L; test with ammonium thiosulfate and P. subcapitata; 72 h EC50).

Other acute effect concentrations (EC/LC50s) are i) unbounded, ii) above the test limit of 100 mg/L as defined in the respective OECD guideline (OECD 201, 202, 203), and/or iii) presumably caused by to oxygen depletion and/or a pH decrease and do not represent the intrinsic toxicity of sulfite/disulfite and thiosulfate substances. Thus, it may be assumed that the “substance-specific” EC/LC50 of thiosulfate substances for freshwater fish and algae and freshwater and marine invertebrates is higher than the EC50/LC50s derived in studies applying a test system without proper buffering capacity for oxygen concentrations and pH.

It is thus concluded that thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances, including potassium thiosulfate, are not acutely toxic to freshwater fish and algae and freshwater and marine invertebrates. Additional studies on the acute effects of disodium disulfite toDaphnia magna and Raphidocelis subcapitata according to OECD 202 and OECD 201, respectively, with appropriate aeration and buffering of thetest system, are currently ongoing.

Thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances -Summary of chronic toxicity data

Chronic toxicity data are available for several aquatic freshwater species covering three trophic levels (primary producers, primary and secondary consumers). The table below provides an overview of the effect values for chronic toxicity of sulfite/disulfite and thiosulfate substances.

Table: Overview of reliable chronic toxicity data for thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances

Species

Parameter

Endpoint

EC [mg SO32-/L]

Observed interference

Test substance

Reference

Danio rerio

all (ELS)

34 d NOEC

≥ 200.5

none

sodium sulfite

ECT, 2010

Daphnia magna

reproduction, mortality

21 d NOEC

≥ 8.41

none

disodium disulfite

BASF, 1993

Desmodesmus subspicatus

growth rate

72 h EC10

28

pH decrease*

disodium disulfite

BASF, 1989

Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata

growth rate

72 h NOEC

≥ 54

none

ammonium thiosulfate

ECT, 2010

 *pH decrease: solution pH decreases at higher test concentrations

**oxygen depletion: oxygen concentration of medium at “toxic” test concentrations is outside OECD test criteria

 

Chronic effect values of ammonium thiosulfate are unbounded, without effects at the highest test concentration (P. subcapitata). Other chronic effect values are i) unbounded, without effects at the highest test concentration (D. rerio, D. magna) or ii) above the chronic OECD test limit of 10 mg/L (D. subspicatus).

It is thus concluded that thiosulfate or sulfite/disulfite substances, including potassium thiosulfate, are not chronically toxic to freshwater fish, invertebrates and algae.

 

Toxicity to STP microorganisms

Regarding the toxicity to microorganisms, reliable studies of the respiration inhibition of activated sludge and supporting studies of the growth inhibition of Pseudomonas putida are available (see Table below).

Table: Overview of reliable toxicity data to microorganisms for thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances

Species

Parameter

Endpoint

EC [mg SO32-/L]

Test substance

Reference

Activated sludge

respiration inhibition

3 h EC50

3 h NOEC

> 634.4

≥ 634.4

sodium sulfite

ECT, 2010

Activated sludge

respiration inhibition

3 h EC50

3 h NOEC

> 540.2

≥ 540.2

ammonium thiosulfate

ECT, 2010

Pseudomonas putida

growth inhibition

17 h EC50

17 h EC10

47.2

25.9

disodium disulfite

BASF, 1988a

Pseudomonas putida

growth inhibition

17 h EC50

17 h EC10

207.2

77.3

potassium sulfite

BASF, 1988b

Pseudomonas putida

growth inhibition

17 h EC50

17 h EC10

65.8

23

potassium disulfite

BASF, 1988c

 

Effects on the respiration of activated sludge were not observed at the OECD test limit of 1000 mg/L in studies with ammonium thiosulfate or sodium sulfite, respectively.

The hazard assessment is based on effect concentrations for the respiration inhibition of activated sludge in accordance with ECHA guidance on IR & CSA, Chapter 7b (Version 4.0, 2017).

It is thus concluded that thiosulfate and sulfite/disulfite substances, including potassium thiosulfate, are not toxic to aquatic microorganisms.