Sediment Toxicity Testing for Prospective Risk Assessment-A New Framework and How to Establish It
Authored by M A Beketov, N Cedergreen, L Y Wick, M Kattwinkel, S Duquesne, M Liess
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2012.683741
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
There is a recognized need to design a new framework for sediment
toxicity testing that meets current scientific standards and regulatory
requirements, such as reliable assessment of toxicity, which prevents
any harmful effects on biodiversity, a strong capability to predict
population- and community-level effects, and applicability of the
results to decision-making. We propose a new framework for prospective
sediment toxicity testing, and suggest solutions to the key
methodological challenges that hinder establishment of this framework
(comparison of sensitivities, design of test batteries, consideration of
different exposure routes, extrapolations to population and community
levels, use of test results for decision-making). The proposed framework
consists of the following three units: test-battery system, higher-tier
testing systems and additional ecological modeling, and a decision
support system. The key methodologies proposed to establish this
framework are compound-tailored test-battery use approach, relative
sensitivity distribution analysis, toxicity tests that combine bacteria
and arthropods, micro- and mesocosms studies, population and community
models, and model-driven decision support systems. The proposed
framework, as well as the key methods mentioned above, has the potential
to improve not only prospective toxicity testing for sediments, but also
ecological risk assessment in general.
Tags
Mechanistic effect models
Invertebrate communities
Nontarget aquatic plants
Fresh-water
sediments
Organic contaminants
Pore-water
Species sensitivity
Functional traits
Oligochaete worm
Marine-sediments