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Journal ArticleDOI

Predictions of Sediment Toxicity Using Consensus-Based Freshwater Sediment Quality Guidelines

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TLDR
Analytical results indicate that the consensus-based PECs can be used to reliably predict toxicity of sediments on both a regional and national basis and that the different patterns in toxicity may be the result of unique chemical signals associated with individual contaminants in samples.
Abstract
The objectives of this study were to compare approaches for evaluating the combined effects of chemical mixtures on the toxicity in field-collected sediments and to evaluate the ability of consensus-based probable effect concentrations (PECs) to predict toxicity in a freshwater database on both a national and regional geographic basis. A database was developed from 92 published reports, which included a total of 1,657 samples with high-quality matching sediment toxicity and chemistry data from across North America. The database was comprised primarily of 10- to 14-day or 28- to 42-day toxicity tests with the amphipod Hyalella azteca (designated as the HA10 or HA28 tests) and 10- to 14-day toxicity tests with the midges Chironomus tentans or C. riparius (designated as the CS10 test). Mean PEC quotients were calculated to provide an overall measure of chemical contamination and to support an evaluation of the combined effects of multiple contaminants in sediments. There was an overall increase in the incidence of toxicity with an increase in the mean quotients in all three tests. A consistent increase in the toxicity in all three tests occurred at a mean quotient > 0.5, however, the overall incidence of toxicity was greater in the HA28 test compared to the short-term tests. The longer-term tests, in which survival and growth are measured, tend to be more sensitive than the shorter-term tests, with acute to chronic ratios on the order of six indicated for H. azteca. Different patterns were observed among the various procedures used to calculate mean quotients. For example, in the HA28 test, a relatively abrupt increase in toxicity was associated with elevated polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) alone or with elevated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) alone, compared to the pattern of a gradual increase in toxicity observed with quotients calculated using a combination of metals, PAHs, and PCBs. These analyses indicate that the different patterns in toxicity may be the result of unique chemical signals associated with individual contaminants in samples. Though mean quotients can be used to classify samples as toxic or nontoxic, individual quotients might be useful in helping identify substances that may be causing or substantially contributing to the observed toxicity. An increase in the incidence of toxicity was observed with increasing mean quotients within most of the regions, basins, and areas in North America for all three toxicity tests. The results of these analyses indicate that the consensus-based PECs can be used to reliably predict toxicity of sediments on both a regional and national basis.

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Assessment of heavy metal pollution from anthropogenic activities and remediation strategies: A review.

TL;DR: The concentration of heavy metals in several sites, assessed in water, soil and sediment samples, affected by different pollution sources are reviewed, showing how human activities impact natural media and how the pollution spreads.
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Calculation and Uses of Mean Sediment Quality Guideline Quotients: A Critical Review

TL;DR: The mean sediment quality guideline quotient (mSQGQ) as discussed by the authors is calculated by dividing the concentrations of chemicals in sediments by their respective SQGs and calculating the mean of the quotients for the individual chemicals.
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Trends in hydrophobic organic contaminants in urban and reference lake sediments across the United States, 1970-2001

TL;DR: Upward trends in PAH concentrations, the strong association of PAH with urban settings, and rapid urbanization occurring in the United States suggest that PAHs could surpass chlorinated hydrocarbons in the threat they pose to aquatic biota in urban streams and lakes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Weight-of-Evidence Issues and Frameworks for Sediment Quality (And Other) Assessments

TL;DR: Weight of evidence (WOE) frameworks for integrating and interpreting multiple lines of evidence are discussed, focusing on sediment quality assessments, and introducing a series of ten papers on WOE as mentioned in this paper.
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Recommended Uses of Empirically Derived, Sediment Quality Guidelines for Marine and Estuarine Ecosystems

TL;DR: Sediment quality guidelines (SQGs) have been developed for many potentially toxic substances, based upon empirical analyses of matching chemical and biological data as mentioned in this paper, and the predictive abilities and recommended applications of two sets of guidelines, ERLs/ERMs and TELs/PELs, are discussed in this paper.
Book

The potential for biological effects of sediment-sorbed contaminants tested in the National Status and Trends Program

E.R. Long, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a wide variety of methods and approaches were assembled and evaluated to identify informal guidelines for use in evaluation of the National Status and Trends (NS&:T) Program sediment data, and the data from three basic approaches to the establishment of effects-based criteria were evaluated: the equilibriumpartitioning approach, the spiked-sediment bioassay approach and various methods of evaluating synoptically collected biological and chemical data in field surveys.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Preliminary Evaluation of Sediment Quality Assessment Values for Freshwater Ecosystems

TL;DR: In this article, two assessment values (a threshold effect level (TEL) and a probable effect level(PEL)) were derived for 23 substances, including eight trace metals, six individual polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), total polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and eight pesticides.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calculation and Evaluation of Sediment Effect Concentrations for the Amphipod Hyalella azteca and the Midge Chironomus riparius

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed sediment effect concentrations (SECs) to classify toxicity data for Great Lake sediment samples tested with Hyalella azteca and Chironomus riparius.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and evaluation of consensus-based sediment effect concentrations for polychlorinated biphenyls†

TL;DR: Consensus-based sediment effect concentrations (SECs) for total PCBs (tPCBs) were derived because they estimate the central tendency of the published SQGs and, thus, reconcile the guidance values that have been derived using various approaches as mentioned in this paper.
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