1996 | OriginalPaper | Buchkapitel
Inferring Ecological Risk from Toxicity BioAssays
verfasst von : S. Ferson, L. R. Ginzburg, R. A. Goldstein
Erschienen in: Clean Water: Factors that Influence Its Availability, Quality and Its Use
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
Enthalten in: Professional Book Archive
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Results from toxicological bioassays can express the likely impact of environmental contamination on biochemical function, histopathology, development, reproduction and survivorship. However, justifying environmental regulatory decisions and management plans requires predictions of the consequent effects on ecological populations and communities. Although extrapolating the results of toxicity bioassays to potential effects on the ecosystem may be beyond the current scientific capacity of ecology, it is possible to make detailed forecasts at the level of a population. We give examples in which toxicological impacts are either magnified or diminished by population-dynamic phenomena and argue that ecological risk assessments should be conducted at a level no lower than the population. Although methods recently proposed by EPA acknowledge that ecological risk evaluations should reflect population-level effects, they adopt approaches from human health risk analysis that focus on individuals.