Methods/Indicators for Determining When Metals Are the Cause of Biological Impairments of Rivers and Streams: Species Sensitivity Distributions and Chronic Exposure-Response Relationships from Laboratory Data
Contact
- Patricia Shaw-Allen
- by phone at: 513-569-7136
- by fax at: 513-487-2541
- by email at: shaw-allen.patricia@epa.gov
- by fax at: 513-487-2541
Notice
This final report details the methodology for statistical analysis of data on metals toxicity to aquatic organisms and application of analysis results to Stressor Identification. There are 12 appendices which accompany the report to provide source data along with graphical and tabular output.
Due to the size and complexity of these appendices - they are not coded for accessibility. If you need help with these attachments, please phone 513-569-7598 or email the NCEA Technical Information Unit (TIU) of Cincinnati for assistance.
Background
Over a thousand water bodies in the United States are listed by states as biologically impaired. For many of these, the cause of the impairment is also reported as "unknown". Before an appropriate management action can be formulated, the cause of the biological impairment must be determined. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Stressor Identification Process (U.S. EPA, 2000) is a formal method for identifying causes of such impairments. Defensible causal analyses require knowledge of the mechanisms, symptoms, and stressor-response relationships for various specific stressors as well as the ability to use that knowledge to draw appropriate conclusions.
This report provides information on the effects of metals on laboratory animals which may be used in the strength-of-evidence step of the Stressor Identification (SI) Process to help determine whether metals contribute to biological impairments.
This report provides information on the effects of metals on laboratory animals which may be used in the strength-of-evidence step of the Stressor Identification (SI) Process to help determine whether metals contribute to biological impairments.
History/Chronology
Mar 2005 | External review of the draft document. |
July 2005 | Completion of the final document. |
Jan 2008 | EPA releases the final document. |
TBD | Electronic SSD and Exposure Response Library loaded to CADDIS |
Next Steps
This is the Final report.
Downloads/Related Links
- Methods/Indicators for Determining when Metals are the Cause of Biological Impairments of Rivers and Streams: Species Sensitivity Distributions and Chronic Exposure-Response Relationships from Laboratory Data (PDF) (60 pp, 1 MB, about PDF)
- Appendix A: ECOTOX Coding, Data, and Citations (PDF) (744 pp, 12 MB, about PDF)
- Appendix B: Arthropod Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (66 pp, 678 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix C: Non-Arthropod Invertebrate Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (73 pp, 734 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix D: Invertebrate Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (155 pp, 2 MB, about PDF)
- Appendix E: Vertebrate Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (166 pp, 2 MB, about PDF)
- Appendix F: Comparison of Arthropod and Non-Arthropod Invertebrate Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (17 pp, 250 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix G: Comparison of Hardness Effect on Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (53 pp, 731 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix H: Comparison of Temperature Effect on Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (38 pp, 480 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix I: Comparison of Duration Effect on Species Sensitivity Distributions (PDF) (63 pp, 825 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix J: Exposure Response Modeling with Chronic Toxicity Data (PDF) (39 pp, 489 KB, about PDF)
- Appendix K: Interpolated Exposure Response Relationships (PDF) (119 pp, 1 MB, about PDF)
- Appendix L: Exposure Response Output and Data Tables (PDF) (38 pp, 1 MB, about PDF)
Related Link(s)
Additional Information
This report is also referenced in the Listing Metals as a Candidate Cause section of the CADDIS
Web site. The CADDIS website includes an electronic
indexed gallery of SSDs and source data along with an SSD
Generator spreadsheet that can be used to reanalyze the data. The chronic
concentration-response relationships included in this report are also provided as an electronic indexed gallery with source data that can be reanalyzed using the CADStat.
Citation
U.S. EPA. Methods/Indicators for Determining When Metals Are the Cause of Biological Impairments of Rivers and Streams: Species Sensitivity Distributions and Chronic Exposure-Response Relationships from Laboratory Data. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, EPA/600/X-05/027, 2005.