Jump to main content.


Ecological Risk Assessment

Introduction

An ecological risk assessment is the process for evaluating how likely it is that the environment may be impacted as a result of exposure to one or more environmental stressors such as chemicals, land change, disease, invasive species and climate change.

Every day, people face questions about environmental concerns, many of them related to plants, animals, ecosystems as a whole, and how we interact with them. These questions may be about potential risks such as impacts on the aesthetic value of a place due to physical alterations, effects of pollution on endangered species, or the consequences of long-term release of contaminants to an ecosystem.  For example:

A key part of EPA’s mission is understanding the potential effects of stressors such as those described above and managing risks from them in order to protect the health of the natural environment, and the natural resources that people rely on. 


How Does EPA Conduct an Ecological Risk Assessment?

Ecological risk assessment includes three phases, and is generally conducted following the Guidelines for Ecological Risk Assessment (U.S. EPA, 1998).

Collecting samples

Top of page


How Does EPA Use Ecological Risk Assessments?

At EPA, ecological risk assessments are used to support many types of actions, including the regulation of hazardous waste sites, industrial chemicals, and pesticides; or the management of watersheds or other ecosystems affected by multiple chemical, physical, or biological stressors.

Ecological risk assessments can be used to predict the likelihood of future effects (prospective) or evaluate the likelihood that effects are caused by past exposure to stressors (retrospective). Information from ecological risk assessments are then used by risk managers for follow-up such as communicating to interested parties and the general public, limiting activities related to the ecological stressor, limiting use of a given chemical, or developing a monitoring plan to determine if risks have been reduced or whether an ecosystem is recovering.

For more in depth information about ecological risk assessment, online training Exit EPA Disclaimer is available.

Local Navigation


Jump to main content.