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Bioaccumulation and Aquatic System Simulator (BASS)

Introduction

Bioaccumulation and Aquatic System Simulator (BASS) is a model that simulates the population and bioaccumulation dynamics of age-structured fish communities. Although BASS was specifically developed to investigate the bioaccumulation of chemical pollutants within a community or ecosystem context, it can also be used to explore population and community dynamics of fish assemblages that are exposed to a variety of nonchemical stressors such as altered thermal regimes associated with hydrological alterations or industrial activities, commercial or sports fisheries, and introductions of non native or exotic fish species.

The ability to predict accurately the bioaccumulation of chemicals in fish has become an essential component in assessing the ecological and human health risks of chemical pollutants. Accurate bioaccumulation estimates are needed not only to predict realistic dietary exposures to humans and piscivorous wildlife but also to assess more accurately potential ecological risks to fish assemblages themselves. Although the bioaccumulation of many chemicals in fish can often be predicted accurately using simple bioaccumulation factors (BAF) and measured or predicated chemical water concentrations, such calculations frequently fail to predict accurately concentrations of extremely hydrophobic chemicals and metals such as mercury that are often the chemicals of greatest concern. Process-based models like BASS that simulate the toxicokinetic, physiological, and ecological processes of fish can overcome many of the limitations associated with the use BAF approaches.

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Audience

Ecologist, Scientist, Biologist, Researcher

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Abstract

BASS is a Fortran 95 simulation program that predicts the population and bioaccumulation dynamics of age-structured fish assemblages that are exposed to hydrophobic organic pollutants and class B and borderline metals that complex with sulfhydryl groups (e.g., cadmium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel, silver, and zinc). The model's bioaccumulation algorithms are based on diffusion kinetics and are coupled to a process-based model for the growth of individual fish. The model's bioaccumulation algorithms consider both biological attributes of fishes and physico-chemical pro perties of the chemicals that determine diffusive exchange across gill membranes and intestinal mucosa. Biological characteristics used by the model include the fish's gill morphometry, feeding and growth rate, and proximate composition (i.e., its fractional aqueous, lipid, and structural organic content). Relevant physico-chemical properties are the chemical's aqueous diffusivity, n-octanol / water partition coefficient (Kow), and, for metals, binding coefficients to proteins and other organic matter. BASS simulates the growth of individual fish using a standard mass balance, bioenergetic model (i.e., growth = ingestion - egestion - respiration - specific dynamic action - excretion). A fish's realized ingestion is calculated from its maximum consumption rate adjusted for the availability of prey of the appropriate size and taxonomy. The community's food web is specified by defining one or more foraging classes for each fish species based on either its body weight, body length, or age. The dietary composition of each of these foraging classes is specified as a combination of benthos, incidental terrestrial insects, periphyton / attached algae, phytoplankton, zooplankton, and one or more fish species. Population dynamics are generated by predatory mortalities defined by community's food web and standing stocks, physiological mortality rates, the maximum longevity of species, toxicological responses to chemical exposures, and dispersal. The model's temporal and spatial scales of resolution are a day and a hectare, respectively. Currently, BASS ignores the immigration of fish into the simulated hectare.

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Applications and Possible Uses

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Model History

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Technical Support / Training

For information concerning the distribution or installation of BASS software, documentation, or data please contact Center for Exposure Assessment Modeling (CEAM) that is located at the Ecosystems Research Division of EPA's National Exposure Research Laboratory in Athens, GA.

For questions regarding how to use or apply the BASS model, please contact the principal investigator, Craig Barber (barber.craig@epa.gov), at: Ecosystems Research Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 960 College Station Road, Athens, Georgia 30605-2700

Currently, there are no planned BASS model training sessions.

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Quality Assurance/Quality Control

Quality Assurance (QA) and Quality Control (QC) for the BASS simulation model has been addressed with respect to:

For detailed information please refer to chaper 7 in the Bioaccumulation and Aquatic System Simulator (BASS) User's Manual Version 2.2. (PDF, 128pp, 3.16MB, About PDF).

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Related Sites

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References of Published BASS Applications and Uses

Barber, M.C., L.A. Suárez, and R.R. Lassiter. 1991. Modelling bioaccumulation of organic pollutants in fish with an application to PCBs in Lake Ontario salmonids. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 48: 318-337.

Barnthouse, L.W. 1992. The role of models in ecological risk assessment: a 1990's perspective. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 11: 1751-1760.

Barron, M.G. 1990. Bioconcentration. Environmental Science and Technology 24: 1612-1618.

Bartell, S.M. 2001. Chapter 9. Ecosystem Models - Aquatic. In Ecological Modeling in Risk Assessment: Chemical Effects on Populations, Ecosystems, and Landscapes. Edited by R.A. Pastorok, S.M. Bartell, S. Ferson and L.R. Ginzburg. CRC Press, Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL.

Bartell, S.M., K.R. Campbell, C.M. Lovelock, S.K. Nair, and J.L. Shaw. 2000. Characterizing aquatic ecological risks from pesticides using a diquat dibromide case study III: ecological process models. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 19: 1441-1453.

Boxall, A., C. Brown, and K. Barrett. 2001. Higher tier laboratory aquatic toxicity testing. Cranfield University, Cranfield Centre for EcoChemistry, Silsoe, Beds MK45 4DT, UK. Research Report No. JF 4317E for DETR.

Boxall, A.B.A., C.D. Brown, and K.L. Barrett. 2002. Higher-tier laboratory methods for assessing the aquatic toxicity of pesticides. Pest Management Science 58: 637-648.

Brockway, D.L., P.D. Smith, and M.C. Barber. 1996. PCBs in the Aquatic-Riparian zone of the Lake Hartwell Ecosystem, South Carolina. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Athens, GA. Internal Report.

Campfens, J. and D. Mackay. 1997. Fugacity-based model of PCB bioaccumulation in complex aquatic food webs. Environmental Science and Technology 31: 577-583.

Chapra, S.C. and J.M. Boyer. 1992. Fate of environmental pollutants. Water Environmental Research 64: 581-593.

Cowan, C.E., D.J. Versteeg, R.J. Larson, and P.J. Kloepper-Sams. 1995. Integrated approach for environmental assessment of new and existing substances. Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology 21: 3-31.

Deliman, P.N. and J.A. Gerald. 1998. Development of a Multimedia Exposure Assessment Model for Evaluating Ecological Risk of Exposure to Military-Related Compounds (MRCs) at Military Sites. US Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station, Wahington, DC. Technical Report IRRP-98-9.

Dixon, K.R. and J.D. Florian, Jr. 1993. Modeling mobility and effects of contaminants in wetlands. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 12: 2281-2292.

ECOFRAM. 1999. Aquatic Draft Report (http://www.epa.gov/oppefed1/ecorisk/aquareport.pdf). Ecological Committee on Federal, Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act, Risk Assessment.

ECOFRAM Aquatic Effects Subcommittee, J. Giddings, L. Barnthouse, D. Farrar, T. Hall, M. McKee, M. Newman, K. Reinert, B. Sebastien, K. Solomon, A. Stavola, L. Touart, and R. Wentsel. 1998. Preliminary Findings of the Ecological Committee on Fifra Risk Assessment Methods (Ecofram): VI. Aquatic Effects Analysis. Poster (http://www.epa.gov/oppefed1/ecorisk/setac98a.pdf), SETAC Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC.

Exponent. 1998. Review of Bioaccumulation Methods for Fish and Shellfish. Exponent, Bellevue, WA. Prepared for Washington State Department of Ecology, Olympia, WA.

Exponent. 2003. Fish Contaminant Monitoring Program: Review and Recommendations. Exponent, Bellevue, WA. Prepared for Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, Water Division, Lansing, MI.

Feijtel, T., P. Kloepper-Sams, K. den Haan, R. van Egmond, M. Comber, R. Heusel, P. Wierich, W. Ten Berge, A. Gard, W. de Wolf, and H. Niessen. 1997. Integration of bioaccumulation in an environmental risk assessment. Chemosphere 34: 2337-2350.

Gobas, F.A.P.C. and H.A. Morrison. 2000. Chapter 9. Bioconcentration and Biomagnification in the Aquatic Environment. In Handbook of Property Estimation Methods for Chemicals: Environmental and Health Sciences. Edited by R.S. Boethling and D. Mackay. Lewis Publishers, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL.

Howgate, P. 1998. Review of the public health safety of products from aquaculture. International Journal of Food Science and Technology 33: 99-125.

Hunt, T., K. Roberts, and K. Red Knox. 1992. Bioaccumulation simulation of DDT by channel catfish, 13th Annual Meeting Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

Jones, K.C., T. Keating, P. Diage, and A.C. Chang. 1991. Transport and food chain modeling and its role in assessing human exposure to organic chemicals. Journal of Environmental Quality 20: 317-329.

Landrum, P.F., H. Lee, II, and M.J. Lydy. 1992. Toxicokinetics in aquatic systems: model comparisons and use in hazard assessment. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 11: 1709-1725.

Lassiter, R.R. and T.G. Hallam. 1990. Survival of the fattest: implications for acute effects of lipophilic chemicals on aquatic populations. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 9: 585-595.

Limno-Tech. 2002. Descriptive Inventory of Models with Prospective Relevance to Ecological Impacts of Water Withdrawals. Limno-Tech, Inc., Ann Arbor, MI. Prepared for The Great Lakes Commission, October 14, 2002.

Mackay, D. and A. Fraser. 2000. Bioaccumulation of persistent organic chemicals: mechanisms and models. Environmental Pollution 110: 375-391.

Marchettini, N., M. Panzieri, and E.B.P. Tiezzi. 2001. Effects of bioaccumulation of PCBs on biodiversity and distribution of fish in two creeks in east Tennessee (USA). Ann. Chim. 91: 435-443.

Murphy, G.W. 2004. Uptake of mercury and relationship to food habits of selected fish species in the Shenandoah River Basin, Virginia. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA.

Olem, H., S. Livengood, and K.M. Sandra. 1992. Lake and reservoir management. Water Environmental Research 64: 523-531.

Reinert, K.H., J.M. Giddings, and L. Judd. 2002. Effects analysis of time-varying or repeated exposures in aquatic ecological risk assessment of argochemicals. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 21: 1977-1992.

Simon, T.W. 1999. Two-dimensional Monte Carlo simulation and beyond: A comparison of several probabilistic Risk Assessment methods applied to a Superfund Site. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment 5: 823-843.

Sood, C. and R.M. Bhagat. 2005. Interfacing geographical information systems and pesticide models. Current Science 89: 1362-1370.

USEPA. 1994. EPA Superfund Record of Decision: Sangamo Weston/Twelvemile Creek/Lake Hartwell PCB Contamination Superfund Site - Operable Unit Two Pickens, Pickens County, South Carolina (EPA ID: SCD003354412). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 4, Atlanta, GA. EPA/ROD/R04-94/178.

USEPA. 2003. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection of Human Health (2000) Technical Support Document Volume 2: Development of National Bioaccumulation Factors. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Office of Science and Technology, Washington, DC. EPA/822/R-03/030.

USEPA. 2004. Five-year Review Report for the Sangamo Weston/Twelvemile Creek/Lake Hartwell PCB Contamination Superfund Site - Operable Unit Two Pickens, Pickens County, South Carolina (EPA ID: SCD003354412) (http://www.epa.gov/region04/waste/npl/nplsc/sangamo5yr.pdf ). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 4, Atlanta, GA.

USEPA. 2005. Regulatory Impact Analysis for the Clean Air Mercury Rule. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards. EPA/452/R-05/003.

VDEQ. 2005. PCB Strategy For the Commonwealth of Virginia. Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. http://www.deq.virginia.gov/info/documents/PCB-Statewide-Strategy-2005.pdf.

Vorhees, D.J., S.B.K. Driscoll, K. von Stackelberg, and T.S. Bridges. 1998. Improving Dredged Material Management Decisions with Uncertainty Analysis. US Army Corps of Engineers Waterways Experiment Station, Washington, DC. Technical Report DOER-3.

Wania, F. and D. Mackay. 1999. The evolution of mass balance models of persistent organic pollutant fate in the environment. Environmental Pollution 100: 223-240.

Wurbs, R.A. 1994. Computer Models for Water Resources Planning and Management. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Institute for Water Resources, Alexandria, VA. IWR Report 94-NDS-7.

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