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Freshwater to saltwater toxicity extrapolation using species sensitivity distributions

James R. WHEELER*, Kenneth M.Y. LEUNG, David MORRITT, Neal SOROKIN, Howard ROGERS, Robin TOY, Martin HOLT, Paul WHITEHOUSE, Mark CRANE

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

There is generally a lack of saltwater ecotoxicity data for risk assessment purposes, leaving an unknown margin of uncertainty in saltwater assessments that utilize surrogate freshwater data. Consequently, a need for sound scientific advice on the suitability of using freshwater data to extrapolate to saltwater effects exists. Here we use species sensitivity distributions to determine if freshwater datasets are adequately protective of saltwater species assemblages for 21 chemical substances. For ammonia and the metal compounds among these data, freshwater data were generally protective because freshwater organisms tended to be more sensitive. In contrast, for pesticide and narcotic compounds, saltwater species tended to be more sensitive and a suitable uncertainty factor would need to be applied to surrogate freshwater data. Biological and physicochemical factors contribute to such differences in freshwater and saltwater species sensitivities, but the species compositions of datasets used are also important. © 2002 SETAC
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2459-2467
JournalEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Volume21
Issue number11
Online published3 Nov 2002
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2002
Externally publishedYes

Research Keywords

  • Risk assessment
  • Saltwater data
  • Species sensitivity distributions

Policy Impact

  • Cited in Policy Documents

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