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D10: Impact of Contaminants - Hydromod

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Integrated Water Resource Management for Important Deep European Lakes and their Catchment Areas<br />

EUROLAKES<br />

<strong>D10</strong>: <strong>Impact</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Contaminants</strong><br />

FP5_Contract No.: EVK1-CT1999-00004<br />

Version: 4.0<br />

Date: 25/07/01<br />

File: <strong>D10</strong>-vers.4.0.doc<br />

Page 27 <strong>of</strong> 136<br />

- plants, soil invertebrates and soil micro-organisms for the soil compartment <strong>of</strong><br />

the terrestrial environment.<br />

- vertebrates, pollinators and foliar dwelling invertebrates for the above soil<br />

compartment <strong>of</strong> the terrestrial environment.<br />

- top predators for biomagnification assessments.<br />

• the toxicity endpoints are specifically selected to be considered as “ecologically<br />

relevant”, i.e., reproduction, growth rate inhibition, etc. depending on the organisms<br />

and their ecological role.<br />

• the interpretation <strong>of</strong> the laboratory information considers the “ecological goal”<br />

using either deterministic or probabilistic approaches to extrapolate the laboratory<br />

data to ecosystem effects. These interpretations require a specific discussion.<br />

At the present state <strong>of</strong> the art <strong>of</strong> ecological risk assessment, deterministic or probabilistic<br />

approaches (based on laboratory single-species tests) can be justified not only as an<br />

economically feasible alternative, but can also be justified from a scientific point <strong>of</strong> view<br />

when a set <strong>of</strong> basic conditions, such as those included below, are fulfilled:<br />

• these methods are part <strong>of</strong> a tiered approach, and constitute the first step <strong>of</strong> the<br />

process (lower tier), to determine if higher tier assessment are required. Their<br />

results are over-ruled when information at a higher tier level becomes available.<br />

• the uncertainty <strong>of</strong> these assessments is quite high, and therefore requires the<br />

application <strong>of</strong> an appropriate level <strong>of</strong> precaution.<br />

• the transparency <strong>of</strong> the process must be guaranteed.<br />

• the decision schemes must be oriented to the reduction <strong>of</strong> type I-errors (minimising<br />

the risk for false negatives even by assuming a higher risk for false positives).<br />

A validation criteria for this condition is that higher tier values must show a<br />

clear tendency to reduce or at least to maintain the ecotoxicological thresholds<br />

estimated from the single-species toxicity data. The agreement between the recommended<br />

protocol and this validation criteria has been observed for several<br />

substances in the EU industrial and pesticide programmes.<br />

Taken these and other considerations into account the use <strong>of</strong> this approach is widely<br />

extended at the international level [i.e, OECD, 1989]. The deterministic approach is<br />

nowadays the most commonly used alternative in Europe. The ECETOC revision<br />

[ECETOC, 1993] compared methods developed in Switzerland, Germany, The Netherlands,<br />

the EC-JRC, UK, AIS and the OECD which were the basis for the development<br />

<strong>of</strong> the EC Technical Guidance Document (TGD). The ecotoxicological threshold is obtained<br />

by applying a factor (usually named as safety factor, uncertainty factor or application<br />

factor) to the lowest “relevant” toxicity value. This application factor depends on<br />

the significance and uncertainty <strong>of</strong> the available information. It should cover the extrapolation:<br />

• from acute to chronic toxicity when acute toxicity data are considered,<br />

• from laboratory to field conditions (unless laboratory conditions should be specifically<br />

designed to maximise the bioavailability),<br />

• from the chronic effects observed for the most sensitive tested species to the<br />

long-term effects predicted for species-species interactions,

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