scholarly journals A Blueprint for the Problem Formulation Phase of EPA-Type Ecological Risk Assessments for 316(b) Determinations

2002 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 271-298
Author(s):  
Webster Van Winkle ◽  
William P. Dey ◽  
Steve M. Jinks ◽  
Mark S. Bevlhimer ◽  
Charles C. Coutant

The difference between management objectives focused on sustainability of fish populations and the indigenous aquatic community, and a management objective focused on minimizing entrainment and impingement losses accounts for much of the ongoing controversy surrounding §316(b). We describe the EPA’s ecological risk assessment framework and recommend that this framework be used to more effectively address differences in management objectives and structure §316(b) determinations. We provide a blueprint for the problem formulation phase of EPA-type ecological risk assessments for cooling-water intake structures (CWIS) at existing power plant facilities. Our management objectives, assessment endpoints, conceptual model, and generic analysis plan apply to all existing facilities. However, adapting the problem formulation process for a specific facility requires consideration of the permitting agency’s guidelines and level of regulatory concern, as well as site-specific ecological and technical differences. The facility-specific problem formulation phase is designed around the hierarchy of biolo gical levels of organization in the generic conceptual model and the sequence of cause-effect events and risk hypotheses represented by this model. Problem formulation is designed to be flexible in that it can be tailored for facilities where §316(b) regulatory concern is low or high. For some facilities, we anticipate that the assessment can be completed based on consideration of susceptibility alone. At the other extreme, a high level of regulatory concern combined with the availability of extensive information and consideration of costly CWIS mitigation options may result in the ecological risk assessment relying on analyses at all levels. Decisions on whether to extend the ecological risk assessment to additional levels should be based on whether regulatory or generator concerns merit additional analyses and whether available information is adequate to support such analyses. In making these decisions, the functional dependence between levels of analysis must be considered in making the transition to the analysis phase and risk estimation component of the ecological risk assessment. Regardless of how the generic analysis plan is modified to develop a facility-specific analysis plan, the resulting plan should be viewed as a tool for comparing representative species and alternative CWIS options by focusing on relative changes (i.e., proportional or percent changes) in various measures. The analysis plan is specifically designed to encourage consideration of multiple lines of evidence and to characterize uncertainties in each line of evidence. Multiple lines of evidence from different levels of analysis, obtained using both prospective and retrospective techniques, provide a broader perspective on the magnitude of potential effects and associated uncertainties and risks. The implications of the EPA’s recent (April 2002) proposed regulations for existing facilities on the applicability of this blueprint are briefly considered.

2001 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-317
Author(s):  
Roger Sutcliffe

Abstract The ecological risk assessment of commercial chemicals in Canada by the regulatory programs of the Commercial Chemicals Evaluation Branch, Environment Canada, are based on results from traditional toxicity data (e.g., lethality, effects to growth or reproduction). Some of the chemicals under consideration are known to alter endocrine systems in exposed organisms; however, effects to the endocrine system are used only as additional supporting information. Presently, there are no internationally accepted methodologies or tests for endocrine disrupting substances that can be used by these regulatory programs. The need for research with respect to hormone disrupting substances has been recognized in the revised Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA 1999). This paper describes the framework for the ecological risk assessment of new and existing substances and identifies issues and research needs in both screening level and in-depth ecological risk assessments with respect to the identification and assessment of potentially endocrine disrupting substances.


2011 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald D. MacDonald ◽  
Dwayne R. J. Moore ◽  
Christopher G. Ingersoll ◽  
Dawn E. Smorong ◽  
R. Scott Carr ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
Author(s):  
ÉRIC CESAR PAGLIARINI ◽  
VANESSA BEZERRA DE MENEZES OLIVEIRA ◽  
EVALDO LUIZ GAETA ESPINDOLA

Abstract The present research employs the Ecological Risk Assessment (ERA) method to evaluate the probability of adverse effects in the water supply of Bom Repouso (MG), a city where the agriculture has caused an advanced degree of degradation of its sources. The methodology is based on the integration of different variables, divided into three Lines of Evidence (chemical, physical-chemical and ecotoxicological), and allows for the evaluation of risk assessment between 0.0 and 1.0 in the sampled environment. Five sampling points were evaluated in three periods, with the results varying between the four possible ratings (from low to very high), and it was not possible to identify a pattern of risk evolution between them. Thus, the method used proved to be efficient in assessing the degree of degradation of the environment, however, additional studies are required to improve this type of systemic impact assessment, based on the evaluation of the environmental degradation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 3659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Astles ◽  
Roland Cormier

Determining the effectiveness of a management system to enable fisheries to harvest sustainably is a key challenge. To fully assess the likelihood that a fishery management system will not achieve its sustainability objectives, the assessment needs to include the whole pathway that leads to the consequences for management objectives. A crucial aspect of the pathway is the inclusion of management controls. Effectiveness of these management controls determines whether the effects of human pressures on ecological components and their impacts are reduced to a level that will not impede management achieving their objectives. Ecological risk assessments do not provide sufficient information to make decisions about what to change specifically in a management system to ensure a fishery is sustainably managed. Bowtie analysis (BTA) is a method that logically connects the relationships between management objectives, management controls, threats, potential impacts of threats on the fishery resource and the consequences of those impacts on achieving the management objectives. The combination of bowtie analysis and ecological risk assessment enables managers, scientists and stakeholders to evaluate different management controls and research options in response to risk factors and track the effectiveness of the management system. We applied a three-step method of bowtie analysis stage 1, quantitative ecological risk assessment and bowtie analysis stage 2 to evaluate fisheries management and science. We demonstrate these steps using a case study of a commercially fished species in New South Wales, Australia.


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