Developing standards for environmental toxicants: the need to consider abiotic environmental factors and microbe-mediated ecologic processes.
- 1 March 1983
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Environmental Health Perspectives in Environmental Health Perspectives
- Vol. 49, 247-260
- https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.8349247
Abstract
This article suggests and discusses two novel aspects for the formulation of standards for environmental toxicants. First, uniform national standards for each pollutant will be underprotective for some ecosystems and overprotective for others, inasmuch as the toxicity of a pollutant to the indigenous biota is dependent on the physicochemical properties of the recipient environment. As the number of chemicals that need regulation is immense and as microbes appear to respond similarly to pollutant-abiotic factor interactions as do plants and animals, it is suggested that microbial assays be used initially to identify those abiotic factors that most influence the toxicity of specific pollutants. Thereafter, additional studies using plants and animals can focus on these pollutant-abiotic factor interactions, and more meaningful standards can then be formulated more rapidly and inexpensively. Second, it is suggested that the response to pollutants of microbe-mediated ecologic processes be used to quantitate the sensitivity of different ecosystems to various toxicants. Such a quantification, expressed in terms of an "ecological dose 50%" (EcD50), could be easily incorporated into the methodologies currently used to set water quality criteria and would also be applicable to setting criteria for terrestrial ecosystems.Keywords
This publication has 119 references indexed in Scilit:
- Risk assessment and regulatory decision makingFood and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1981
- The effect of calcium on cadmium toxicity in the freshwater amphipod,Gammarus pulex (L.)Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 1981
- Quantitative Risk AssessmentJournal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1980
- Carcinogenic Risk AssessmentScience, 1977
- Effects of addition of 12 metals on carbon dioxide release during incubation of an acid sandy soilGeoderma, 1977
- Microbiological effects of metal ions in Chesapeake Bay water and sedimentBulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 1977
- Growth reduction in American sycamore (Plantanus occidentalis L.) caused by PbCd interactionEnvironmental Pollution, 1977
- Incubation study of effect of pH on nitrogen mineralisation and nitrification in soils treated with 1000 ppm lead and zinc, as oxidesEnvironmental Pollution (1970), 1974
- Effects of addition of 1000 ppm Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn on carbon dioxide release during incubation of soil alone and after treatment with strawEnvironmental Pollution (1970), 1972
- Effects of addition of copper, manganese, zinc and chromium compounds on ammonification and nitrification during incubation of soilPlant and Soil, 1969