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Review of aquatic in situ approaches for stressor...
Journal article

Review of aquatic in situ approaches for stressor and effect diagnosis

Abstract

Field-based (in situ) approaches are used increasingly for measuring biological effects and for stressor diagnoses in aquatic systems because these assessment tools provide realistic exposure environments that are rarely replicated in laboratory toxicity tests. Providing realistic exposure scenarios is important because environmental conditions can alter toxicity through complex exposure dynamics (e.g., multiple stressor interactions). In this critical review, we explore the information provided by aquatic in situ exposure and monitoring methods when compared with more traditional approaches and discuss the associated strengths and limitations of these techniques. In situ approaches can, under some circumstances, provide more valuable information to a decision maker than information from surveys of resident biota, laboratory toxicity tests, or chemical analyses alone. A decision tree is provided to assist decision makers in determining when in situ approaches can add value.

Authors

Crane M; Burton GA; Culp JM; Greenberg MS; Munkittrick KR; Ribeiro R; Salazar MH; St‐Jean SD

Journal

Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 234–245

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

April 1, 2007

DOI

10.1897/ieam_2006-027.1

ISSN

1551-3777
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