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Assessing potential bioavailability of metals in sediments: A proposed approach
Authors:Gerald T. Ankley  Nelson A. Thomas  Dominic M. Di Toro  David J. Hansen  John D. Mahony  Walter J. Berry  Richard C. Swartz  Robert A. Hoke  A. Wayne Garrison  Herbert E. Allen  Christopher S. Zarba
Affiliation:(1) US Environmental Protection Agency, 6201 Congdon Blvd., 55804 Duluth, Minnesota, USA;(2) Hydroqual, Inc., 07430 Mahwah, New Jersey, USA;(3) US Environmental Protection Agency, 27 Tarzwell Dr., 02882 Narragansett, Rhode Island, USA;(4) Chemistry Department, Manhattan College, 10471 Bronx, New York, USA;(5) SAIC Corporation, 27 Tarzwell Dr., 02882 Narragansett, Rhode Island, USA;(6) US Environmental Protection Agency, Hatfield Marine Science Center Marine Science Drive, 97365 Newport, Oregon, USA;(7) SAIC Corporation, 411 Hackensack Ave., 07601 Hackensack, New Jersey, USA;(8) US Environmental Protection Agency, College Station Rd., 30605 Athens, Georgia, USA;(9) Department of Civil Engineering, University of Delaware, 19716 Newark, Delaware, USA;(10) US Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M Street S.W., 20460 Washington, DC, USA
Abstract:
Due to anthropogenic inputs, elevated concentrations of metals frequently occur in aquatic sediments. In order to make defensible estimates of the potential risk of metals in sediments and/or develop sediment quality criteria for metals, it is essential to identify that fraction of the total metal in the sediments that is bioavailable. Studies with a variety of benthic invertebrates indicate that interstitial (pore) water concentrations of metals correspond very well with the bioavailability of metals in test sediments. Many factors may influence pore water concentrations of metals; however, in anaerobic sediments a key phase controlling partitioning of several cationic metals (cadmium, nickel, lead, zinc, copper) into pore water is acid volatile sulfide (AVS). In this paper, we present an overview of the technical basis for predicting bioavailability of cationic metals to benthic organisms based on pore water metal concentrations and metal-AVS relationships. Included are discussions of the advantages and limitations of metal bioavailability predictions based on these parameters, relative both to site-specific assessments and the development of sediment quality criteria.
Keywords:Sediment  Metal  Bioavailability  Toxicity  Sediment quality criteria
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