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Setting site‐specific water‐quality standards by using tissue residue criteria and bioaccumulation data. Part 1. Methodology
Author(s) -
Toll John E.,
Tear Lucinda M.,
DeForest David K.,
Brix Kevin V.,
Adams William J.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
environmental toxicology and chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1552-8618
pISSN - 0730-7268
DOI - 10.1897/03-472.1
Subject(s) - bioaccumulation , residue (chemistry) , water quality , environmental science , environmental chemistry , chemistry , biochemical engineering , biology , ecology , engineering , biochemistry
Abstract We have developed a method for determining site‐specific water‐quality standards (SSWQs) for substances regulated based on tissue residues. The method uses a multisite regression model to solve for the conditional prior probability density function (PDF) on water concentration, given that tissue concentration equals a tissue residue threshold. The method then uses site‐specific water and tissue concentration data to update the probabilities on a Monte Carlo sample of the prior PDF by using Bayesian Monte Carlo analysis. The resultant posterior PDF identifies the water concentration that, if met at the site, would provide a desired level of confidence of meeting the tissue residue threshold contingent on model assumptions. This allows for derivation of a SSWQS. The method is fully reproducible, statistically rigorous, and easily implemented. A useful property of the method is that the model is sensitive to the amount of site‐specific data available, that is, a more conservative or protective number (water concentration) is derived when the data set is small or the variance is large. Likewise, as the site water concentration increases above the water‐quality standard, more site‐specific information is needed to demonstrate a safe concentration at the site. A companion paper demonstrates the method by using selenium as an example.

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