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A Decision Making Framework for Sediment Assessment Developed for the Great Lakes
Authors:Lee Grapentine  Janette Anderson  Duncan Boyd  G Allen Burton  Conrad DeBarros  Gary Johnson
Institution:1. National Water Research Institute, Environment Canada;2. Ontario Region, Environment Canada;3. Ontario Ministry of Environment;4. Wright State University
Abstract:A rule-based, weight-of-evidence approach for assessing contaminated sediment on a site-by-site basis in the Laurentian Great Lakes is described. Information from four lines of evidence—surficial sediment chemistry, laboratory toxicity, invertebrate community structure and invertebrate tissue biomagnification—is integrated within each line to produce a pass (‘?’) or fail (‘+’) conclusion, then combined across lines resulting in one of 16 outcome scenarios. For each scenario, the current status of the site, interpretation, and management recommendations are given. Management recommendation(s) can range from no action to risk management required (9 of the 16 scenarios). Within each line of evidence, the strength of each response can also be ranked (e.g., score of 1 to 4), providing managers with more information to aid decision options. Other issues that influence scientific management recommendations include site stability, subsurface contamination and spatial extent of effects. The decision framework is intended to be transparent, comprehensive (incorporating exposure, effect, weight-of-evidence, and risk), and minimally uncertain.
Keywords:sediment assessment  weight-of-evidence  multiple lines of evidence  Great Lakes  bioaccumulation  
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