Preliminary Remediation Goals for Terrestrial Wildlife |
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Authors: | Randall T. Ryti James Markwiese Richard Mirenda Lars Soholt |
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Affiliation: | 1. Neptune and Company, Inc. , Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA;2. Los Alamos National Laboratory , Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA |
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Abstract: | Remediation of contaminated sites requires information on upper concentration limits of chemicals in environmental media that are protective of ecological receptors. These upper concentration limits can be considered ecological preliminary remediation goals (EcoPRGs). The motivation for developing EcoPRGs was to provide risk managers with a simple tool for evaluating remedial actions that would be protective of the environment. Hazard quotient calculations used to support ecological screening assessments were modified to derive soil EcoPRGs for terrestrial wildlife populations. The primary modification is a population area use factor that is the fraction of a terrestrial animal population potentially affected by the contaminated site. Wildlife assessment population boundaries are based on a receptor's dispersal distance; for mammals dispersal distance is strongly related to the linear dimension (square root) of home range. Assuming that wildlife are unlikely to disperse beyond some distance from their birth or natal site, dispersal distance can be thought of as the radius of the assessment population's boundaries. This general relationship is useful as a simple way to estimate assessment population areas for terrestrial animals and helps fill data gaps for wildlife without direct measurements of dispersal. |
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Keywords: | population effects cleanup goal ecological screening assessment contaminated soil. |
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