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Innovative treatment technologies for contaminated sediments
in the Great Lakes: 3 pilot-scale demonstrations
Cieniawski, S., and M. Tuchman
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Great Lakes National
Program Office, 77 W. Jackson Blvd. (G-17J), Chicago, IL 60604,
phone: 312-353-9184, fax: 312-353-2018, e-mail: cieniawski.scott@epa.gov
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Abstract
Paracelsus' Dictum,
which addressing human toxicology, forms the basis for both modern
medicine and ecotoxicology. The Dictum can be paraphrased as "the
dose makes the poison". What this means in terms of ecotoxicology,
is that for toxicity to occur, an organism must be exposed to a
contaminant and at the correct concentration. Effectively, this
Dictum also separates pollutants (toxicity occurs) from contaminants
(toxicity does not occur). However, as presently constituted, the
Dictum neither includes nor considers two critical modifying factors
in the sedimentary environment: bioavailability; and realistic exposure
scenarios. Too many scientists are explicitly or implicitly, applying
the Dictum directly, without modification which has resulted in
incorrect interpretations regarding, for instance: PAH phototoxicity;
bioavailability of PAH and metals/metalloids in sediments; the relative
importance of pore water, overlying water and dietary exposure routes;
bioavailability in dynamic environments such as estuaries; biological
tolerance mechanisms (avoidance, acclimation, non-genetic adaptation,
genetic adaptation, metabolism); and appropriate toxicity test organism
sensitivities. Each of these issues is discussed, as are secondary
(or indirect) toxicity resulting from sediment instability, and
genetic adaptation to particular contaminants resulting in susceptibility
to other stressors. A modification of Paracelsus' Dictum is proposed,
as part of a weight of evidence framework, for determining the present
and future quality of aquatic sedimentary environments.
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