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Towards defining aquatic ecosystem health for the Great
Lakes
John H. Hartig1
& Michael A. Zarull2
1International
Joint Commission, 100 Ouellette Avenue, Windsor, Ontario N9A
6T3, Canada
2National
Water Research Institute, Lakes Research Branch, 867 Lakeshore
Road, Burlington, Ontario L7R4A6, Canada
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Abstract
The Canada - U.S. Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
defines Areas of Concern as geographic areas that fail to meet the
general or specific objectives of the Great Lakes Water Quality
Agreement where such failure has caused or is likely to cause impairment
of beneficial use or the area's ability to support aquatic life.
Impairment of beneficial use is defined by the Agreement as a change
in the physical, chemical or biological integrity sufficient to
cause any one of 14 designated use impairments. In 1987 the International
Joint Commission's Great Lakes Water Quality Board (GLWCB) recommended
that criteria be developed to determine when ecosystem conditions
have been impacted enough to warrant designation as an Area of Concern
and when conditions have improved sufficiently to be delisted. Based
on scientific input and policy considerations, the GLWQB adopted,
in principle, a set of quantitative and qualitative listing/delisting
criteria for each of the 14 use impairments. These criteria can
be uniformly applied throughout the basin. Further, the GLWQB recommended
future refinement of these criteria based on advances in science
and public input.
Keywords: Great Lakes, impairment of beneficial uses
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