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Toxic contaminants and Great Lakes ecosystem health: current
understandings and strategies for improved assessments
Marlene S. Evans
National Hydrology Research Institute, 11 Innovation Boulevard,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 3H5
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Abstract
Although extensive research, surveillance, and monitoring
studies have been conducted on the Great Lakes ecosystem for more
than two decades, the presence of toxic substances in the Great
Lakes ecosystem continues to be a major issue of environmental concern.
This issue was addressed during a symposium and workshop sponsored
by the International Joint Commission during which more than 30
experts on Great Lakes biota discussed various aspects of toxic
substances and Great Lakes ecosystem health. This manuscript is
based on these deliberations. It discusses the reasons for the limited
understanding of the effects of toxic substances on Great Lakes
biota despite years of surveillance and monitoring. It also identifies
those studies which have provided direct evidence of the effects
of toxic substances on the well-being of the organism. Finally,
it recommends improved approaches to research and monitoring investigations
of the effects of toxic substances on the health of the Great Lakes
ecosystem.
Keywords: surveillance, monitoring, International Joint
Commission
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