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The development of ecosystem objectives for the Laurentian
Great Lakes
Trefor B. Reynoldson
National Water Research Institute, Environment Canada,
CCIW 867 Lakeshore Rd, Burlington, Ontario L7R 4A6
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Abstract
Historically management of human use of ecosystems
has been based around engineering and chemical approaches and through
the construction of treatment facilities, effluent controls and
setting chemical concentrations, both at end of pipe and in the
aquatic environment. However, the general continued degradation
of many ecosystems shows these approaches alone are insufficient.
In the Laurentian Great Lakes the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
was first signed in 1972 and ratified in 1978 and in 1987 tacitly
acknowledged the problems with a chemical only approach by requiring
the development of ecosystem objectives in the 1978 agreement. Furthermore,
the agreement specifically identified numerical ecosystem objectives
in the 1987 agreement. The evolution of ecosystem objectives in
the Great Lakes has expanded from the strictly numerical objectives
such as production of lake trout and abundance of the amphipod Pontoporeia
hoyi. More recent developments in ecosystem objectives have
been the inclusion of indicators for wildlife, habitat, human health
and stewardship.
Keywords: ecosystem objectives, Great Lakes
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