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Cover image for Coastal and estuarine risk assessment
Title:
Coastal and estuarine risk assessment
Publication Information:
Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press, 2002
ISBN:
9781566705561

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30000010082602 QH545.W3 C62 2002 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Risk assessment is the cornerstone of contemporary environmental protection. You must find the answers to questions such as: what might be the impacts of the new synthetic chemicals, what problems might arise from the normal operations of industry, what are the chances of accidental releases and how will they impact the environment? Understanding and assessing these risks is essential to sound environmental policy and management.

The first book to address the application of the current National Research Council (NRC) risk assessment paradigm to the coastal marine environment, Coastal and Estuarine Risk Assessment covers topics that range from pollutants of emerging concern to bioavailability and bioaccumulation at the suborganismal through landscape levels. It explores the necessary applications for modifying the NRC paradigm and presents a series of steps to actually accomplish an effective assessment using the modified paradigm. The book highlights the logical framework for assessing causation, and measurement of toxicant fate and effect.

The chapter authors bring together experiences from academia, private consultants, and government agencies, resulting in a rich mixture of experience and insights. Exploring the science of exposure, effect, and risk in coastal and estuarine environments, Coastal and Estuarine Risk Assessment gives you a building block approach to the fundamental components of risk assessment.


Table of Contents

Morris H. Roberts, Jr. and Michael C. Newman and Robert C. HaleMark Crane and Neal Sorokin and James R. Wheeler and Albania Grosso and Paul Whitehouse and David MorrittRobert C. Hale and Mark J. La GuardiaMichael C. Newman and David A. EvansRichard F. LeeRobert P. MasonChristian E. Schlekat and Byeong-Gweon Lee and Samuel N. LuomaKenneth M.Y. Leung and James R. Wheeler and David Morritt and Mark CranePaul D. Jones and Kurunthachalam Kannan and Alan L. Blankenship and John P. GiesyDiane E. Nacci and Timothy R. Gleason and Ruth Gutjahr-Gobell and Marina Huber and Wayne R. Munns, Jr.Christopher E. Mackay and Jenee A. Colton and Gary BighamDave Ludwig and Timothy J. IannuzziMichael C. Newman and Robert C. Hale and Morris H. Roberts, Jr.
Chapter 1 Overview of Ecological Risk Assessment in Coastal and Estuarine Environmentsp. 1
Chapter 2 European Approaches to Coastal and Estuarine Risk Assessmentp. 15
Chapter 3 Emerging Contaminants of Concern in Coastal and Estuarine Environmentsp. 41
Chapter 4 Enhancing Belief during Causality Assessments: Cognitive Idols or Bayes's Theorem?p. 73
Chapter 5 Bioavailability, Biotransformation, and Fate of Organic Contaminants in Estuarine Animalsp. 97
Chapter 6 The Bioaccumulation of Mercury, Methylmercury, and Other Toxic Elements into Pelagic and Benthic Organismsp. 127
Chapter 7 Dietary Metals Exposure and Toxicity to Aquatic Organisms: Implications for Ecological Risk Assessmentp. 151
Chapter 8 Endocrine Disruption in Fishes and Invertebrates: Issues for Saltwater Ecological Risk Assessmentp. 189
Chapter 9 The Use of Toxicity Reference Values (TRVs) to Assess the Risks That Persistent Organochlorines Pose to Marine Mammalsp. 217
Chapter 10 Effects of Chronic Stress on Wildlife Populations: A Population Modeling Approach and Case Studyp. 247
Chapter 11 Structuring Population-Based Ecological Risk Assessments in a Dynamic Landscapep. 273
Chapter 12 Incremental Chemical Risks and Damages in Urban Estuaries: Spatial and Historical Ecosystem Analysisp. 297
Chapter 13 Ecological Risk Assessment in Coastal and Estuarine Environmentsp. 327
Indexp. 337
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