Title of article
Water toxicity assessment and spatial pollution patterns identification in a Mediterranean River Basin District. Tools for water management and risk analysis Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Roberta Carafa، نويسنده , , Leslie Faggiano، نويسنده , , Montserrat Real، نويسنده , , Antoni Munné، نويسنده , , Antoni Ginebreda، نويسنده , , Helena Guasch، نويسنده , , Monica Flo، نويسنده , , Lu?s Tirapu، نويسنده , , Peter Carsten von der Ohe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
11
From page
4269
To page
4279
Abstract
In compliance with the requirements of the EU Water Framework Directive, monitoring of the ecological and chemical status of Catalan river basins (NE Spain) is carried out by the Catalan Water Agency.
The large amount of data collected and the complex relationships among the environmental variables monitored often mislead data interpretation in terms of toxic impact, especially considering that even pollutants at very low concentrations might contribute to the total toxicity.
The total dataset of chemical monitoring carried out between 2007 and 2008 (232 sampling stations and 60 pollutants) has been analyzed using sequential advanced modeling techniques. Data on concentrations of contaminants in water were pre-treated in order to calculate the bioavailable fraction, depending on substance properties and local environmental conditions.
The resulting values were used to predict the potential impact of toxic substances in complex mixtures on aquatic biota and to identify hot spots. Exposure assessment with Species Sensitivity Distribution (SSD) and mixture toxicity rules were used to compute the multi-substances Potentially Affected Fraction (msPAF).
The combined toxicity of the pollutants analyzed in the Catalan surface waters might potentially impact more than 50% of the species in 10% of the sites.
In order to understand and visualize the spatial distribution of the toxic risk, Self Organising Map (SOM), based on the Kohonenʹs Artificial Neural Network (ANN) algorithm, was applied on the output data of these models. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was performed on top of Neural Network results in order to identify main influential variables which account for the pollution trends. Finally, predicted toxic impacts on biota have been linked and correlated to field data on biological quality indexes using macroinvertebrate and diatom communities (IBMWP and IPS). The methodology presented could represent a suitable tool for water managers in environmental risk assessment and management.
Keywords
Species Sensitivity Distribution , Artificial neural networks , Risk assessment , Aquatic toxicity
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
987653
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