ð Ecotoxicology Unit 12 â Ecological Risk Assessment and Management
Ecological risk assessment evaluates how stressors like pesticides or habitat loss affect ecosystems. It involves identifying hazards, assessing exposure and effects, characterizing risks, and developing management strategies. This process helps protect biodiversity and ecosystem health.
The framework includes problem formulation, analysis, risk characterization, and risk management. Key concepts include stressors, receptors, exposure, and effects. Case studies demonstrate applications in areas like pesticide impacts, oil spills, invasive species, and climate change.
Ecological risk assessment evaluates the likelihood that adverse ecological effects may occur or are occurring as a result of exposure to one or more stressors
Stressors are any physical, chemical, or biological entity that can induce an adverse response (pesticides, invasive species, habitat loss)
Receptors are the ecological entities that may be adversely affected by exposure to a stressor (individual organisms, populations, communities, ecosystems)
Exposure is the contact or co-occurrence of a stressor with a receptor
Effects are the biological changes that result from exposure to a stressor
Can occur at different levels of biological organization (individual, population, community, ecosystem)
Risk is the probability of an adverse effect occurring as a result of exposure to a stressor
Uncertainty is the lack of knowledge about specific factors, parameters, or models used in ecological risk assessment
Can arise from natural variability, measurement errors, or incomplete understanding of ecological processes
Ecological Risk Assessment Framework
Problem formulation defines the goals, scope, and endpoints of the assessment
Involves identifying stressors, receptors, and exposure pathways
Develops a conceptual model of the ecological system
Analysis phase includes exposure assessment and effects assessment
Exposure assessment estimates the magnitude, duration, and spatial extent of exposure
Effects assessment evaluates the relationship between stressor levels and ecological responses
Risk characterization integrates exposure and effects information to estimate risks
Describes uncertainties and limitations of the assessment
Risk management uses risk assessment results to make decisions and take actions
Considers social, economic, and political factors in addition to ecological risks
Communication and stakeholder involvement occur throughout the process
Ensures transparency and incorporates diverse perspectives
Hazard Identification
Identifies stressors that may pose risks to ecological receptors
Considers the source, composition, and distribution of stressors in the environment
Chemical stressors (pesticides, heavy metals, organic pollutants)
Physical stressors (habitat alteration, temperature changes, noise)