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BIOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF AQUATIC POLLUTION: A REVIEW, WITH EMPHASIS ON PLANTS AS BIOMONITORS
- Source :
- Biological Reviews. 69:147-186
- Publication Year :
- 1994
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 1994.
-
Abstract
- In a number of disciplines including ecology, ecotoxicology, water quality management, water resource management, fishery biology etc., there is significant interest in the testing of new materials, environmental samples (of water or sediments) and specific sites, in terms of their effects on biota. In the first instance, we consider various sources of aquatic pollution, sources typically associated with developed areas of the world. Historically, much water quality assessment has been performed by researchers with a background in chemistry or engineering, thus chemical analysis was a dominant form of assessment. However, chemical analyses, particularly of such materials as organochlorines and polyaromatic hydrocarbons can be expensive, and local environmental factors may cause the actual exposure of an organism to be little correlated with chemical concentrations in the surrounding water or sediments. To a large extent toxicity testing has proceeded independently of environmental quality assessment in situ, and the work has been done by different, and differently-trained researchers. Here we attempt to bring together the various forms of biological assessment of aquatic pollution, because in our opinion it is worth developing a coherent framework for the application of this powerful tool. Biotic assessment in its most primitive form involves the simple tracking of mortality in exposed organisms. However, in most natural environments it is extended, chronic exposure to contaminants that has the most wide-ranging and irreversible repercussions--thus measures of sub-lethal impairment are favoured. From an ecological standpoint, it is most valuable to assess ecological effects by direct study of in situ contaminant body burdens and impairment of growth and reproduction compared with 'clean' sites. A distinction is made here between bioindication and biomonitoring, and a case is made for including aquatic macrophytes (angiosperms) in studies of contaminant levels and effects in the biota. It is apparent that there is a concurrent need for laboratory-based testing of new industrial by-products before any are released in the environment, and such studies should aid the investigation of mechanisms and modes of toxicity, but environmental assessment, and tracking of improvements in environmental quality are most effectively achieved by active biomonitoring experiments.
- Subjects :
- Pollution
Ecology
media_common.quotation_subject
Water Pollution
Fresh Water
Biota
Plants
Biology
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Macrophyte
Toxicology
Environmental protection
Biomonitoring
Environmental impact assessment
Water quality
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Organism
Environmental quality
Environmental Monitoring
media_common
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1469185X and 14647931
- Volume :
- 69
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biological Reviews
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ae62c4794be8df5e7b8070eada94df8f
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-185x.1994.tb01504.x