The European Union Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) requires individual member states to develop a robust set of tools for defining eleven qualitative descriptors of Good Environmental Status (GES), such as demonstrating that "Concentrations of contaminants are at levels not giving rise to pollution effects" (GES descriptor 8). Adopting the recommendations of the ICES/OSPAR Study Group for the Integrated Monitoring of Contaminants and Biological Effects (SGIMC), we present a case study demonstrating how the proposed approach, using chemical contaminant (metals and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and polychlorinated biphenyls) and biological effects (EROD, bile metabolites and pathology) data in different matrices (sediment and biota), could be used to contribute to the determination of GES in a region of the North Sea region off the east coast of the UK.
The determination of PAH metabolites in fish bile is performed to assess the PAH contamination in fish for environmental monitoring. A growing number of laboratories in Europe use this parameter for national monitoring. However, an international intercomparison between laboratories has not taken place in the last years. Therefore the determination of the PAH metabolite 1-hydroxypyrene was tested in a collaborative trial performed by 10 laboratories from eight countries. Five samples of naturally contaminated fish bile covering different concentration levels were distributed among the participants. The present study was open for different methods: GS/MS, HPLC-fluorescence (HPLC-F), fixed wavelength fluorescence (FWF), and synchronous fluorescence spectrometry (SFS), respectively. The results suggest that all four methods under investigation are suitable for screening purposes, but only three methods have produced comparable results which could be used for a common monitoring database: GC/MS, HPLC-F, and SFS (with conversion factor). Most z-scores were within the acceptance criteria of ±2. The comparability of GC/MS, HPLC-F, and SFS results should be further improved because SFS is a widely used method with a great potential for monitoring. The present study contributes to the quality assurance of results for European marine monitoring.
Mollusks are known to be uniquely sensitive to a number of reproductive toxicants including some vertebrate endocrine disrupting chemicals. However, they have widely been ignored in environmental risk assessment procedures for chemicals. This study describes the validation of the Potamopyrgus antipodarum reproduction test within the OECD Conceptual Framework for Endocrine Disrupters Testing and Assessment. The number of embryos in the brood pouch and adult mortality serve as main endpoints. The experiments are conducted as static systems in beakers filled with artificial medium, which is aerated trough glass pipettes. The test chemical is dispersed into the medium, and adult snails are subsequently introduced into the beakers. After 28 days the reproductive success is determined by opening the brood pouch and embryo counting. This study presents the results of two validation studies of the reproduction test with eleven laboratories and the chemicals tributyltin (TBT) with nominal concentrations ranging from 10 to 1000 ng TBT-Sn/L and cadmium with concentrations from 1.56 to 25 μg/L. The test design could be implemented by all laboratories resulting in comparable effect concentrations for the endpoint number of embryos in the brood pouch. After TBT exposure mean EC, EC, NOEC and LOEC were 35.6, 127, 39.2 and 75.7 ng Sn/L, respectively. Mean effect concentrations in cadmium exposed snails were, respectively, 6.53, 14.2, 6.45 and 12.6 μg/L. The effect concentrations are in good accordance with already published data. Both validation studies show that the reproduction test with P. antipodarum is a well-suited tool to assess reproductive effects of chemicals.
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