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Strategien zur Sedimentbewertung : ein Überblick
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Publikationsdatum
2009-04-01
Sprache
German
TORE-URI
Enthalten in
Volume
21
Issue
2
Start Page
160
End Page
176
Citation
Umweltwissenschaften und Schadstoff-Forschung 2 (21): 160-176 (2009)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
Springer
Background Being an important determinant in aquatic ecosystems, sediments have gotten more and more into focus of scientific and public discussions. While water quality has been significantly improving during recent years, highly contaminated sediments in many European rivers will still have ongoing impact for several centuries from now. Hence, monitoring and assessment of sediment quality are crucial for national legislation as well as the implementation of the European Water Framework Directive (WFD). Aim On the occasion of the retirement of Prof. Dr. Dr. h. c. Volker Storch, this article reviews the various concepts of sediment assessment and introduces case studies in sediment toxicology which have been carried out in Heidelberg and surrounding areas. Results and Discussion Initially, the article portrays benefits and drawbacks of chemical analytics and biotest systems. The individual approach has only limited informative value, but combiningbothperspectives allows fora comprehensive characterization of the state of sediments. As examples of toxicity evaluation based on this strategy, weight-of-evidence studies for tiered investigations and integrated sediment assessment are presented. In addition, a combination of chemical fractionation, bioanalytic investigations and chemical analysis - known as 'effect-directed analysis' (EDA) - is discussed. This integrated concept eventually aims at the identification of hazardous substance classes or even of single compounds. Finally, the article raises the issue of sediment mobility as an important parameter for risk analyses of highly contaminated legacy sediments within further WFD implementation. Outlook Using various case studies, the article outlines the potentials of integrated approaches for cause-effect analysis of complex environmental samples within aquatic ecosystems as well as for action programs of management plans dealing with chemically polluted rivers. Effect-directed analysis in particular, but also the combined application of acute and mechanism-specific bioassays together with in-situ investigations, complemented by investigations on sediment mobility, appear promising with regard to comprehensive sediment assessment weight-of-evidence studies. © Springer-Verlag 2009.
Schlagworte
Effect-directed analysis
Flood events
Sediment
Suspended particulate matter
Toxicity
Weight-of-evidence
DDC Class
600: Technik
620: Ingenieurwissenschaften