
Appendix A to Part 132 -- Great Lakes Water Quality Initiative
Methodologies for Development of Aquatic Life Criteria and Values
METHODOLOGY FOR DERIVING AQUATIC LIFE CRITERIA: TIER I
Great Lakes States and Tribes shall adopt provisions consistent with (as
protective as) this appendix.
I. Definitions
A. Material of Concern. When defining the material of concern the
following should be considered:
1. Each separate chemical that does not ionize substantially in most natural
bodies of water should usually be considered a separate material, except
possibly for structurally similar organic compounds that only exist in large
quantities as commercial mixtures of the various compounds and apparently have
similar biological, chemical, physical, and toxicological properties.
2. For chemicals that ionize substantially in most natural bodies of water
(e.g., some phenols and organic acids, some salts of phenols and organic acids,
and most inorganic salts and coordination complexes of metals and metalloid),
all forms that would be in chemical equilibrium should usually be considered one
material. Each different oxidation state of a metal and each different
non-ionizable covalently bonded organometallic compound should usually be
considered a separate material.
3. The definition of the material of concern should include an operational
analytical component. Identification of a material simply as "sodium," for
example, implies "total sodium," but leaves room for doubt. If "total" is meant,
it must be explicitly stated. Even "total" has different operational
definitions, some of which do not necessarily measure "all that is there" in all
samples. Thus, it is also necessary to reference or describe the analytical
method that is intended. The selection of the operational analytical component
should take into account the analytical and environmental chemistry of the
material and various practical considerations, such as labor and equipment
requirements, and whether the method would require measurement in the field or
would allow measurement after samples are transported to a laboratory.
a. The primary requirements of the operational analytical component are that
it be appropriate for use on samples of receiving water, that it be compatible
with the available toxicity and bioaccumulation data without making
extrapolations that are too hypothetical, and that it rarely result in
underprotection or overprotection of aquatic organisms and their uses. Toxicity
is the property of a material, or combination of materials, to adversely affect
organisms.
b. Because an ideal analytical measurement will rarely be available, an
appropriate compromise measurement will usually have to be used. This compromise
measurement must fit with the general approach that if an ambient concentration
is lower than the criterion, unacceptable effects will probably not occur, i.e.,
the compromise measure must not err on the side of underprotection when
measurements are made on a surface water. What is an appropriate measurement in
one situation might not be appropriate for another. For example, because the
chemical and physical properties of an effluent are usually quite different from
those of the receiving water, an analytical method that is appropriate for
analyzing an effluent might not be appropriate for expressing a criterion, and
vice versa. A criterion should be based on an appropriate analytical
measurement, but the criterion is not rendered useless if an ideal measurement
either is not available or is not feasible.
Note: The analytical chemistry of the material might have to be taken
into account when defining the material or when judging the acceptability of
some toxicity tests, but a criterion must not be based on the sensitivity of an
analytical method. When aquatic organisms are more sensitive than routine
analytical methods, the proper solution is to develop better analytical methods.
4. It is now the policy of EPA that the use of dissolved metal to set and
measure compliance with water quality standards is the recommended approach,
because dissolved metal more closely approximates the bioavailable fraction of
metal in the water column that does total recoverable metal. One reason is that
a primary mechanism for water column toxicity is adsorption at the gill surface
which requires metals to be in the dissolved form. Reasons for the consideration
of total recoverable metals criteria include risk management considerations not
covered by evaluation of water column toxicity. A risk manager may consider
sediments and food chain effects and may decide to take a conservative approach
for metals, considering that metals are very persistent chemicals. This approach
could include the use of total recoverable metal in water quality standards. A
range of different risk management decisions can be justified. EPA recommends
that State water quality standards be based on dissolved metal. EPA will also
approve a State risk management decision to adopt standards based on total
recoverable metal, if those standards are otherwise approvable under this
program.
B. Acute Toxicity. Concurrent and delayed adverse effect(s) that
results from an acute exposure and occurs within any short observation period
which begins when the exposure begins, may extend beyond the exposure period,
and usually does not constitute a substantial portion of the life span of the
organism. (Concurrent toxicity is an adverse effect to an organism that results
from, and occurs during, its exposure to one or more test materials.) Exposure
constitutes contact with a chemical or physical agent. Acute exposure, however,
is exposure of an organism for any short period which usually does not
constitute a substantial portion of its life span.
C. Chronic Toxicity. Concurrent and delayed adverse effect(s) that
occurs only as a result of a chronic exposure. Chronic exposure is exposure of
an organism for any long period or for a substantial portion of its life span.
II. Collection of Data
A. Collect all data available on the material concerning toxicity to aquatic
animals and plants.
B. All data that are used should be available in typed, dated, and signed
hard copy (e.g., publication, manuscript, letter, memorandum, etc.) with enough
supporting information to indicate that acceptable test procedures were used and
that the results are reliable. In some cases, it might be appropriate to obtain
written information from the investigator, if possible. Information that is not
available for distribution shall not be used.
C. Questionable data, whether published or unpublished, must not be used. For
example, data must be rejected if they are from tests that did not contain a
control treatment, tests in which too many organisms in the control treatment
died or showed signs of stress or disease, and tests in which distilled or
deionized water was used as the dilution water without the addition of
appropriate salts.
D. Data on technical grade materials may be used if appropriate, but data on
formulated mixtures and emulsifiable concentrates of the material must not be
used.
E. For some highly volatile, hydrolyzable, or degradable materials, it might
be appropriate to use only results of flow-through tests in which the
concentrations of test material in test solutions were measured using acceptable
analytical methods. A flow-through test is a test with aquatic organisms in
which test solutions flow into constant-volume test chambers either
intermittently (e.g., every few minutes) or continuously, with the excess
flowing out.
F. Data must be rejected if obtained using:
1. Brine shrimp, because they usually only occur naturally in water with
salinity greater than 35 g/kg.
2. Species that do not have reproducing wild populations in North America.
3. Organisms that were previously exposed to substantial concentrations of
the test material or other contaminants.
4. Saltwater species except for use in deriving acute-chronic ratios. An ACR
is a standard measure of the acute toxicity of a material divided by an
appropriate measure of the chronic toxicity of the same material under
comparable conditions.
G. Questionable data, data on formulated mixtures and emulsifiable
concentrates, and data obtained with species non-resident to North America or
previously exposed organisms may be used to provide auxiliary information but
must not be used in the derivation of criteria.
III. Required Data
A. Certain data should be available to help ensure that each of the major
kinds of possible adverse effects receives adequate consideration. An adverse
effect is a change in an organism that is harmful to the organism. Exposure
means contact with a chemical or physical agent. Results of acute and chronic
toxicity tests with representative species of aquatic animals are necessary so
that data available for tested species can be considered a useful indication of
the sensitivities of appropriate untested species. Fewer data concerning
toxicity to aquatic plants are usually available because procedures for
conducting tests with plants and interpreting the results of such tests are not
as well developed.
B. To derive a Great Lakes Tier I criterion for aquatic organisms and their
uses, the following must be available:
1. Results of acceptable acute (or chronic) tests (see section IV or VI of
this appendix) with at least one species of freshwater animal in at least eight
different families such that all of the following are included:
a. The family Salmonidae in the class Osteichthyes;
b. One other family (preferably a commercially or recreationally important,
warmwater species) in the class Osteichthyes (e.g., bluegill, channel catfish);
c. A third family in the phylum Chordata (e.g., fish, amphibian);
d. A planktonic crustacean (e.g., a cladoceran, copepod);
e. A benthic crustacean (e.g., ostracod, isopod, amphipod, crayfish);
f. An insect (e.g., mayfly, dragonfly, damselfly, stonefly, caddisfly,
mosquito, midge);
g. A family in a phylum other than Arthropoda or Chordata (e.g., Rotifera,
Annelida, Mollusca);
h. A family in any order of insect or any phylum not already represented.
2. Acute-chronic ratios (see section VI of this appendix) with at least one
species of aquatic animal in at least three different families provided that of
the three species:
a. At least one is a fish;
b. At least one is an invertebrate; and
c. At least one species is an acutely sensitive freshwater species (the other
two may be saltwater species).
3. Results of at least one acceptable test with a freshwater algae or
vascular plant is desirable but not required for criterion derivation (see
section VIII of this appendix). If plants are among the aquatic organisms most
sensitive to the material, results of a test with a plant in another phylum
(division) should also be available.
C. If all required data are available, a numerical criterion can usually be
derived except in special cases. For example, derivation of a chronic criterion
might not be possible if the available ACRs vary by more than a factor of ten
with no apparent pattern. Also, if a criterion is to be related to a water
quality characteristic (see sections V and VII of this appendix), more data will
be required.
D. Confidence in a criterion usually increases as the amount of available
pertinent information increases. Thus, additional data are usually desirable.
IV. Final Acute Value
A. Appropriate measures of the acute (short-term) toxicity of the material to
a variety of species of aquatic animals are used to calculate the Final Acute
Value (FAV). The calculated Final Acute Value is a calculated estimate of the
concentration of a test material such that 95 percent of the genera (with which
acceptable acute toxicity tests have been conducted on the material) have higher
Genus Mean Acute Values (GMAVs). An acute test is a comparative study in which
organisms, that are subjected to different treatments, are observed for a short
period usually not constituting a substantial portion of their life span.
However, in some cases, the Species Mean Acute Value (SMAV) of a commercially or
recreationally important species of the Great Lakes System is lower than the
calculated FAV, then the SMAV replaces the calculated FAV in order to provide
protection for that important species.
B. Acute toxicity tests shall be conducted using acceptable procedures. For
good examples of acceptable procedures see American Society for Testing and
Materials (ASTM) Standard E 729, Guide for Conducting Acute Toxicity Tests with
Fishes, Macroinvertebrates, and Amphibians.
C. Except for results with saltwater annelids and mysids, results of acute
tests during which the test organisms were fed should not be used, unless data
indicate that the food did not affect the toxicity of the test material. (NOTE:
If the minimum acute-chronic ratio data requirements (as described in section
III.B.2 of this appendix) are not met with freshwater data alone, saltwater data
may be used.)
D. Results of acute tests conducted in unusual dilution water, e.g., dilution
water in which total organic carbon or particulate matter exceeded five mg/L,
should not be used, unless a relationship is developed between acute toxicity
and organic carbon or particulate matter, or unless data show that organic
carbon or particulate matter, etc., do not affect toxicity.
E. Acute values must be based upon endpoints which reflect the total severe
adverse impact of the test material on the organisms used in the test.
Therefore, only the following kinds of data on acute toxicity to aquatic animals
shall be used:
1. Tests with daphnids and other cladocerans must be started with organisms
less than 24 hours old and tests with midges must be started with second or
third instar larvae. It is preferred that the results should be the 48-hour EC50
based on the total percentage of organisms killed and immobilized. If such an
EC50 is not available for a test, the 48-hour LC50 should be used in place of
the desired 48-hour EC50. An EC50 or LC50 of longer than 48 hours can be used as
long as the animals were not fed and the control animals were acceptable at the
end of the test. An EC50 is a statistically or graphically estimated
concentration that is expected to cause one or more specified effects in 50% of
a group of organisms under specified conditions. An LC50 is a statistically or
graphically estimated concentration that is expected to be lethal to 50% of a
group of organisms under specified conditions.
2. It is preferred that the results of a test with embryos and larvae of
barnacles, bivalve molluscs (clams, mussels, oysters and scallops), sea urchins,
lobsters, crabs, shrimp and abalones be the 96-hour EC50 based on the percentage
of organisms with incompletely developed shells plus the percentage of organisms
killed. If such an EC50 is not available from a test, of the values that are
available from the test, the lowest of the following should be used in place of
the desired 96-hour EC50: 48- to 96-hour EC50s based on percentage of organisms
with incompletely developed shells plus percentage of organisms killed, 48- to
96-hour EC50s based upon percentage of organisms with incompletely developed
shells, and 48-hour to 96-hour LC50s. (NOTE: If the minimum acute-chronic ratio
data requirements (as described in section III.B.2 of this appendix) are not met
with freshwater data alone, saltwater data may be used.)
3. It is preferred that the result of tests with all other aquatic animal
species and older life stages of barnacles, bivalve molluscs (clams, mussels,
oysters and scallops), sea urchins, lobsters, crabs, shrimp and abalones be the
96-hour EC50 based on percentage of organisms exhibiting loss of equilibrium
plus percentage of organisms immobilized plus percentage of organisms killed. If
such an EC50 is not available from a test, of the values that are available from
a test the lower of the following should be used in place of the desired 96-hour
EC50: the 96-hour EC50 based on percentage of organisms exhibiting loss of
equilibrium plus percentage of organisms immobilized and the 96-hour LC50.
4. Tests whose results take into account the number of young produced, such
as most tests with protozoans, are not considered acute tests, even if the
duration was 96 hours or less.
5. If the tests were conducted properly, acute values reported as "greater
than" values and those which are above the solubility of the test material
should be used, because rejection of such acute values would bias the Final
Acute Value by eliminating acute values for resistant species.
F. If the acute toxicity of the material to aquatic animals has been shown to
be related to a water quality characteristic such as hardness or particulate
matter for freshwater animals, refer to section V of this appendix.
G. The agreement of the data within and between species must be considered.
Acute values that appear to be questionable in comparison with other acute and
chronic data for the same species and for other species in the same genus must
not be used. For example, if the acute values available for a species or genus
differ by more than a factor of 10, rejection of some or all of the values would
be appropriate, absent countervailing circumstances.
H. If the available data indicate that one or more life stages are at least a
factor of two more resistant than one or more other life stages of the same
species, the data for the more resistant life stages must not be used in the
calculation of the SMAV because a species cannot be considered protected from
acute toxicity if all of the life stages are not protected.
I. For each species for which at least one acute value is available, the SMAV
shall be calculated as the geometric mean of the results of all acceptable
flow-through acute toxicity tests in which the concentrations of test material
were measured with the most sensitive tested life stage of the species. For a
species for which no such result is available, the SMAV shall be calculated as
the geometric mean of all acceptable acute toxicity tests with the most
sensitive tested life stage, i.e., results of flow-through tests in which the
concentrations were not measured and results of static and renewal tests based
on initial concentrations (nominal concentrations are acceptable for most test
materials if measured concentrations are not available) of test material. A
renewal test is a test with aquatic organisms in which either the test solution
in a test chamber is removed and replaced at least once during the test or the
test organisms are transferred into a new test solution of the same composition
at least once during the test. A static test is a test with aquatic organisms in
which the solution and organisms that are in a test chamber at the beginning of
the test remain in the chamber until the end of the test, except for removal of
dead test organisms.
Note 1: Data reported by original investigators must not be rounded
off. Results of all intermediate calculations must not be rounded off to fewer
than four significant digits.
Note 2: The geometric mean of N numbers is the Nth root of the product
of the N numbers. Alternatively, the geometric mean can be calculated by adding
the logarithms of the N numbers, dividing the sum by N, and taking the antilog
of the quotient. The geometric mean of two numbers is the square root of the
product of the two numbers, and the geometric mean of one number is that number.
Either natural (base e) or common (base 10) logarithms can be used to calculate
geometric means as long as they are used consistently within each set of data,
i.e., the antilog used must match the logarithms used.
Note 3: Geometric means, rather than arithmetic means, are used here
because the distributions of sensitivities of individual organisms in toxicity
tests on most materials and the distributions of sensitivities of species within
a genus are more likely to be lognormal than normal. Similarly, geometric means
are used for ACRs because quotients are likely to be closer to lognormal than
normal distributions. In addition, division of the geometric mean of a set of
numerators by the geometric mean of the set of denominators will result in the
geometric mean of the set of corresponding quotients.
J. For each genus for which one or more SMAVs are available, the GMAV shall
be calculated as the geometric mean of the SMAVs available for the genus.
K. Order the GMAVs from high to low.
L. Assign ranks, R, to the GMAVs from "1" for the lowest to "N" for the
highest. If two or more GMAVs are identical, assign them successive ranks.
M. Calculate the cumulative probability, P, for each GMAV as R/(N+1).
N. Select the four GMAVs which have cumulative probabilities closest to 0.05
(if there are fewer than 59 GMAVs, these will always be the four lowest GMAVs).
O. Using the four selected GMAVs, and Ps, calculate