Abstract

The goal of this study was to incorporate community data into the effect assessment of environmental and regulatory relevant metal mixtures. In this experiment three fixed mixture ratios (Canadian soil quality guideline ratio - CSQG; Agricultural, residential and Loamy ratio – ARL; and Sudbury ratio – SUD) were tested in a natural community microcosm with 11 doses for each mixture ratio. The effect of metal mixtures on the community was measured using the community effect concentration (EC) concept which assumes that as contamination increases, the community similarity between test and control treatments decreases producing a dose response curve allowing the calculation of community effect concentrations. In regulatory mixture ratios (CSQG and ARL) community EC10s were four times higher than regulatory thresholds and current regulation might be overprotective of the microarthropod communities in some soils. For the contaminated site ratio (SUD), the field dose in the contaminated site corresponded to a community EC20 and if metal concentrations were reduced by 1TU, (from 3.1TU to 2.1TU) effects would be below a community EC10. Overall, the community EC concept was successfully applied and has the potential for inclusion in risk assessment schemes as a measure of community response.

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