Abstract

This ecological risk assessment was designed to characterize risk of copper and cadmium exposure in the Chesapeake Bay watershed by comparing the probability distributions of environmental exposure concentrations with the probability distributions of species response data determined from laboratory studies. The overlap of these distributions was a measure of risk to aquatic life. Dissolved copper and cadmium exposure data were available from six primary data sources covering 102 stations in 18 basins in the Chesapeake Bay watershed from 1985 through 1996. Highest environmental concentrations of copper (based on 90th percentiles) were reported in the Chesapeake and Delaware (C and D) Canal, Choptank River, Middle River, and Potomac River; the lowest concentrations of copper were reported in the lower and middle mainstem Chesapeake Bay and Nanticoke River. Based on the calculation of 90th percentiles, cadmium concentrations were highest in the C and D Canal, Potomac River, Upper Chesapeake Bay, and West Chesapeake watershed. Lowest environmental concentrations of cadmium were reported in the lower and middle mainstem Chesapeake Bay and Susquehanna River. The ecological effects data used for this risk assessment were derived primarily from acute copper and cadmium laboratory toxicity tests conducted in both fresh water and salt water; chronic data were much more limited. The 10th percentile (concentration protecting 90% of the species) for all species derived from the freshwater acute copper toxicity database was 8.3 μg/L. For acute saltwater copper data, the 10th percentile for all species was 6.3 μg/L copper. The acute 10th percentile for all species in the freshwater cadmium database was 5.1 μg/L cadmium. The acute 10th percentile for all saltwater species was 31.7 μg/L cadmium. Highest potential ecological risk from copper exposures was reported in the C and D Canal area of the northern Chesapeake Bay watershed. Relatively high potential ecological risk from copper exposure was also reported in Middle River. Moderate potential ecological risk from copper exposure was reported in selected locations in the Choptank and Potomac Rivers. Potential ecological risk from copper exposure was either low or data were insufficient to assess ecological risk in the other 14 basins. Potential ecological risk from cadmium exposures was much lower than for copper. Highest potential ecological risk from cadmium exposure was reported in the C and D Canal. Low to moderate potential ecological risk for the most sensitive trophic group (fish) was reported in the Potomac River, upper mainstem bay, West Chesapeake watershed, Choptank River, and Chester River. In the other 12 basins, ecological risk was either judged to be low or insufficient data were available for determining risk.

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