Abstract

ABSTRACT Species sensitivity distributions (SSDs) are used globally to generate water quality guidelines (WQGs). In Canada, a suite of models has been endorsed for describing SSDs. However, these models may not be suitable for substances with multiple modes of toxic action such as pesticides. Pesticides can produce multimodal SSDs where sensitive target organisms comprise one mode of the SSD and non-target organisms comprise the remaining mode(s). Guidelines from this type of SSD might be estimated using only the most sensitive taxa or using a multimodal distribution. The multimodal method presented here uses all data meeting data quality criteria and is thus in keeping with the concept that data comprising an SSD are a random sample from the population of interest rather than a subset thereof. The bimodal method can simultaneously emphasize the more sensitive portion of the dataset by allowing estimation of WQGs using a statistical subset of the data. In the case of the atrazine dataset example, this allowed estimating a WQG emphasizing more sensitive taxa whereas no parametric models fit only the more sensitive data and the small sample size (5) precluded the use of nonparametric methods.

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