Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 310 OF 1816

Main Title Development of an Ecological Risk Assessment Methodology for Assessing Wildlife Exposure Risk Associated with Mercury-Contaminated Sediments in Lake and River Systems. Part 1: Essential Data Requirements. Part 2: SERAFM - Spreadsheet-Based Ecological Risk Assessment for the Fate of Mercury (A Screening-Level Model).
Author Knightes, C. D. ; Ambrose, R. B. ;
CORP Author Environmental Protection Agency, Athens, GA. Ecosystems Research Div.;Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC. Office of Research and Development.
Publisher Jul 2006
Year Published 2006
Report Number EPA/600/R-06/073;
Stock Number PB2006-114098
Additional Subjects Mercury(Metal) ; Water pollution ; Risk assessment ; Wildlife ; Spreadsheets ; Environmental transport ; Sediments ; Limnology ; Lakes ; Rivers ; Environmental exposure pathway ; SERAFM(Spreadsheet-based Ecological Risk Assessment for the Fate of Mercury)
Internet Access
Description Access URL
https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=P1000C4Z.PDF
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
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Status
NTIS  PB2006-114098 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 84p
Abstract
Mercury is an important environmental contaminant with a complex chemistry cycle. The SERAFM model (SERAFM) incorporates the chemical, physical, and biological processes governing mercury transport and fate in a surface water body including: atmospheric deposition; watershed mercury transport, transformations, and loadings; solid transport and cycling within the water body; and water body mercury fate and transport processes. SERAFM is comprised of a series of sub-modules that are linked together in series, so that each part is viewed as a building block within the general modeling framework. SERAFM estimates exposure mercury concentrations in the sediment, water column, and food web, and calculates hazard indices for exposed wildlife and humans. Because mercury risk assessments are complicated due to the different source types, that is, from historical loadings of mercury from current atmospheric deposition and watershed loadings, SERAFM simultaneously calculates exposure conditions for three different scenarios at any given site. These are: (1) the historical case of mercury-contaminated sediments; (2) suggested clean-up levels necessary to protect the most sensitive species, if possible; and (3) background conditions that would be present if there were no historical contamination. The sub-modules within SERAFM include: mercury loading (watershed and atmospheric deposition); abiotic and biotic solids balance (soil erosion, settling, burial, and resuspension); equilibrium partitioning; water body mercury transformation and transport processes; and wildlife risk calculations. The spreadsheet structure of SERAFM permits dismantling and reassembling of specific sub-modules to allow model flexibility and to maintain model transparency.