Ecological Risk Assessment
"...no adverse effect on human health or the environment." is the 
  mandate of several environmental laws. By now you have a good grasp on the basics 
  of human health risks. From that base we will talk a little about adverse effects 
  on the environment. Here are the main differences between the two types of risk 
  assessment:

Let's discuss each:
  - You realize by now that our estimation of low dose effect on humans is at 
    least one step removed from science for most chemicals, although it is the 
    best we can do. In any given meso-environment or ecosystem there are hundreds 
    or thousand of species, from whales to microorganisms. It is rare we know 
    anything about the toxicity of any particular chemical to more than one or 
    two of these species. If there is a species that is both convenient and relevant, 
    it could be tested, just like Cheeech 
    did to the fish back in Module 1. By convenient I mean amenable to laboratory 
    testing. Relevant means important to the ecosystem in question, recognized 
    by the public, sensitive to the chemical. These are often impractical to find, 
    so standard indicator species are used. These you order from a supply house 
    and are delivered in a day or two. Then they are tested with standard EPA 
    protocols. As for human dose-response estimates, the indicator species are 
    about the best you can do, given normal limitations of time and budget. The 
    resulting dose-response numbers may or may not be relevant.
 
  - For human, we do not what to hurt anybody. Now or ever. For animals in an 
    ecosystem, we can accept some mortality, as long as the population stays healthy. 
    On a macroscale, Fish and Game manages game populations this way. For example, 
    while for humans a one is one million or one in ten thousand chance of harm 
    is acceptable to some. (Note this is computed harm, it may not hurt anyone.) 
    For damage to an ecosystem, a LD10 might be acceptable. That is, it will kill 
    10% of the animal species population. As long as the PRP can demonstrate the 
    population will spring back in a year or two, an LD 50 might be be acceptable.
 
  - For humans we sometimes separate male and females. We always separate children. 
    But that's about it. For ecosystems we must consider trophic levels, i.e., 
    the food chain. Ducks eat lead shot from the bottom of the lake, foxes eat 
    the ducks. Some contaminants increase as they are passed up the food chain
 
  - Effects are impossible to test in humans, but often can be tested in at 
    least some animals.
 
  - Pathways. You remember the pathways for the SCEM 
    on the PCP site. Here the approximate equivalent for an Ecorisk site. 
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