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Review article

Assessing and Managing Contaminated Sediments: Requirements on Data Quality – from Molecular to River Basin Scale

Ulrich Förstner
Susanne Heise


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Abstract

Management of environmental risks in river basins needs to address quality aspects of sediment – both because of its storage capacity for contaminants and due to its potential function as a secondary source of pollution. Assessment of sediment quality, however, is still prone to a number of uncertainties and insufficient information with regard to regulation, analytical methods, risk assessment and risk management. The European Water Framework Directive (WFD), e.g., has not come up with environmental quality standards for sediments. Lack of harmonization, representativeness and traceability of sediment data, not fully understood processes governing bioavailability of sediment-bound contaminants, all add up to the uncertainty that needs to be quantified. This paper details uncertainties ranging from the molecular to the basin scale level with regard to sediment quality assessment and its integration into management approaches, and it suggests ways of how to cope with a lack of data and insecure data while still developing an overview of basin wide risks.

Keywords

contaminated sediment; environmental quality standards; monitoring; risk assessment; river catchment; traceability; uncertainty

Hrčak ID:

2595

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/2595

Publication date:

22.4.2006.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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