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INCORPORATING MULTIPLE LINES OF EVIDENCE INTO SEDIMENT QUALITY OBJECTIVES

INCORPORATING MULTIPLE LINES OF EVIDENCE INTO SEDIMENT QUALITY OBJECTIVES. Stephen B. Weisberg Southern California Coastal Water Research Project. BACKGROUND. For many years, scientist have advocated a triad approach for evaluating sediment quality

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INCORPORATING MULTIPLE LINES OF EVIDENCE INTO SEDIMENT QUALITY OBJECTIVES

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  1. INCORPORATING MULTIPLE LINES OF EVIDENCE INTO SEDIMENT QUALITY OBJECTIVES Stephen B. Weisberg Southern California Coastal Water Research Project

  2. BACKGROUND • For many years, scientist have advocated a triad approach for evaluating sediment quality • Individual lines of evidence each have potential limitations • Most applications have been site-specific and based on best professional judgment • There are many challenges in translating scientific concept into a state-wide regulatory framework • Standardizing interpretation • Ph.D. biologists vs. B.S. engineers

  3. LARGEST CONCERNS YOU EXPRESSED RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCIENCE AND POLICY • There are a spectrum of decisions • Selecting indicators and thresholds from individual lines of evidence • Joining multiple lines of evidence to make a station assessment • Joining multiple stations to make a water body (on site) assessment • Science is about linearizing complex information • Policy is about establishing thresholds along those gradients • Policy becomes predominant at the higher levels of information • Reconsider using a linear, numerical scoring system • Implies a linearity that may not exist • Assures equal weighting among different lines or evidence • Enhance interaction with stakeholders • Integration framework is a combination of science and policy • Place greater emphasis on application guidance

  4. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCIENCE AND POLICY • There are a spectrum of decisions • Selecting indicators and thresholds from individual lines of evidence • Joining multiple lines of evidence to make a station assessment • Joining multiple stations to make a water body (on site) assessment • Science is about linearizing complex information • Policy is about establishing thresholds along those gradients • Policy becomes predominant at the higher levels of information Species Abundance Species Abundance

  5. LARGEST CONCERNS YOU EXPRESSED APPLICATION GUIDANCE • Moving from site-based objectives to water body assessments • Selecting implementation options where there are no chemical-specific thresholds • Consider a sequential of phased sampling approach where effort is proportional to the nature of the problem • Reconsider using a linear, numerical scoring system • Implies a linearity that may not exist • Assures equal weighting among different lines or evidence • Enhance interaction with stakeholders • Integration framework is a combination of science and policy • Place greater emphasis on application guidance

  6. LARGEST CONCERNS YOU EXPRESSED • Reconsider using a linear, numerical scoring system • Implies a linearity that may not exist • Assures equal weighting among different lines or evidence • Enhance interaction with stakeholders • Integration framework is a combination of science and policy • Place greater emphasis on application guidance

  7. MLOE WORKPLAN BENEFICIAL USE PROTECTION CATEGORIES • Aquatic life (Infaunal) effects • Human health effects • Fish and wildlife effects • MLOE will be used within each, but independent assessments will be conducted for each beneficial use • Task 1: Define the lines of evidence that will be used for each beneficial use • Select the indicators for those lines of evidence • Task 2: Develop a scoring system for each LOE • When a single indicator is available • When multiple indicators are available • Task 3: Integrate scoring across multiple LOEs to develop a station assessment • Task 4: Develop a strategy for incomplete data • Task 5: Develop application guidance

  8. MLOE WORKPLAN • Task 1: Define the lines of evidence that will be used for each beneficial use • Select the indicators for those lines of evidence • Task 2: Develop a scoring system for each LOE • When a single indicator is available • When multiple indicators are available • Task 3: Integrate scoring across multiple LOEs to develop a station assessment • Task 4: Develop a strategy for incomplete data • Task 5: Develop application guidance

  9. CLASSIC TRIAD APPROACH • Score each LOE as a binary decision • This yields 8 narratively-interpretable integrated endpoints • Relies heavily on best professional judgement • Assessment tools are too crude for binary decisions • Eight endpoints don’t capture uncertainty within individual LOE

  10. CLASSIC TRIAD APPROACH • Score each LOE as a binary decision • This yields 8 narratively-interpretable integrated endpoints • Relies heavily on best professional judgement • Assessment tools are too crude for binary decisions • Eight endpoints don’t capture uncertainty within individual LOE

  11. ALTERNATIVE APPROACH • Create multiple categories for each line of evidence • Recognize uncertainty associated with a single threshold • Leads to many more than 8 combinations • A headache, but provides more information • Allows for assessment of endpoints that describe magnitude of effects • Also allows for endpoints that describe confidence in the result • Confidence based on level of effect or agreement among individual lines of evidence

  12. AGREEMENT ABOUT CATEGORIES LIKELY ASSESSMENT CATEGORIES FOR INDIVIDUAL LINES OF EVIDENCE • Reference condition • Slight deviation from reference • Probably defined by measurement error • Moderate effect • Severe effect • Individual lines of evidence • MLOE site assessment

  13. AGREEMENT ABOUT CATEGORIES • Individual lines of evidence • MLOE: Site assessment

  14. POSSIBLE SITE ASSESSMENT CATEGORIES • Reference • Unimpaired • Unimpacted • Unaffected • Protected • Affected • Individual line of evidence • Impacted • Site level • Merging multiple lines of evidence • Impaired • Water body level • Merging multiple sites • Unimpacted • Likely unimpacted • Possibly impacted • Likely impacted • Clearly impacted • Inconclusive?

  15. POSSIBLE SITE ASSESSMENT CATEGORIES • Unimpacted • Likely unimpacted • Possibly impacted • Likely impacted • Clearly impacted • Inconclusive?

  16. CHEMISTRY: Reference Toxicity Benthos

  17. CHEMISTRY: Minor Deviation Toxicity Benthos

  18. CHEMISTRY: Moderate Effect Toxicity Benthos

  19. CHEMISTRY: Severe Effect Toxicity Benthos

  20. NUMERICAL SYSTEM • Can be simpler than look-up charts • Also can provide more gradation for prioritization or trends analysis • Assumes a linearity • Assumes an equal weighting • Assumes the stakeholders community counts it

  21. MLOE WORKPLAN • Task 1: Define the lines of evidence that will be used for each beneficial use • Select the indicators for those lines of evidence • Task 2: Develop a scoring system for each LOE • When a single indicator is available • When multiple indicators are available • Task 3: Integrate scoring across multiple LOEs to develop a station assessment • Task 4: Develop a strategy for incomplete data • Task 5: Develop application guidance

  22. APPLICATION GUIDANCE • Inherently a policy issue • Stakeholder advisory committee has been tasked to do this • They have formed subcommittees to develop guidance for three applications • 303d listings • Dredging decisions • NPDES permitting

  23. TECHNICAL SUPPORT • Uncertainty analysis • Sampling design guidance • Phased sampling design • Guidance for identifying contaminants of concern

  24. UNCERTAINTY ANALYSIS • Assessing uncertainty at the station level • Measurement variability • Assessment tool error • Defining background level of “impact” • No system is likely to have completely unimpacted sites • Identify systems (or subsystems) that are least influenced • Use project data base to create a frequency plot for those systems

  25. TECHNICAL SUPPORT • Uncertainty analysis • Sampling design guidance • Phased sampling design • Guidance for identifying contaminants of concern

  26. IDENTIFYING CONTAMINANTS OF CONCERN • Chemical specific thresholds • Don’t want to rely on chemistry as a sole means for impairment decision, but chemical thresholds can be useful guidance for implementation actions • Spatial gradient analyses • Probably better in concept than practice • Sediment TIES • This is a key area for scientific advance in support of management

  27. MLOE WORKPLAN • Task 1: Define the lines of evidence that will be used for each beneficial use • Select the indicators for those lines of evidence • Task 2: Develop a scoring system for each LOE • When a single indicator is available • When multiple indicators are available • Task 3: Integrate scoring across multiple LOEs to develop a station assessment • Task 4: Develop a strategy for incomplete data • Task 5: Develop application guidance

  28. WHICH INDICATORS? • Infaunal effects • Sediment chemistry • Sediment toxicity • Benthic infaunal assemblage • Human health • Sediment chemistry • Fish/bivalve tissue chemistry • Fish/wildlife • Sediment chemistry • Tissue exposure • Biological effects

  29. MULTIPLE INDICATORS WITHINA LINE OF EVIDENCE • Multiple toxicity tests available for the site • Chronic and acute tests • Multiple ways to interpret the same data • Equilibrium partitioning vs. empirical thresholds • Several alternatives for integrating such data

  30. POSSIBLE SCORING APPROACHES • Average score • Worst score • They each measure different things • Prioritizing among tests • Most sensitive test • Least sensitive test • “Best” test • Highest quality data • Some combination of frequency and severity

  31. PROPOSED SCORING WHEN MULTIPLE INDICATORS ARE MEASURED

  32. WHAT IF ONLY TWO LINES OF EVIDENCE ARE AVAILABLE? • Looking for a combination of concordance and magnitude • Unimpacted: No effect from either indicator • Likely unimpacted: Small effect with no indicator, but no effect for the other • Inconslusive: Large effect with one indicator but no effect for the other • Likely impacted: Some effect for both indicators • Clearly impacted: High effect for both indicators

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