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Sediment Quality Objectives for California Enclosed Bays and Estuaries Benthic Indicator Development. Scientific Steering Committee 26 th July 2005. Overview . Why Benthos and Benthic Indices? The Index Development Process Define Habitat Strata Calibrate Candidate Benthic Indices
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Sediment Quality Objectivesfor California Enclosed Bays and EstuariesBenthic Indicator Development Scientific Steering Committee 26th July 2005
Overview • Why Benthos and Benthic Indices? • The Index Development Process • Define Habitat Strata • Calibrate Candidate Benthic Indices • Validate and Evaluate Candidate Indices • Proposed Next Steps
Why Benthos? • Benthic organisms are living resources • Direct measure of what legislation intends to protect • They are good indicators • Sensitive, limited mobility, high exposure, integrate impacts, integrate over time • Already being used to make regulatory and sediment management decisions • Santa Monica Bay removed from 303(d) list • Listed for metals in the early 1990’s • 301(h) waivers granted to dischargers • Toxic hotspot designations for the Bay Protection and Toxic Cleanup Program
Benthic Assessments Pose Several Challenges • Interpreting species abundances is difficult • Samples may have tens of species and hundreds of organisms • Benthic species and abundances vary naturally with habitat • Different assemblages occur in different habitats • Comparisons to determine altered states should vary accordingly • Sampling methods vary • Gear, sampling area and sieve size affect species and individuals captured
Benthic Indices Meet These Challenges • Benthic Indices • Remove much of the subjectivity associated with data interpretation • Account for habitat differences • Are single values • Provide simple means of • Communicating complex information to managers • Tracking trends over time • Correlating benthic responses with stressor data • Are included in the U.S. EPA’s guidance for biocriteria development
Overview • Why Benthos and Benthic Indices? • The Index Development Process • Define Habitat Strata • Calibrate Candidate Benthic Indices • Validate and Evaluate Candidate Indices • Proposed Next Steps
Define Habitat Strata • Rationale • Species and abundances vary naturally from habitat to habitat • Benthic indicators and definitions of reference condition should vary accordingly • Objectives • Identify naturally occurring benthic assemblages, and • The habitat factors that structure them
Approach • Identify assemblages by cluster analysis • Standard choices • Species in ≥ 2 samples • ³√ transform, species mean standardization • Bray Curtis dissimilarity with step-across adjustment • Flexible sorting ß=-0.25 • Evaluate habitat differences between assemblages • Salinity, % fines, depth, latitude, longitude, TOC • Using Mann-Whitney tests
Data • EMAP data enhanced by regional data sets • Comparable methods • Sampling, measurements, taxonomy • OR and WA data included • Potential to increase amount of data for index development • 1164 samples in database • Eliminated potentially contaminated sites • ≥ 1 chemical > ERM or ≥ 4 chemicals > ERL • Toxic to amphipods • Located close to point sources • DO < 2 ppm • 714 samples analyzed
Overview • Why Benthos and Benthic Indices? • The Index Development Process • Define Habitat Strata • Calibrate Candidate Benthic Indices • Validate and Evaluate Candidate Indices • Proposed Next Steps
Common Definitions • A common set of definitions were established • For “Good” and “Bad” sites • Used in two ways • Identify data to be withheld from index development • Subsequently used to validate index • Goal: A set of clearly affected or reference sites to evaluate index performance • “A Gold Standard” • Identify reference and degraded condition for index calibration
Common Criteria“Good” (Reference) Sites • Meet all the following criteria: • Far from known point sources • Data available for sediment chemistry and at least one amphipod toxicity test • No ERM* exceedences • No more than 3 ERL* exceedences • No toxicity • Amphipod survival > 83% • Species abundance list does not indicate bad biology (In progress) *: As, Cd, Cu, Pb, Hg, Ag, Zn, Hmw(8) & Lmw(11) PAH, Total PCB
Common Criteria“Bad” (Degraded) Sites • Meet both of the following criteria • 1 or more ERM exceedences, or 3 or more ERL exceedences, and • >50% mortality in an acute amphipod test
National vs. CA data North South
The Calibration Process • Identify habitats with sufficient data • “Good” and “Bad” sites • For index calibration and validation • Distribute calibration data • Teams calibrate candidate indices • Distribute independent data for validation • Teams apply candidates to data • Results compiled for evaluation
Overview • Why Benthos and Benthic Indices? • The Index Development Process • Define Habitat Strata • Calibrate Candidate Benthic Indices • Validate and Evaluate Candidate Indices • Proposed Next Steps
Index Validation Approaches • Classification accuracy • Chemistry and toxicity • Biologist best professional judgment • Repeatability • Same day • Same site on different days • Independence from natural gradients • Correlations with other information • Species richness • Other indices
Potential Reasons for Low Classification Accuracy • Do threshold and scaling problems exist? • Does an index correlate well with condition, but an incorrect threshold lead to the wrong interpretation? • Are chemistry-toxicity “bad” definitions inadequate? • Chemistry criteria were less stringent than many other benthic index efforts
Are Validation Sites Misclassified? • Is our “Gold Standard” correct? • Are multiple indices disagreeing? • How do index disagreements relate to biology? • Samples with multiple disagreements evaluated • Using biologist best professional judgment
Biology Comparison • For six of seven samples • Biologists agreed that the chemistry-toxicity status was incorrect • All four biologists agreed for four samples • 75% agreement for other two • “Gold Standard” is tarnished
Overview • Why Benthos and Benthic Indices? • The Index Development Process • Define Habitat Strata • Calibrate Candidate Benthic Indices • Validate and Evaluate Candidate Indices • Proposed Next Steps
Complete the Index Validation Process • Classification accuracy • Chemistry and toxicity • Biologist best professional judgment • Repeatability • Same day • Same site on different days • Independence from natural gradients • Correlations with other information • Species richness • Other indices
Biology Classification • Panel of six external experts • Evaluate 20-25 samples • Samples where 5 of 6 experts agree will establish a new “Gold Standard” • To be used in the same way as the chemistry-toxicity classification
Repeatability • Identify sites where • Multiple samples were collected on the same visit • Multiple visits to the same site • Evaluate candidate index stability
Summary • We will be able to develop benthic indices for two habitats • Some indices validating well • Validation rates with sediment toxicity and chemistry data are low • Need to re-visit our scaling methods for some indices • Need to establishing biology-based good and bad criteria • Best professional judgment of an independent panel of experts • Have more validation steps to complete before making final selections