4.7 Article

Bridging the lab to field divide: Advancing oil spill biological effects models requires revisiting aquatic toxicity testing

Journal

AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY
Volume 256, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2022.106389

Keywords

Aquatic toxicity; Oil exposure modeling; Biological effects modeling; Oil spill impact; Toxic unit model

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Oil fate and exposure modeling is used to estimate exposure histories of oil components and environmental conditions over time. Different approaches have been developed to predict adverse effects resulting from these exposures. Toxicity-based screening thresholds and concentration-response relationships are used to assess the effects of oil components. The use of toxic unit models and single compound toxicity data help quantify the effects of oil constituents on aquatic organisms. Well-characterized whole oil bioassay data should be used to validate and refine these models.
Oil fate and exposure modeling addresses the complexities of oil composition, weathering, partitioning in the environment, and the distributions and behaviors of aquatic biota to estimate exposure histories, i.e., oil component concentrations and environmental conditions experienced over time. Several approaches with increasing levels of complexity (i.e., aquatic toxicity model tiers, corresponding to varying purposes and ap-plications) have been and continue to be developed to predict adverse effects resulting from these exposures. At Tiers 1 and 2, toxicity-based screening thresholds for assumed representative oil component compositions are used to inform spill response and risk evaluations, requiring limited toxicity data, analytical oil characterizations, and computer resources. Concentration-response relationships are employed in Tier 3 to quantify effects of assumed oil component mixture compositions. Oil spill modeling capabilities presently allow predictions of spatial and temporal compositional changes during exposure, which support mixture-based modeling frame-works. Such approaches rely on summed effects of components using toxic units to enable more realistic analyses (Tier 4). This review provides guidance for toxicological studies to inform the development of, provide input to, and validate Tier 4 aquatic toxicity models for assessing oil spill effects on aquatic biota. Evaluation of organisms' exposure histories using a toxic unit model reflects the current state-of the-science and provides an improved approach for quantifying effects of oil constituents on aquatic organisms. Since the mixture compositions in toxicity tests are not representative of field exposures, modelers rely on studies using single compounds to build toxicity models accounting for the additive effects of dynamic mixture exposures that occur after spills. Single compound toxicity data are needed to quantify the influence of exposure duration and modifying environmental factors (e.g., temperature, light) on observed effects for advancing use of this frame-work. Well-characterized whole oil bioassay data should be used to validate and refine these models.

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