M. Bombardier et C. Blaise, Comparative study of the sediment-toxicity index, benthic community metrics and contaminant concentrations, WAT QUAL RE, 35(4), 2000, pp. 753-780
This paper demonstrates how a new tool for integrating the results of a bat
tery of sediment toxicity tests can be effective in assessing the relative
toxic potential of freshwater sediments to aquatic organisms. This tool, ca
lled the Sediment-Toxicity (:SED-TOX) Index, was applied to laboratory toxi
city data derived from two larger projects conducted on freshwater sediment
s. The SED-TOX Index generates a single value that represents all the resul
ts of the different STTs on a common, easily interpreted scale. The SED-TOX
results were tentatively correlated with four benthic community metrics (s
pecies richness, number of taxa in the orders Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and
Trichoptera, the Shannon-Wiener diversity index, and the ICI-SL, which is
a version of the invertebrate community index modified for the St. Lawrence
River) and levels of sediment contamination. Although not significant (p =
0.07), SED-TOX scores were most closely related with ICI-SL values; high S
ED-TOX scores (greater than or equal to 2.0) were always associated with lo
wer ICI-SL scores (<8), which suggests benthos degradation. Agreement was o
bserved between chemistry and SED-TOX results in extreme situations. Indeed
, 70% of the sites showing a high hazard potential (greater than or equal t
o 2.0) in the SED-TOX Index had mean sediment quality guideline (SQG) quoti
ents >5, while 86% of those with a marginal SED-TOX score (0.1 to 0.9) had
mean SQG quotients <1. The SED-TOX Index was useful for discriminating sedi
ments based on their hazard potential to a variety of test species and for
predicting most (but not all) of the extreme chemistry and benthic communit
y results.