{"title":"特有的土壤动物物种是否需要额外的保护来应对不利的重金属环境?","authors":"Herman Eijsackers, Mark Maboeta","doi":"10.1007/398_2021_72","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The concept of Ecotoxicological Species Sensitivity Distributions, as used in EU and US, to derive environmental standards for contaminants, starts from the assumption that by protecting the majority of species (95% confidence interval) all species will be protected. Nevertheless, 5% of the species outside the confidence interval might become harmed; half of it being the most sensitive for the particular compound tested. With respect to protection of rare endemic species it is not clear, however, if contamination is a driving factor for endemicity. The aim of this paper is to explore whether endemic and rare species deserve extra protection from adverse environmental conditions. To this end, a brief overview of the various forms of endemism, their relation to environmental stress factors and the distribution of endemic species is discussed. Further, the sensitivities of these species towards environmental stress factors are analysed, in order to conclude if and how endemic species could be better protected against environmental stress factors. This was achieved by specifically focusing on the potential impacts of metalliferous soils, mining, the treatment of mined soil and the storage of treated mine waste. It is concluded that at present there are some signals about specific sensitivities, but the database is much too small for a definite conclusion about adverse environmental factors as a threat to endemic species. The data gap has to be filled in with experimental tests with endemic species. This is hampered by the protection status of these endemic, rare species. Recommendations and derived activities are proposed to address this.</p>","PeriodicalId":21182,"journal":{"name":"Reviews of environmental contamination and toxicology","volume":"258 ","pages":"55-71"},"PeriodicalIF":6.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Do Endemic Soil Fauna Species Deserve Extra Protection for Adverse Heavy Metal Conditions?\",\"authors\":\"Herman Eijsackers, Mark Maboeta\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/398_2021_72\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The concept of Ecotoxicological Species Sensitivity Distributions, as used in EU and US, to derive environmental standards for contaminants, starts from the assumption that by protecting the majority of species (95% confidence interval) all species will be protected. Nevertheless, 5% of the species outside the confidence interval might become harmed; half of it being the most sensitive for the particular compound tested. With respect to protection of rare endemic species it is not clear, however, if contamination is a driving factor for endemicity. The aim of this paper is to explore whether endemic and rare species deserve extra protection from adverse environmental conditions. To this end, a brief overview of the various forms of endemism, their relation to environmental stress factors and the distribution of endemic species is discussed. Further, the sensitivities of these species towards environmental stress factors are analysed, in order to conclude if and how endemic species could be better protected against environmental stress factors. This was achieved by specifically focusing on the potential impacts of metalliferous soils, mining, the treatment of mined soil and the storage of treated mine waste. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
生态毒理学物种敏感性分布(Ecotoxicological Species Sensitivity distribution)的概念被欧盟和美国用来推导污染物的环境标准,其出发点是假设通过保护大多数物种(95%置信区间),所有物种都将得到保护。然而,在置信区间外,5%的物种可能会受到伤害;其中一半是对特定化合物最敏感的。然而,在保护稀有地方性物种方面,尚不清楚污染是否是地方性的驱动因素。本文的目的是探讨在不利的环境条件下,特有和稀有物种是否应该得到额外的保护。为此,本文简要介绍了各种形式的特有种,它们与环境胁迫因子的关系以及特有种的分布。此外,还分析了这些物种对环境应激因子的敏感性,以确定是否以及如何更好地保护特有物种免受环境应激因子的影响。这是通过特别注重含金属土壤、采矿、开采土壤的处理和处理后的矿山废物的储存的潜在影响来实现的。结论是,目前有一些关于特定敏感性的信号,但数据库太小,无法确定不利环境因素是否对特有物种构成威胁。必须用特有物种的实验测试来填补数据空白。这些地方性稀有物种的保护状况阻碍了这一进程。为此提出了建议和衍生活动。
Do Endemic Soil Fauna Species Deserve Extra Protection for Adverse Heavy Metal Conditions?
The concept of Ecotoxicological Species Sensitivity Distributions, as used in EU and US, to derive environmental standards for contaminants, starts from the assumption that by protecting the majority of species (95% confidence interval) all species will be protected. Nevertheless, 5% of the species outside the confidence interval might become harmed; half of it being the most sensitive for the particular compound tested. With respect to protection of rare endemic species it is not clear, however, if contamination is a driving factor for endemicity. The aim of this paper is to explore whether endemic and rare species deserve extra protection from adverse environmental conditions. To this end, a brief overview of the various forms of endemism, their relation to environmental stress factors and the distribution of endemic species is discussed. Further, the sensitivities of these species towards environmental stress factors are analysed, in order to conclude if and how endemic species could be better protected against environmental stress factors. This was achieved by specifically focusing on the potential impacts of metalliferous soils, mining, the treatment of mined soil and the storage of treated mine waste. It is concluded that at present there are some signals about specific sensitivities, but the database is much too small for a definite conclusion about adverse environmental factors as a threat to endemic species. The data gap has to be filled in with experimental tests with endemic species. This is hampered by the protection status of these endemic, rare species. Recommendations and derived activities are proposed to address this.
期刊介绍:
Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology publishes reviews pertaining to the sources, transport, fate and effects of contaminants in the environment. The journal provides a place for the publication of critical reviews of the current knowledge and understanding of environmental sciences in order to provide insight into contaminant pathways, fate and behavior in environmental compartments and the possible consequences of their presence, with multidisciplinary contributions from the fields of analytical chemistry, biochemistry, biology, ecology, molecular and cellular biology (in an environmental context), and human, wildlife and environmental toxicology.
•Standing on a 55+ year history of publishing environmental toxicology reviews
•Now publishing in journal format boasting rigorous review and expanded editorial board
•Publishing home for extensive environmental reviews dealing with sources, transport, fate and effect of contaminants
•Through Springer Compact agreements, authors from participating institutions can publish Open Choice at no cost to the authors