6533b7d7fe1ef96bd12679af

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ecological risk assessment of agricultural soils for the definition of soil screening values: A comparison between substance-based and matrix-based approaches

Maria Cristina LavagnoloGiovanni BeggioBarbara ManachiniStefano VaninRoberto RagaAlberto Pivato

subject

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEngineeringS10211 other engineering and technologiesSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaLegislation02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesArticleEnvironmental scienceQH301Multidisciplinary approachEnvironmental protectionEcological risklcsh:Social sciences (General)lcsh:Science (General)0105 earth and related environmental sciences021110 strategic defence & security studiesContaminated soilsMultidisciplinarySettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-Ambientalebusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataAgricultureSustainable managementSoil waterlcsh:H1-99Environmental science; Multidisciplinarybusinesslcsh:Q1-390

description

The Italian legislation on contaminated soils does not include the Ecological Risk Assessment (ERA) and this deficiency has important consequences for the sustainable management of agricultural soils. The present research compares the results of two ERA procedures applied to agriculture (i) one based on the “substance-based” approach and (ii) a second based on the “matrix-based” approach. In the former the soil screening values (SVs) for individual substances were derived according to institutional foreign guidelines. In the latter, the SVs characterizing the whole-matrix were derived originally by the authors by means of experimental activity.\ud \ud \ud The results indicate that the “matrix-based” approach can be efficiently implemented in the Italian legislation for the ERA of agricultural soils. This method, if compared to the institutionalized “substance based” approach is (i) comparable in economic terms and in testing time, (ii) is site specific and assesses the real effect of the investigated soil on a battery of bioassays, (iii) accounts for phenomena that may radically modify the exposure of the organisms to the totality of contaminants and (iv) can be considered sufficiently conservative.

10.1016/j.heliyon.2017.e00284http://hdl.handle.net/10447/235913