Planning transboundary ecological risk assessments at military installations

Rebecca A. Efroymson, Virginia H. Dale, Latha M. Baskaran, Michael Chang, Matthew Aldridge, Michael W. Berry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ecological risk assessments at military installations that are performed to support natural resources management objectives rely on information from the surrounding region. Stressors such as noise, ozone, and ozone precursors cross installation boundaries, and effects of urbanization and highway development are regional in scale. Ecological populations are not limited to one side of the installation boundary. Therefore, a framework for transboundary ecological risk assessment at military installations is under development. This article summarizes the problem formulation stage. Components include: (1) regional management goals such as installation Integrated Natural Resources Management Plans and land acquisition, (2) involvement of multiple stressors, and (3) large-scale assessment endpoint entities. Challenges of selecting measures of exposure include: quantifying exposure to aggregate stressors, describing land cover consistently in the region, describing rates of land-cover transition, scaling local measurements to a region, and aggregating or isolating exposures from within and outside of the installation. Measures of effect that are important to transboundary or regional ecological risk assessments at military installations are those that represent: effects at a distance from the stressor, large-scale effects, effects of habitat change or fragmentation, spatial extrapolations of localized effects, and integrated effects of multiple stressors. These factors are reflected in conceptual models.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1193-1215
Number of pages23
JournalHuman and Ecological Risk Assessment
Volume11
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2005

Funding

We thank John Housein of the U.S. Army Environment Center for information about Army Compatible Use Buffers. The work was funded by a contract from the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP) project CS-1259 to Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), which is managed by the UT-Battelle, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725.

FundersFunder number
U.S. Department of EnergyDE-AC05-00OR22725
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Strategic Environmental Research and Development ProgramCS-1259

    Keywords

    • Ecological risk assessment
    • Military
    • Problem formulation
    • Regional risk assessment
    • Scaling

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