National Status and Trends, Benthic Surveillance Project Chemistry Data, 1984-1992, National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
Data Set (DS) | National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science (NCCOS)GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:39256 | Updated: October 17, 2023 | Published / External
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Summary
Short Citation
National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, 2025: National Status and Trends, Benthic Surveillance Project Chemistry Data, 1984-1992, National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, http://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/inport/item/39256.
Full Citation Examples
The National Status and Trends (NSandT) Benthic Surveillance Project Chemistry data file reports the trace concentrations of a suite of chemical contaminants in marine sediment and benthic fish tissue samples collected from all U.S. coastal regions from 1984 to 1992. The sediment and tissue samples were analyzed for major and trace elements and a suite of organic chemical constituents, including butyltins, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and pesticides. The Benthic Surveillance Project Tissue Chemistry file is constructed as a vertically formatted table.
Distribution Information
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XML (Structured Text)
Live Data and Maps
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Text (Unstructured)
Live Data and Maps
None
NOAA requests that all individuals who download NSandT data acknowledge the source of these data in any reports, papers, or presentations. If you publish these data, please include a statement similar to: "Some or all of the data described in this article were produced by NOAA through its National Status and Trends Program".
Controlled Theme Keywords
environment
Child Items
Type | Title |
---|---|
Entity | Dataset Parameters for Benthic Surveillance Chemistry data |
Contact Information
Point of Contact
NCCOS Scientific Data Coordinator
NCCOS.data@noaa.gov
Metadata Contact
NCCOS Scientific Data Coordinator
NCCOS.data@noaa.gov
Extents
-159.356° W,
-66.181° E,
61.133° N,
17.939° S
1984 - 1992
Item Identification
Title: | National Status and Trends, Benthic Surveillance Project Chemistry Data, 1984-1992, National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science |
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Short Name: | bs_analyte |
Status: | Completed |
Publication Date: | 1992 |
Abstract: |
The National Status and Trends (NSandT) Benthic Surveillance Project Chemistry data file reports the trace concentrations of a suite of chemical contaminants in marine sediment and benthic fish tissue samples collected from all U.S. coastal regions from 1984 to 1992. The sediment and tissue samples were analyzed for major and trace elements and a suite of organic chemical constituents, including butyltins, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and pesticides. The Benthic Surveillance Project Tissue Chemistry file is constructed as a vertically formatted table. |
Purpose: |
In response to concerns over environmental quality of the Nation's coastal and estuarine ecosystems, NOAA created the National Status and Trends (NSandT) Program in 1984. From 1984 through 1993, the Benthic Surveillance Project monitored chemical concentrations in the livers (and for metabolites of PAH's in the bile) of bottom-dwelling fish and in sediments at the sites of fish capture. The Benthic Surveillance Project also measured the biological effects of contaminant exposure, primarily as prevalence's of toxicopathic liver diseases. |
Notes: |
986 |
Keywords
Theme Keywords
Thesaurus | Keyword |
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ISO 19115 Topic Category |
environment
|
UNCONTROLLED | |
None | butyltins |
None | chemical contaminants of benthic fish |
None | chemical contaminants of marine sediments |
None | coastal monitoring |
None | DDTs |
None | grain size |
None | inorganic analytes |
None | metals |
None | NCCOS Research Data Type > Field Observation |
None | NCCOS Research Priority > Long-term Monitoring |
None | NCCOS Research Priority > Stressors, Impacts, Mitigation, and Restoration (SIMR) |
None | NCCOS Research Topic > Bioeffects/Toxicity |
None | NCCOS Research Topic > Chemical Contaminants |
None | NCCOS Research Topic > Monitoring |
None | NSandT |
None | oceans |
None | organic analytes |
None | organochlorine pesticides |
None | PAHs |
None | PCBs |
None | Persistent Organic pollutants |
None | pollution |
None | polychlorinated biphenyls |
None | polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons |
None | POPs |
None | TBTs |
None | TIC |
None | TOC |
None | total inorganic carbon |
None | total organic carbon |
Spatial Keywords
Thesaurus | Keyword |
---|---|
UNCONTROLLED | |
None | Apalachicola Bay, St. George Island |
None | Arroyo Colorado, Arroyo City |
None | Baltimore Harbor, Brewerton Channel |
None | Baltimore Harbor, Fort McHenry Channel |
None | Barataria Bay, Barataria Pass |
None | Beaufort Sea, Oliktok Point |
None | Beaufort Sea, Prudhoe Bay |
None | Bering Sea, Dutch Harbor |
None | Bering Sea, Kuskokwim River |
None | Bering Sea, Kvichak Bay |
None | Bering Sea, Port Moller |
None | Bering Sea, Yukon River |
None | Biscayne Bay, Chicken Key |
None | Biscayne Bay, North Bay |
None | Boca de Quadra, Bacrian Point |
None | Bodega Bay, North |
None | Boston Harbor, Deer Island |
None | Boston Harbor, Hull Bay |
None | Boston Harbor, Mystic River |
None | Boston Harbor, President Roads |
None | Boston Harbor, Quincy Bay |
None | Buzzards Bay, West Island |
None | Calcasieu River, Bayou d Inde |
None | Calcasieu River, Prien Lake |
None | Calcasieu River, West Cove |
None | Cape Elizabeth, Richmond Island |
None | Cape Fear River, Horseshoe Shaol |
None | Casco Bay, Cousins Island |
None | Casco Bay, Great Chebeague Island |
None | Charleston Harbor, Coastal |
None | Charleston Harbor, South Channel |
None | Charlotte Harbor, Cape Haze |
None | Chesapeake Bay, Chester River |
None | Chesapeake Bay, Elizabeth River |
None | Chesapeake Bay, Gibson Island |
None | Chesapeake Bay, James River |
None | Chesapeake Bay, Kent Island |
None | Chesapeake Bay, Patuxent River |
None | Chesapeake Bay, Smith Island |
None | Chesapeake Bay, York River |
None | Choctawhatchee Bay, Choctawhatchee Bay |
None | Choctawhatchee Bay, Destin Harbor |
None | Chukchi Sea, Red Dog Mine |
None | Columbia River, Desdemona Sands |
None | Columbia River, Youngs Bay |
None | Coos Bay, North Bend |
None | Corpus Christi Bay, Corpus Christi Channel |
None | Corpus Christi Bay, Long Reef |
None | Dana Point Harbor, Outside |
None | Dana Point, Inside Harbor |
None | Delaware Bay, Brandywine Shoal |
None | Delaware Bay, Cherry Island Range |
None | Delaware Bay, The Shears |
None | Estero Bay, Estero Bay |
None | Farallon Islands, Farallon Islands |
None | Frenchmans Bay, Long Porcupine Island |
None | Galveston Bay, Boggy Bayou |
None | Galveston Bay, Cedar Bayou |
None | Galveston Bay, Clear Lake |
None | Galveston Bay, Eagle Point |
None | Galveston Bay, East Bay |
None | Galveston Bay, Goat Islands |
None | Galveston Bay, Greens Bayou |
None | Galveston Bay, Morgans Point |
None | Galveston Bay, Texas City |
None | Galveston Bay, Trinity Bay |
None | Great Bay, Intracoastal Waterway |
None | Great Bay, Seven Island |
None | Great Bay, Wells Island |
None | Gulf of Alaska, Kamishak Bay |
None | Heron Bay, Heron Bay |
None | Hudson River, Englewood Cliffs |
None | Humboldt Bay, Indian Island |
None | Johns Bay, Pemaquid Neck |
None | Lake Pontchartrain, North Shore |
None | Lake Pontchartrain, South Shore |
None | Lavaca Bay, Lavaca Bay |
None | Lavaca Bay, Point Comfort |
None | Long Island Sound, Lloyd Point |
None | Long Island Sound, Long Sand Shoal |
None | Long Island Sound, New Haven |
None | Long Island Sound, Norwalk |
None | Long Island Sound, Oak Neck Point |
None | Long Island Sound, Rocky Point |
None | Lower Laguna Madre, Laguna Heights |
None | Lower Laguna Madre, Long Island |
None | Lutak Inlet, Chilkoot River Mouth |
None | Machias Bay, Chance Island |
None | Machias Bay, Hog Island |
None | Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth Entrance |
None | Merrimac River, Plum Island |
None | Mission Bay, Mission Bay |
None | Mission Bay, Outside |
None | Mississippi River Delta, Head of Passes |
None | Mississippi River Delta, Off Shore |
None | Mississippi River Delta, Southeast Pass |
None | Mobile Bay, Mobile River |
None | Mobile Bay, North Point |
None | Monterey Bay, Indian Head Beach |
None | Monterey Bay, Moss Landing |
None | Nahku Bay, East Side |
None | Narragansett Bay, Conanicut Island |
None | Narragansett Bay, Prudence Island |
None | NCCOS Research Location > Geographic Area > Coastal Ocean |
None | NCCOS Research Location > Region > Alaska |
None | NCCOS Research Location > Region > East Coast |
None | NCCOS Research Location > Region > Gulf of Mexico |
None | NCCOS Research Location > Region > West Coast |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Alabama |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Alaska |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > California |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Connecticut |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Delaware |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Florida |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Georgia |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Louisiana |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Maine |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Maryland |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Massachusetts |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Mississippi |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > New Jersey |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > New York |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > North Carolina |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Oregon |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Rhode Island |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > South Carolina |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Texas |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Virginia |
None | NCCOS Research Location > U.S. States and Territories > Washington |
None | New Bedford Harbor, Clarks Point |
None | Niantic Bay, Black Point |
None | Norton Sound, Nome |
None | Oceanside Harbor, Outside |
None | Pamlico Sound, Jones Bay |
None | Pascagoula River, Escatawpa River |
None | Pascagoula River, Pascagoula River |
None | Penobscot Bay, Colt Head Island |
None | Penobscot Bay, Islesboro Island |
None | Penobscot Bay, Job Island |
None | Pensacola Bay, Pensacola Bay |
None | Prince William Sound, Port Valdez |
None | Puget Sound, Commencement Bay |
None | Puget Sound, Elliott Bay |
None | Puget Sound, Nisqually Reach |
None | Raritan Bay, East Reach |
None | Raritan Bay, Gravesend Bay |
None | Raritan Bay, Lower Bay |
None | Raritan Bay, Upper Bay |
None | Raritan Bay, West Reach |
None | Round Island, Round Island |
None | Salem Harbor, Folger Point |
None | San Antonio Bay, Mosquito Point |
None | San Antonio Bay, San Antonio Bay |
None | San Diego Bay, Harbor Island |
None | San Diego Bay, National City |
None | San Diego Bay, North |
None | San Diego Bay, Outside |
None | San Diego Bay, Shelter Island |
None | San Diego Bay, Twenty Eighth Street |
None | San Francisco Bay, Castro Creek |
None | San Francisco Bay, Hunters Point |
None | San Francisco Bay, Islais Creek Channel |
None | San Francisco Bay, Oakland Enterance |
None | San Francisco Bay, Oakland Estuary |
None | San Francisco Bay, Redwood City |
None | San Francisco Bay, San Pablo Bay |
None | San Francisco Bay, Southampton Shoal |
None | San Luis Obispo Bay, San Luis Obispo Bay |
None | San Pedro Bay, Cerritos Channel |
None | San Pedro Bay, Long Beach |
None | San Pedro Bay, Mid Harbor |
None | San Pedro Bay, Outer Harbor |
None | San Pedro Bay, Outside |
None | San Pedro Bay, Seal Beach |
None | Santa Monica Bay, Deep |
None | Santa Monica Bay, Manhatten Beach |
None | Santa Monica Bay, North |
None | Santa Monica Bay, South |
None | Santa Monica Bay, Southeast |
None | Santa Monica Bay, West |
None | Sapelo Sound, Barbour Island River |
None | Sapelo Sound, Dog Hammock |
None | Sapelo Sound, High Point |
None | Sapelo Sound, Inlet |
None | Sapelo Sound, Johnson Creek |
None | Sapelo Sound, South Newport River |
None | Savannah River, Elba Island |
None | Skagway, Skagway River |
None | St. Andrews Bay, Military Point |
None | St. Johns River, Arlington Channel |
None | St. Johns River, Orange Point |
None | St. Johns River, Ortega River |
None | St. Johns River, Piney Point |
None | St. Johns River, Quarantine Island |
None | St. Johns River, Trout River |
None | St. Johns River, W. Mill Cove |
None | St. Lucie River, Stuart |
None | Tampa Bay, Northern Tampa Bay |
None | U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone |
Physical Location
Organization: | National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science |
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City: | Silver Spring |
State/Province: | MD |
Data Set Information
Data Set Scope Code: | Data Set |
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Maintenance Frequency: | None Planned |
Data Presentation Form: | Table (digital) |
Distribution Liability: |
None |
Support Roles
Data Steward
Date Effective From: | 1992 |
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Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Position): | NCCOS Scientific Data Coordinator |
Email Address: | NCCOS.data@noaa.gov |
Distributor
Date Effective From: | 1992 |
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Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Position): | NCCOS Scientific Data Coordinator |
Email Address: | NCCOS.data@noaa.gov |
Metadata Contact
Date Effective From: | 1992 |
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Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Position): | NCCOS Scientific Data Coordinator |
Email Address: | NCCOS.data@noaa.gov |
Point of Contact
Date Effective From: | 1992 |
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Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Position): | NCCOS Scientific Data Coordinator |
Email Address: | NCCOS.data@noaa.gov |
Principal Investigator
Date Effective From: | 1992 |
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Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Person): | Piniak, Greg |
Email Address: | greg.piniak@noaa.gov |
Extents
Currentness Reference: | Publication Date |
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Extent Group 1
Extent Group 1 / Geographic Area 1
W° Bound: | -159.356 | |
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E° Bound: | -66.181 | |
N° Bound: | 61.133 | |
S° Bound: | 17.939 |
Extent Group 1 / Time Frame 1
Time Frame Type: | Range |
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Start: | 1984 |
End: | 1992 |
Spatial Information
Spatial Representation
Representations Used
Vector: | Yes |
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Access Information
Security Class: | Unclassified |
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Data Access Constraints: |
None |
Data Use Constraints: |
NOAA requests that all individuals who download NSandT data acknowledge the source of these data in any reports, papers, or presentations. If you publish these data, please include a statement similar to: "Some or all of the data described in this article were produced by NOAA through its National Status and Trends Program". |
Distribution Information
Distribution 1
Download URL: | http://products.coastalscience.noaa.gov/collections/ltmonitoring/nsandt/default.aspx |
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Distributor: | |
Description: |
Live Data and Maps |
File Type (Deprecated): | XML |
Distribution Format: | XML (Structured Text) |
Distribution 2
Download URL: | http://products.coastalscience.noaa.gov/collections/ltmonitoring/nsandt/default.aspx |
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Distributor: | |
Description: |
Live Data and Maps |
File Type (Deprecated): | ASCII |
Distribution Format: | Text (Unstructured) |
URLs
URL 1
URL: | http://products.coastalscience.noaa.gov/collections/ltmonitoring/nsandt/default.aspx |
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URL Type: |
Online Resource
|
Activity Log
Activity Log 1
Activity Date/Time: | 2016-11-16 |
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Description: |
Date that the source FGDC record was last modified. |
Activity Log 2
Activity Date/Time: | 2017-04-05 |
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Description: |
Converted from FGDC Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata (version FGDC-STD-001-1998) using 'fgdc_to_inport_xml.pl' script. Contact Tyler Christensen (NOS) for details. |
Activity Log 3
Activity Date/Time: | 2017-09-13 |
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Description: |
Partial upload of Spatial Info section only. |
Activity Log 4
Activity Date/Time: | 2018-02-08 |
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Description: |
Partial upload of Positional Accuracy fields only. |
Data Quality
Accuracy: |
The quality of the analytical data generated by the NSandT Program is overseen by the QA Project component, which has been in operation since 1985 and is designed to document sampling and analytical procedures, and to reduce intralaboratory and interlaboratory variation. The QA Project documentation will facilitate comparisons among different monitoring programs with similar QA activities and thus extended the temporal and spatial scale of such programs. To document laboratory expertise, the QA Project required all NSandT laboratories to participate in a series of intercomparison exercises utilizing a variety of materials. The organic analytical intercomparison exercises were coordinated by the NIST, and the inorganic exercises by National Research Council (NRC) of Canada. Details of quality assurance for the Benthic Surveillance Program can be found in Lauenstein, et. al. 1993. |
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Horizontal Positional Accuracy: |
The same kind of field/site data have been supplied since the start of the Benthic Surveillance Project, in 1984. Original site coordinates were derived from Loran-C time conversions. Early sites information resulting from Loran-C was converted from time delay information to latitudes and longitudes. These earlier data may be suspect when sites were located close to large structures that could have interfered with accurate time delays. When GPS was first available the signal was intentionally degraded so earlier coordinate information, even if it resulted from GPS, is not as accurate as data would be today.Because fish are not sessile, fish trawls have been made along different tracks in the water body of interest. The latitude/ longitude coordinates provided in this file represent a nominal site center and trawling occurs within a 1 km radius of this location. When possible sediment samples were collected within 500 m of the fish sampling location. |
Completeness Report: |
Once sampling in a certain geographic area is initiated, repeat sampling occurs during the same time frame. Northeast samples (Chesapeake Bay through Maine) have been collected during March and April. Southeast samples have been collected from August to October. Gulf Coast samples have been collected from August to October. West Coast samples have been collected from May through July. Alaska samples have been collected from May to August. The collection of fish is not directly tied to their spawning cycle, though different age classes may be found in certain estuaries during different times of the year. Sediments were collected concurrently with fish specimens at each Benthic Surveillance Project site. Care was taken to minimize the disturbance to the sediment grabs. Grabs that were incomplete, slumped, less than 7 cm in depth, or comprised chiefly of shelly substrates were discards. The chance of sampling the same location was minimized by repositioning the boat (five meters downstream) after three sampling attempts. Analytical protocols for the quantification of the NSandT organic contaminants were developed by MacLeod et al. (1984) at the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) facilities in Seattle, WA. These methods were prescribed for all NMFS laboratories participating in the Benthic Surveillance Project (BSP) when the NSandT Program began in 1984. Three NMFS laboratories used these methods in 1984: Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC), Gloucester, MA; Southeast Fisheries Science Center (SEFSC), Charleston, SC; and NWFSC, Seattle, WA. The philosophy associated with the development of exacting protocols for the quantification of organic contaminants was that the same analytical methods would increase the likelihood of data being comparable among laboratories. Even though interlaboratory comparisons were initiated at the start of the NSandT Program, it was felt that a method-driven QA and analytical effort for the quantification of organic contaminants was the best way to begin. In 1985, MacLeod et al., 1985, updated the protocols. This method was further has been further edited and can be found in Volume 1 of Technical Memorandum 71. The NSandT Mussel Watch Project (MWP) began in 1986. At that time, both the MWP and BSP laboratories were allowed to use any analytical method if it could be proven that the proposed alternate procedure was equal to or better than earlier MacLeod et al. (1984, 1985) methods. Mandatory protocols were never prescribed for the laboratories quantifying major and trace elements in either the BSP or MWP. The quantification of elements by the NSandT Program laboratories was perceived to be of a high enough quality that analytical control could be maintained by the use of standard reference materials during the analytical cycle and through interlaboratory comparisons exercises. |
Conceptual Consistency: |
The sampling gear does not require any calibration, although it was inspected regularly for damage by mishandling or impact on rocky substrates. All sampling equipment was washed with water, and rinsed with alcohol and a final rinse with distilled water. Other solvents were used to rinse equipment earlier in the project.Because most fish were dissected onboard ship, a special effort was made to develop an environment as close to clean-room conditions as possible. All fish were dissected in positive pressure laminar flow hoods. Air was drawn into the laminar flow hood from above and filtered by a high efficiency particle attenuator (HEPA) filter before it passed over the fish samples. Stainless steel tools were used to dissect fish for organic analysis. Titanium tools were used to dissect fish for trace metal analyses because tools made of this element do not pose the problem of introducing nickel, chromium, and/or iron into the specimens to be analyzed. The NSandT Program analyzed specimens for the latter three elements. After knives had been sharpened, and thoroughly cleaned with detergent solution, rinsed extensively with tap water, rinsed in distilled or high-purity water (i.e., milli-Q or HPLC-grade water), rinsed with isopropranol under a fume hood, followed by a rinse with distilled water, and placed on a similarly cleaned Teflon cutting board that was allowed to air-dry in the laminar-flow hood. Between individual fish of the same species at the same site, the tools were rinsed with distilled water before any fluid or tissue had a chance to dry on the knife. Three sets of sampling tools were used to remove fish tissues for analysis. One set was used to cut through the body wall or make the initial cuts through the epidermis for fish muscle dissection. A second set was used to collect the liver and other internal tissues that were analyzed for organic contaminants. The third set, consisting of a Teflon knife and polyamide forceps, was used for collecting liver tissue for trace element analyses. The second set of cutting instruments avoids chemistry samples from being contaminated with dirt and mucus from the surface to the fish, while the third set of tools avoids introducing trace element contamination. |
Lineage
Process Steps
Process Step 1
Description: |
Sediment and benthic fish tissue samples were collected for the analysis of metallic and organic chemical constituents. Separate samples from the same sediment were collected for sediment grain-size analyses and Clostridium perfringens enumeration. Samples were primarily collected from gasoline-powered boats or from NOAA ships. The NOAA RV Ferrell was the primary collecting platform on the US East and Gulf coasts while the NOAA RV McArthur was the primary collecting platform for the West Coast.Multiple sediment grabs were collected from each site using a Young-modified Van Veen grab sampler. Each grab was nominally 440 cm2 in area and up to 10 cm in depth, but only the top two-centimeter section of a grab was retained for the chemical analyses. Sample material was a composite from three grab samples for each suite of analyses. Sediments were taken from the center of each grab, avoiding contact with the sediment grab walls. The grab was cleaned and solvent rinsed between each sampling site. Subsamples were taken with a kynar coated calibrated sediment scoop. Fish were primarily collected with Otter trawls towed by NOAA research vessels or their associated boats. Occasionally, along the Southeast and Gulf Coasts, fish were taken with hook and line or with gill nets. These alternate collections methods were necessary because larger fish, such as older Atlantic croaker, were able to avoid an Otter trawl, or were found in untrawlable habitats such as shallow water, along marsh edges, and over oyster reefs. Fish in the correct size range were dissected in the onboard laboratory immediately after collection. This ensured that a determination could be made regarding whether sufficient material had been collected and whether the sample material was of high quality. If either one of these criteria was not met, the opportunity existed to continue sample collection. Also, field dissection minimizes contamination problems associated with dissection of frozen fish samples. Frozen fish tissues, when thawed, may lose their integrity and one tissue type may contaminate another. Fish tissues for histopathological examination must be prepared in the field because freezing will destroy the morphology of the tissue. Sediment and benthic fish tissue samples were analyzed for metals, butyltins, PAH's (sediments only), PCBs, pesticides, and periodically additional analytes. The analytical instruments were calibrated by standard laboratory procedures including: construction calibration curves, running blank and spiked quality control samples, and analyzing standard reference materials. Process Date Range is 1984 - 1992 |
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Process Date/Time: | 1992-01-01 00:00:00 |
Process Step 2
Description: |
Total DDT = opdde + ppdde + ppddd + opddt + ppddt Total PAH (high molecular weight) = benanth + chrysene + fluorant + pyrene + benapy + benepy + benzobfl + benzokfl + benzofl + dibenz + perylene + benzop + indeno Total PAH (low molecular weight) = biphenyl + dimeth + menap1 + menap2 + naph + trimeth + acenth + acenthy + anthra + bibenzot + fluorene + mephen1 + phenanth Total PAHs (prior to 1988) = naph + menap2 + menap1 + biphenyl + dimeth + acenthy + fluorene + phenanth + anthra + mephen1 + fluorant + pyrene + benanth + chrysene + benepy + benapy + perylene + dibenz Total PAHs (since 1988) = naph + menap2 + menap1 + biphenyl + dimeth + acenthe + acenthy + trimeth + fluorene + phenanth + anthra + mephen1 + fluorant + pyrene + benanth + benzobfl + benzokfl + benzofl + benepy + benapy + dibenz + indeno + benzop + chrysene + perylene (Note: benzobfl and benzokfl were not reported when benzofl was, therefore benzofl is included in the sum) Total PCBs (prior to 1988) = di + tri + tet + pen + hex + hep + oct + non Total PCBs (since 1988) = 2 x (pcb8 + pcb18 + pcb 28 + pcb52 + pcb44 + pcb66 + pcb101 + pcb105 + pcb138 + pcb118 + pcb128 + pcb153 + pcb170 + pcb180 + pcb187 + pcb195 + pcb206 + pcb209) Total Chlordanes = alphachl + tnonchl + heptachl + heptaepo (Note: gammachl, cnonchl, and oxychl not included) Total Dieldrin = aldrin + dieldrin (Note: endrin not included) Total butyltins = tbt + dbt + mbtProcess Date Range is 1984 - 1992 |
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Process Date/Time: | 1992-01-01 00:00:00 |
Child Items
Rubric scores updated every 15m
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Type | Title |
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Entity | Dataset Parameters for Benthic Surveillance Chemistry data |
Catalog Details
Catalog Item ID: | 39256 |
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GUID: | gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:39256 |
Metadata Record Created By: | Tyler Christensen |
Metadata Record Created: | 2017-04-05 12:51+0000 |
Metadata Record Last Modified By: | SysAdmin InPortAdmin |
Metadata Record Last Modified: | 2023-10-17 16:12+0000 |
Metadata Record Published: | 2018-02-08 |
Owner Org: | NCCOS |
Metadata Publication Status: | Published Externally |
Do Not Publish?: | N |
Metadata Last Review Date: | 2018-02-08 |
Metadata Review Frequency: | 1 Year |
Metadata Next Review Date: | 2019-02-08 |