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  • Biological monitoring constitutes an integrated approach for the assessment of environment risk of pollutants discharged in wastewater effluents. Among the techniques associated with biological monitoring, the use of biomarkers—molecular, biochemical responses—and bioindicators—individual to community responses—are the most prevalent applied methods. Biomonitoring has been applied in acute and chronic studies, although it is generally accepted that the long-term tests are more sensitive to measure effluent toxicity. A good bioindicator should integrate a long-term interaction of the environmental conditions, and simultaneously react in a quantifiable manner to relevant changes. Biomonitoring integrates the effects of total pollution on many individuals and processes; however, biological variability and the complexity of correlating observed effects with specific pollutants accounts for the need of complementing biomonitoring with chemical analysis. Nonetheless, application of biomonitoring covers essential aspects, such as formulation and validation of ecological water quality objectives, determining the effectiveness of pollution control measures, and as an alarm notification for process failure, among others.

Last update from database: 3/13/26, 4:15 PM (UTC)

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