Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states

In recent collaborative biological sampling exercises organised by the Nottingham Regional Laboratory of the Severn-Trent Water Authority, the effect of handnet sampling variation on the quality and usefulness of the data obtained has been questioned, especially when this data is transcribed into one or more of the commonly used biological methods of water quality assessment. This study investigates if this effect is constant at sites with similar typography but differing water quality states when the sampling method is standardized and carried out by a single operator. An argument is made for the use of a lowest common denominator approach to give a more consistent result and obviate the effect of sampling variation on these biological assessment methods.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fretwell, G.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Freshwater Biological Association 1980
Subjects:Biology, Limnology, Pollution, Sampling, Samplers, Methodology, Standardization, Rivers, Invertebrate larvae, England, Trent River,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22768
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-227682021-07-09T02:43:11Z Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states Fretwell, G. Biology Limnology Pollution Sampling Samplers Methodology Standardization Rivers Invertebrate larvae England Trent River In recent collaborative biological sampling exercises organised by the Nottingham Regional Laboratory of the Severn-Trent Water Authority, the effect of handnet sampling variation on the quality and usefulness of the data obtained has been questioned, especially when this data is transcribed into one or more of the commonly used biological methods of water quality assessment. This study investigates if this effect is constant at sites with similar typography but differing water quality states when the sampling method is standardized and carried out by a single operator. An argument is made for the use of a lowest common denominator approach to give a more consistent result and obviate the effect of sampling variation on these biological assessment methods. Bilateral study of methods 2 - Pollution Report No.8 2021-06-24T16:04:37Z 2021-06-24T16:04:37Z 1980 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22768 en http://www.fba.org.uk application/pdf application/pdf 19 Freshwater Biological Association Ambleside, UK http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/5259 1256 2011-09-29 15:09:27 5259 Freshwater Biological Association
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Biology
Limnology
Pollution
Sampling
Samplers
Methodology
Standardization
Rivers
Invertebrate larvae
England
Trent River
Biology
Limnology
Pollution
Sampling
Samplers
Methodology
Standardization
Rivers
Invertebrate larvae
England
Trent River
spellingShingle Biology
Limnology
Pollution
Sampling
Samplers
Methodology
Standardization
Rivers
Invertebrate larvae
England
Trent River
Biology
Limnology
Pollution
Sampling
Samplers
Methodology
Standardization
Rivers
Invertebrate larvae
England
Trent River
Fretwell, G.
Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
description In recent collaborative biological sampling exercises organised by the Nottingham Regional Laboratory of the Severn-Trent Water Authority, the effect of handnet sampling variation on the quality and usefulness of the data obtained has been questioned, especially when this data is transcribed into one or more of the commonly used biological methods of water quality assessment. This study investigates if this effect is constant at sites with similar typography but differing water quality states when the sampling method is standardized and carried out by a single operator. An argument is made for the use of a lowest common denominator approach to give a more consistent result and obviate the effect of sampling variation on these biological assessment methods.
format monograph
topic_facet Biology
Limnology
Pollution
Sampling
Samplers
Methodology
Standardization
Rivers
Invertebrate larvae
England
Trent River
author Fretwell, G.
author_facet Fretwell, G.
author_sort Fretwell, G.
title Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
title_short Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
title_full Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
title_fullStr Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
title_full_unstemmed Corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
title_sort corroborative studies on the effects of sample variation on three macroinvertebrate biological assessment methods at different water quality states
publisher Freshwater Biological Association
publishDate 1980
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22768
work_keys_str_mv AT fretwellg corroborativestudiesontheeffectsofsamplevariationonthreemacroinvertebratebiologicalassessmentmethodsatdifferentwaterqualitystates
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