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Definitions of relevant terms and some commonly used abbreviations.

A

B

C

D

E

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H

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Term

Meaning

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A

Absorbed dose

Quantity of energy imparted by ionising radiation to unit mass of matter such as tissue. Unit gray, symbol Gy. 1 Gy = 1 joule per kilogram.

Activity Concentration

The activity per unit mass or volume, e.g. Bq kg-1, Bq l-1

AECL

Atomic Energy Canada Limited

ALARA

"As low as reasonably achievable", refers to actions directed to limiting doses to individuals, the number of exposed individuals, and the probability of receiving a dose.

Allometry

Relationships between body mass of organisms and various parameters (including of relevance to PROTECT radionuclide biological half-life and dietary dry matter intake).

Assessment Endpoint

The biological effect inferred from measurements or predictions and which the assessment framework is designed to study.

Assessment factor

Allowance for degree of uncertainty, caused by lack of effects data. For example, an estimated lowest observed effect concentration may, as a precautionary approach, be divided by a assessment factor (normally within the range of 10 to 10000) to safeguard against harmful effects, where the magnitude of the assessment factor reflects the degree and type of uncertainty (e.g. lack of chronic exposure data, lack of data for different taxonomic groups or trophic levels, etc.). The assessment factor (AF) is also know as the safety factor.

Assessment Framework

Identification and demarcation of the assessment boundaries. In FASSET, the framework contains the process from problem formulation through to characterisation of the effects of radiation on individuals. The overall
assessment system describes the tools, methods and information flow used to carry out the impact assessment.

Authorisation

he granting by a regulatory body or other governmental body of written permission for an operator to perform specified activities.

B

BAT

Best Available Technology: a term applied to abatement technology designed to limit pollutant discharges. The term constitutes a moving target on practices, since developing societal values and advancing techniques may change what is currently regarded as 'best available'. Similar terms include 'best practicable means' and 'best practicable environmental option'.

BCG

Biota Concentration Guidelines: the media concentration for which the corresponding dose rate is equal to the screening dose rate used in the USDoE's
graded approach and RESRAD-BIOTA assessment tool.

BCG calculator

Biota Concentration Guidelines calculator: A semi-automated tool for implementing screening and analysis methods contained within the USDoE graded approach. Although the BCG calculator is still available RESRAD-BIOTA has been developed to replace it.

Benchmark

Risk assessment benchmarks are the concentrations, doses or dose rates that are estimated to equate to predefined criteria (e.g. predicted no effects dose rate,
severe risk) based on exposure-response information and political/societal decisions.

Bioaccumulation

The process whereby an organism accumulates substances in living tissues to concentrations higher than those existing in the surrounding media.

Bioassay

A test to determine the relative strength of a substance by comparing its effect on a test organism with that of a standard preparation.

Bioavailability

Defined as the fraction of the contaminant that can be taken up by living organisms, dependant both on the chemical speciation of the exposure source(s) and on the physiological status of the organism.

Biodiversity

The number and abundance of species found within a common environment. This includes the variety of genes, species, ecosystems, and the ecological processes that connect everything in a common environment.

Biological half-life

The time required for a biological system (e.g. an animal) to eliminate, by natural processes, half the amount of a substance that has been absorbed into that system.

Biomagnification

Situations where the concentration of certain substances increases up the food chain.

Biosphere

That part of the environment normally inhabited by living organisms. In practice, the biosphere is not usually defined with great precision, but is generally taken to include the atmosphere and the Earth's surface, including the soil, surface water bodies, seas and oceans and their sediments. There is no generally accepted definition of the depth below the surface at which soil or sediment ceases to be part of the biosphere, but this might typically be taken to be the depth affected by basic human actions, particularly farming. In waste safety in particular, the biosphere is normally distinguished from the geosphere.

Birds Directive

The abbreviated term of 'Council Directive 79/409/EEC of 2 April 1979 on the Conservation of Wild Birds'. It is the aim of this directive to promote the
conservation and protection of listed species of birds within the European Union.

BPEO

Best Practicable Environmental Option, see BAT.

BPM

Best Practicable Means, see BAT.

BWG

Biota Working Group: Part of the IAEA EMRAS programme aimed at comparing and validating models used and developed by member states for biota dose assessments that may be used as part of a regulatory processes concerning authorised releases of radionuclides in order to improve Member States' capabilities for protection of the environment.

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C

Conceptual model

Representation of the environmental system and of the physico-chemical and biological processes that determine the transport/transfer of contaminants from sources through environmental media to ecological receptors within the system.

Contaminant

Any physical, chemical, biological, or radiological substance or matter that has a potentially adverse effect on air, water, or soil, with the implication that the amount is measurable.

CR

Concentration ratio: ratio used to quantify the equilibrium between an environmental medium and a living organism (e.g., water to fish CR). Sometimes referred to as concentration factor or bioaccumulation factor.

Cytogenetic effect

An observed effect in chromosomes that can be correlated with adverse hereditary effects or genetic effects (effects that are inheritable and appear in the descendants of those exposed).

D

DCC

Dose Conversion Coefficient expressed as Gy per kg of the target organism per Bq per unit of mass or volume of the source. The DCC is specific to each radionuclide and organism and was calculated for external and internal
exposure. Sometimes referred to as the Dose Conversion Factor.

DCF

Dose Conversion Factor, see Dose Conversion Coefficient.

DCL

Derived consideration level: A band of absorbed dose rate for each Reference Animal and Plant within the ICRP proposed framework. These do not represent dose limits but a range of doses which form a starting point from which dose limits may be considered in the future.

Dispersion model

Model for the representation of the spreading of radionuclides in air (aerodynamic dispersion) or water (hydrodynamic dispersion) resulting mainly from physical processes affecting the velocity of different molecules in the medium.

Dose

See absorbed dose

Dose constraint

A restriction on annual dose to an individual (human), which may either relate to a single dose or to a complete site, in order to ensure that when aggregated with doses from all sources, excluding natural background and medical procedures, the dose limit is not exceeded.

Dose rate

Dose (normally absorbed dose) received over a specified unit of time.

Dose-effect

The relationship between dose (usually an estimate of dose) and the gradation of the effect in an exposed population, that is a biological change measured on a graded scale of severity.

Dose-response

A correlation between a quantified exposure (dose) and the proportion of an exposed population that demonstrates a specific effect (response).

Dosimetry

The measurement and calculation of radiation dose in matter and tissue resulting from exposure to ionising radiation.

DWB

Direct Weighted Bootstrap

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E

EA R&D 128

Radiological assessment approach for wildlife and associated tool developed by the England and Wales Environment Agency.

Ecological impact

The total effect of an environmental change, natural or man-made, on the community of living organisms.

Ecological Receptor

Living organisms at various organisational levels (i.e. ecosystems, communities, populations, individual organisms) potentially exposed to and adversely affected by stressors because they are present in the source(s) and/or along stressor migration pathways. This term dose not refer to humans.

Ecosystem

The interacting system of a biological community and its nonliving surroundings.

ECx

Effect Concentration: the concentration of a chemical required to cause a given effect to x% of a population or community. For example, EC10: concentration of a chemical required to cause a given effect in 10% of a population or community.

EDRx

Effects Dose Rate: the radiation dose rate required to cause a given effect to x% of a population or community. For example, EDR10: the dose rate required to cause a given effect in 10% of a population or community. Effect A biological change caused by an exposure. Strictly speaking, an effect is the change in an endpoint under consideration when it is compared to a control.

EIA

Environmental Impact Assessment

EMRAS

Environmental Modelling for Radiation Safety: An IAEA programme aimed at improving models for the purposes of radiation protection of the public and the environment (http://www-ns.iaea.org/projects/emras).

EMCLS

Environmental Media Concentration Limits: Used as part of the ERICA Tool and defined as the activity concentration in the selected media (soil, air, water or sediment) that would result in a dose-rate to the most exposed reference organism equal to that of the selected screening dose-rate.

Endpoint

In toxicity testing and evaluation it is the biological response that is measured. Endpoints vary with the level of biological organisation being examined and include responses at the subcellular level to the community level such as biomarkers (subcellular level), survival, growth, reproduction (individual
level), primary production, and structure (and abundance) and function in a community (population or community level). Endpoints are used in toxicity tests as criteria for effects.

ENEV

Environmental No Effects Value: a dose level at which a population of organisms will not be affected (defined by Environment Canada).

Environment

Water, air, land, plants and man and all other organisms living therein, and the interrelationships which exist among them.

EIS

Environmental Impact Statement: a document providing information for decision makers on the positive and negative effects of an action, practice or policy, which identifies and evaluates the environmental impacts of the hazard source and feasible alternatives, including taking no action.

Environmental Justice

Often used interchangeably with the term environmental equity, refers to the distribution and effects of environmental problems and the policies and processes to reduce differences in who bears environmental risks. In a general sense, it includes concern for disproportionate risk burden placed upon any population group, as defined by gender, age, income, race, nationality or generation.

Environmental quality criteria

The levels of pollution and lengths of exposure, above which adverse effects may occur on health and welfare.

Environmental

The level of contaminants prescribed by law or regulation that cannot be quality standards exceeded during a specified time in a defined area.

EQSs

Environmental Quality Standards

ERA

Ecological Risk Assessment

ERICA

Environmental Risk from Ionising Contaminants: Assessment and Management, EURATOM 6th Framework project.

ERICA Tool

A tool implementing the ERICA tiered approach for radiological assessment of wildlife in freshwater, terrestrial and marine ecosystems developed by an EURATOM 6th Framework consortium.

EURATOM

European Atomic Energy Community

Exposure

The co-occurrence or contact between the endpoint organism and the stressor (e.g. radiation or radionuclide).

Exposure Assessment

The process of measuring or estimating the intensity, frequency, and duration of exposures to an agent currently present in the environment or of estimating hypothetical exposures that might arise from the release of new chemicals into the environment.

Exposure pathway

A route by which radiation or radionuclides can reach humans and cause exposure - an exposure pathway may be very simple, e.g. external exposure from airborne radionuclides, or a more complex chain.

F

FASSET

Framework for Assessment of Environmental Impact EURATOM 5th Framework project.

Feature species

see reference organisms

Fecundity

The number of viable offspring produced by an organism; mature seeds produced, eggs laid, or live offspring delivered, excluding fertilised embryos that have failed to develop.

Fertility

The ability to produce offspring.

Foundation species

Highly interactive species that are often extremely abundant or ecologically dominant.

FREDERICA

The FASSET Radiation Effects Database (FRED) which has been updated through the addition of a quality scoring exercise of each literature source to evaluate how useable the data is in the context of defining dose (rate) effect relationships for incorporation into the SSD and other approaches. In addition new literature sources have been added to the database and it has been updated to make it available on the internet. It has been renamed as the FREDERICA database in recognition of these changes (www.frederica-online.org).

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G

Gamma air kerma

Gamma air kerma is exposure measured in air which is in effect, the absorbed dose measured in air. See Kerma.

H

Habitats Directive

The abbreviated term of 'Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the conservation of Natural Habitats and the Wild Fauna and Flora'. It is the aim of this directive to promote the conservation of certain habitats and species within the European Union.

Hazard

A condition or physical situation with a potential for an undesirable
consequence, such as harm to health or environment.

Hazard analysis

Procedure used to (1) identify potential sources of release of hazardous materials from fixed facilities or transportation accidents; (2) determine the vulnerability of a geographical area to a release of hazardous materials; and (3) compare hazards to determine which present greater or lesser risks to a community.

Hazard Identification

Recognising that a hazard exists and trying to define its characteristics. The process of determining whether exposure to an agent can cause an increase in the incidence of an adverse health or environmental effect.

HDRx

Hazardous Dose (rate) affecting x% of the species of a given ecosystem. This
value is estimated from the Species Sensitivity Distribution.

HNED(R)

The highest no effect dose or dose rate in a toxicity test that does not causes a statistically significant effect in comparison to the control. The same definition applies for Concentration. See NOEC.

Hormetic pattern

Pattern of dose response where there is an initial 'positive' effect at low concentrations of a chemical or low radiation dose rates, followed by a progressive negative effect at higher concentrations or dose rates.

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I

IAEA

International Atomic Energy Agency, see www.iaea.org

ICRP

International Commission on Radiological Protection, see www.icrp.org

Indicator Organisms

A species, whose presence or absence may be characteristic of environmental conditions in a particular area of habitat; however, species composition and relative abundance of individual components of the population or community are usually considered to be a more reliable index of water quality.

IUR

International Union of Radioecology (http://www.iur-uir.org/en/)

K

Kd

Distribution Coefficient used to quantify the equilibrium between solid and
liquid phases (soil or sediment-interstitial water), usually expressed in l kg-1. It
is the ratio of the mass of the solute species adsorbed (or precipitated) on the
solid particles per unit of dry mass of the soil or sediment to the solute
concentration in the liquid phase. It represents the partition of the solute in the
soil or sediment matrix and soil or sediment water, assuming that equilibrium
conditions exist between the solid and liquid phases. The Kd values are
dependent on the soil or sediment physical and chemical characteristics.

Kerma

Kerma is the kinetic energy released in material measured in Gy. Kerma can be quoted for any specified material at a point in free space or in an absorbing medium. See gamma air kerma.

Keystone species

A species that plays a critical role in maintaining the structure of an ecological community and whose impact on the community is greater than would be expected based on its relative abundance or total biomass.

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L

LEL

Lowest Effect Level

LOEC, LOED(R)

The lowest observed effect concentration in a toxicity test that causes a statistically significant effect in comparison to the control. The same definition applies for Dose or Dose Rate (in place of Concentration).

M

Measurement endpoint

Measured or predicted value that an assessment produces.

Morbidity

A loss of functional capacities generally manifested as reduced fitness, which may render organisms less competitive and more susceptible to other stressors,
thus reducing the life span.

Mortality

Death; the death rate; ratio of number of deaths to a given population.

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N

NATURA 2000 Site

A protected ecological area within the EU containing threatened habitats and/or species.

Natural Background

The doses, dose rates or activity concentrations associated with natural sources or any other sources in the environment which are not amenable to control. This is usually considered to include doses, dose rates or concentrations due to natural sources but may also include global fallout (but not local fallout) from atmospheric nuclear weapon tests and depending upon context, fallout from incidents such as the Chernobyl accident.

NCRP

National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, see www.ncrponline.org

NEA

Nuclear Energy Agency. A specialised agency within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). See www.nea.fr NEC No effect concentration, see NOEC, NOED(R)

NGO

Non-Governmental Organisation

NoE

Network of Excellence: EC funding mechanism

NOEC, NOED(R)

No observed effect concentration is the highest concentration in a toxicity test not causing a statistically significant effect compared with the control. The same definition applies for Dose or Dose Rate (in place of Concentration). See also HNEDR.

NPP

Nuclear Power Plant

O

OECD

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, see www.oecd.org

Occupancy factors

The maximum fraction of time during which individuals may be exposed to a given dose rate of ionising radiation.

OSPAR

The mechanism by which 15 governments of the western coasts and catchments of Europe, together with the EC, cooperate to protect the marine environment of the North-East Atlantic.

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P

PNED(R)

Predicted No-Effect Dose (Rate) expressed in Gy or Gy per unit of time.

PNEC

Predicted No-Effect Concentration, see NOEC, NOED(R) for No Effect Concentration.

Precautionary Principle

The precautionary principle applies where scientific evidence is insufficient, inconclusive or uncertain and preliminary scientific evaluation indicates that there are reasonable grounds for concern that the potentially dangerous effects on the environment, human, animal or plant health may be inconsistent with the desired level of protection.

PROTECT

Protection of the Environment from Ionising Radiation in a Regulatory Context

Protection goal

The measurable aims of environmental protection

R

Radiation weighting factors

Factor (numeric value) which represents the relative biological effectiveness of the different radiation types, relative to X- or gamma-rays, in producing endpoints of ecological significance.

Radioactive Material

Material designated in national law or by a regulatory body as being subject to regulatory control because of its radioactivity.

Radioactive Substance

A substance that emits ionising radiation. See also radioactive material.

Radioecological Sensitivity

A combination of features which includes biology and habits of an organism, that contribute to the likelihood of an organism being exposed to radioactive substances in its environment.

Radionuclide

An unstable nuclide that undergoes spontaneous transformation, emitting ionising radiation.

RAP

Reference Animals and Plants: Group of 12 reference organisms proposed as part of the ICPR framework.

RBE

Relative Biological Effectiveness: For a given type of radiation, the RBE is the dose of the reference radiation needed to produce the same effect dose of the given radiation needed to produce a given biological effect.

REACH

Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation of Chemicals and EU regulatory
framework

Receptor

See ecological receptor

Reference Organisms

A series of entities that provide a basis for the estimation of radiation dose rate to a range of organisms that are typical, or representative, of a contaminated environment. These estimates, in turn, would provide a basis for assessing the likelihood and degree of radiation effects.

Relative Biological Response

The proportion or absolute size of an exposed population that demonstrates a specific effect. May also refer to the nature of the effect.

RESRAD-BIOTA

Radiological assessment tool which implements the USDOE's graded approach for evaluating radiation doses to freshwater and terrestrial biota.

Risk

A statistical concept describing the expected frequency or probability of undesirable effects arising from exposure to a contaminant. A measure of the probability that damage to life, health, property, and/or the environment will occur as a result of a given hazard. A technical estimation of risk is usually based on the expected value of the conditional probability of the event occurring times the consequence or magnitude of the event given that it has occurred.

Risk assessment

A qualitative or quantitative evaluation of the risk posed to human health and/or the environment by the actual and/or potential presence of contaminants. It includes problem formulation, exposure and dose-response assessment an d risk characterisation.

Risk characterisation

The synthesis of information obtained during risk assessment for use in management decisions. This should include an estimation of the probability (or incidence) and magnitude (or severity) of the adverse effects likely to occur in a population or environmental compartment, together with identification of uncertainties.

Risk communication

The exchange of information about health or environmental risks among risk assessors and managers, the general public, news media, interest groups, etc.

Risk evaluation

A component of risk assessment in which judgments are made about the significance and acceptability of risk.

Risk management

The selection and practical implementation of regulatory and non-regulatory responses to risk. Practical implementation of procedures, actions or policies to mitigate, reduce, remove or monitor health or environmental risks.

RQ

Risk Quotient: ratio of predicted dose rate to benchmark dose rate.

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S

Safety factors

See assessment factor.

Screening assessment

Simple and generally highly conservative assessment tier.

Screening value

As used by the ERICA and PROTECT projects the screening value is equivalent to the PNED(R).

SD

Standard Deviation

SETAC

Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry

Source

Anything that may cause radiation exposure — such as by emitting ionising radiation or by releasing radioactive substances or materials — and can be treated as a single entity for protection and safety purposes.

SSD

Species Sensitivity Distribution establishing the statistical distribution of the radiosensitivity of species.

Sustainability

The ability of an ecosystem to maintain ecological processes and functions, biological diversity, and productivity over time.

Synergism

An interaction between two substances that results in a greater effect than both of the substances could have had acting independently.

T

TeNORM

Technologically-Enhanced Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material. Refers to radioactive materials that occur naturally but which have been exposed or
concentrated by human activity.

TGD

European Chemicals Bureau Technical Guidance Document on risk assessment
(http://ecb.jrc.ec.europa.eu/DOCUMENTS/TECHNICAL_GUIDANCE_DOCUMENT/EDITION_2/tgdpart2_2ed.pdf).

Threshold

A contaminant concentration (or dose), below which no deleterious effect
occurs.

Tiered assessment

Approach involving progressively detailed tiers of assessment generally starting with highly conservative and simple ('screening') assessments and progressing through more detailed realistic tiers if warranted.

Toxicant

A substance that kills or injures an organism through chemical or physical action or by altering the organism's environment; for example, cyanides, phenols, pesticides, or heavy metals; especially used for insect control.

Trigger value

See screening value

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U

Uncertainty

This arises from imprecision due to lack of information, expert judgement and/or measurement errors and could be reduced with increased knowledge and/or experimentation.

UNSCEAR

United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation

USDOE graded approach

United States Department of Energy graded approach for evaluating radiation doses to aquatic and terrestrial biota.

V

Valued ecosystem components

Assessed species selected for both scientific and public interest reasons.

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W

WFD

Water Framework Directive. EC water legislation for integrated river basin management.

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