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Cho, Kyung Hwa
Water-Environmental Informatics Lab.
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Coupling of the AQUATOX and EFDC Models for Ecological Impact Assessment of Chemical Spill Scenarios in the Jeonju River, Korea

Author(s)
Yeom, JaehoonKim, InjeongKim, MinjeongCho, KyunghwaKim, Sang Don
Issued Date
2020-10
DOI
10.3390/biology9100340
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/48797
Fulltext
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-7737/9/10/340
Citation
BIOLOGY-BASEL, v.9, no.10
Abstract
Simple Summary This study proposed a methodology to simulate ecological damage in a toluene spill situation by coupling AQUATOX, an established ecological assessment model, and EFDC, a Lagrangian fluid diffusion model. TheAQUATOX-EFDC simulation showed a significant ecological impact, especially the greatest damage on the fish species group, the top predators. In this study, an ecological impact was assessed for the short-term leak scenario through the AQUATOX-EFDC model, which combines the proven ecological model AQUATOX with the hydrodynamic model EFDC. A case study of the coupled AQUATOX-EFDC model was conducted for 30-30,000 kg toluene leak scenarios in the Jeonju River in South Korea. A 21-day scenario simulation was conducted, and the impact of the toluene spill accident was evaluated by comparing the biomass between the control simulation and the perturbed simulation. As a result of the simulation, it was found that in the scenario in which 3000 kg of toluene was leaked for a day, a substantial change was expected in the range of 0-640 m from the accident site. Additionally, for a 30,000 kg leak, a substantial change was expected in the range of 0-2300 m from the accident site, and the greatest damage was observed for the fish species group, the top predators. As a result, the AQUATOX-EFDC simulation showed a significant ecological impact, and the proposed model will be helpful to understand the ecological impact and establish the management strategy for the ecological risk of the chemical spill.
Publisher
MDPI
ISSN
2079-7737
Keyword (Author)
chemical accidenttolueneecological assessmentbiomassAQUATOXEFDC
Keyword
FRESH-WATER MACROINVERTEBRATESRISK-ASSESSMENTAROMATIC-HYDROCARBONSLENGTH RELATIONSHIPSORGANIC POLLUTANTSENVIRONMENTAL FATEECOSYSTEMWEIGHTTOXICITYOIL

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