Ecological risk characterization for PFAS has been identified as a clear and immediate information gap by the Tri-Services Environmental Risk Assessment Working Group (TSERAWG) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). PFAS are persistent in aquatic and terrestrial environments, and are known to accumulate in fish and wildlife. Management of PFAS-impacted sites requires ecological risk evaluations for listed and non-listed wildlife species. However, the basic PFAS ecotoxicological data necessary to derive soil- or sediment-based clean-up levels (CULs) for AFFF sites are lacking. While single compound CULs can be derived using standard soil or sediment toxicity tests, CULs for protecting higher trophic level organisms (e.g., threatened and endangered species) – or human health based on fish consumption – require a more complete understanding of fate and transport, as well as uptake, bioaccumulation, biomagnification, and trophic transfer kinetics.
Ecological risk assessments at AFFF sites are complicated by the fact that PFAS occur in complex mixtures, with over 200 different fluorinated organic chemicals having been identified in AFFF-impacted waters and soils so far. Biota are exposed to a mixture of PFAS, but what remains a critical research need is the bioaccumulation, food-web biomagnification, and the relative potency of both individual PFAS and the mix of constituents present at AFFF sites. Determining these relationships for a range of PFAS will allow more reliable risk assessments at AFFF sites.
SERDP is actively engaged in research to develop tools to assess PFAS ecological risks. Completed and on-going projects include developing TRVs for a range of freshwater and on land receptors, as well as the compilation of ecotoxicity TRVs from the scientific literature into tools that can be used for ecological risk assessments (see PFAS Ecotoxicity Risks: How SERDP is Closing the Knowledge Gaps). Understanding PFAS bioaccumulation, biomagnification, and toxicity to avian species in the field remains an important information gap. On-going research under SERDP will provide some data, but in addition to perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS), there remains a need for uptake and toxicity data for readily bioaccumulable compounds such as perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS), perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHXA), and perfluorobutanoic acid (PFBA ), 6:2 Fluorotelomer Sulfonate (FTS), 8:2 FTS and other AFFF-occurring PFAS. These compounds are frequently detected as mixtures on DoD sites and are of increasing interest to regulators.