A
Anonymous
Guest
Peter,
At risk of being called an employee of MAC, or a mindless MAC-backer I will venture to ask a few questions regarding the IMA ISE based CDT and some of the data resulting from it.
1) What is the lower reliable method detection limit of the ISE method?
2) What error ranges are ascribed to values obtained by the ISE method?
3) In a personal correspondence made by C. Ellen Gonter, that you provided to me, there was a comment: “Statistics from these [round robin] studies indicate there is no difference between 0.03 and 5.0 mg CN/L using the ISE procedure”. Is she saying that values between 0.03 and 5.0 mg/L all have similar statistical value or that the method cannot statistically differentiate between known values of 0.03 mg/L and 5.0 mg/L?
4) If the ISE method cannot differentiate between values of 0.03 mg/L and 5.0 mg/L why is the BFAR legal enforcement value set at 0.2 mg/L?
5) In Rubec (2002) there is discussion of cyanide absence and presence in fish by Family (Tables 3A & 3B). In the table fish are listed as “CN absent” or “CN present”. What was the cut-off value for the determination of absence of presence of cyanide?
6) In Rubec (2001) there is a discussion of cyanide testing on marine-aquarium fish that lumps fish into 3 categories (Table 2). The categories are: “Positive, >=0.2 mg/Kg”, “Trace, >0 to <0.2 mg/Kg”, and “Zero, 0 mg/Kg”. Shouldn’t “Trace, >0 to <0.2 mg/Kg”, actually read “Trace, above lower method detection limit to <0.2 mg/Kg”? Also shouldn’t “Zero, 0 mg/Kg” actually be specified as “below method detection limit”?
Thank you for your participation in this board and for considering my questions.
Respectfully,
Lee Morey
Rubec, P.J., F. Cruz, V. Pratt, M. Oellers, B. McCullough, and F. Lallo. 2001. Cyanide-free net-caught fish for the marine aquarium trade. Aquarium Sciences and Conservation 3: 37-51.
Rubec, P.J., V. Pratt, B. McCullough, B. Manipula, J. Alban, T. Espero, and E. Suplido. 2002. Trends Determined By Cyanide Testing On Marine Aquarium Fish In the Philippines. Draft.
At risk of being called an employee of MAC, or a mindless MAC-backer I will venture to ask a few questions regarding the IMA ISE based CDT and some of the data resulting from it.
1) What is the lower reliable method detection limit of the ISE method?
2) What error ranges are ascribed to values obtained by the ISE method?
3) In a personal correspondence made by C. Ellen Gonter, that you provided to me, there was a comment: “Statistics from these [round robin] studies indicate there is no difference between 0.03 and 5.0 mg CN/L using the ISE procedure”. Is she saying that values between 0.03 and 5.0 mg/L all have similar statistical value or that the method cannot statistically differentiate between known values of 0.03 mg/L and 5.0 mg/L?
4) If the ISE method cannot differentiate between values of 0.03 mg/L and 5.0 mg/L why is the BFAR legal enforcement value set at 0.2 mg/L?
5) In Rubec (2002) there is discussion of cyanide absence and presence in fish by Family (Tables 3A & 3B). In the table fish are listed as “CN absent” or “CN present”. What was the cut-off value for the determination of absence of presence of cyanide?
6) In Rubec (2001) there is a discussion of cyanide testing on marine-aquarium fish that lumps fish into 3 categories (Table 2). The categories are: “Positive, >=0.2 mg/Kg”, “Trace, >0 to <0.2 mg/Kg”, and “Zero, 0 mg/Kg”. Shouldn’t “Trace, >0 to <0.2 mg/Kg”, actually read “Trace, above lower method detection limit to <0.2 mg/Kg”? Also shouldn’t “Zero, 0 mg/Kg” actually be specified as “below method detection limit”?
Thank you for your participation in this board and for considering my questions.
Respectfully,
Lee Morey
Rubec, P.J., F. Cruz, V. Pratt, M. Oellers, B. McCullough, and F. Lallo. 2001. Cyanide-free net-caught fish for the marine aquarium trade. Aquarium Sciences and Conservation 3: 37-51.
Rubec, P.J., V. Pratt, B. McCullough, B. Manipula, J. Alban, T. Espero, and E. Suplido. 2002. Trends Determined By Cyanide Testing On Marine Aquarium Fish In the Philippines. Draft.