Human Health Criteria - Methylmercury
The 2001 methylmercury human health criterion is a concentration of methylmercury in fish that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency calculated to protect human health. States and Tribes may use the criterion as the basis for establishing their water quality standards.
- Federal Register Notice: 2001 Final Methylmercury Criterion (January 8, 2001)
- Fact Sheet: Water Quality Criterion for the Protection of Human Health: Methylmercury (pdf)
- Water Quality Criterion for the Protection of Human Health: Methylmercury (pdf)
Final Implementation Guidance
This implementing guidance provides technical guidance to states and authorized Tribes on how they may want to use Water Quality Criterion for the Protection of Human Health: Methylmercury in their surface water protection programs (e.g., TMDLs, NPDES permitting). The guidance addresses questions related to water quality standards adoption (e.g., site-specific criteria, variances), assessments, monitoring, TMDLs, and NPDES permitting. The guidance consolidates the EPA's existing guidance where relevant to mercury.