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Safety and Ethics in Investigation

Environmental Science
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Safety and Ethics in Investigation

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Health, Safety and Ethical Guidelines in Scientific Investigations

Every scientific investigation must be planned and conducted with explicit consideration of health and safety risks and ethical obligations. In VCE Environmental Science, students are required to demonstrate safe and ethical practice in their investigations.

Why Safety and Ethics Matter

  • Field and laboratory environments contain real hazards that can cause injury or illness
  • Living organisms (plants, animals, microorganisms) require ethical treatment
  • Environmental investigations may affect fragile ecosystems
  • Unsafe or unethical practice can invalidate results and cause harm

Risk Assessment — The Core Safety Tool

A risk assessment identifies hazards before an investigation begins and specifies controls:

Step Description
Hazard identification What could cause harm? (physical, chemical, biological)
Risk assessment How likely is the hazard to cause harm? How severe?
Control measures What precautions reduce the risk to acceptable levels?
Residual risk What risk remains after controls are applied?

Safety Data Sheets (SDS)

When chemicals are used in an investigation, Safety Data Sheets (SDS) provide:
- Physical and chemical properties of the substance
- Health hazards and first aid measures
- Storage and handling requirements
- Disposal procedures

SDS must be consulted and referenced in the risk assessment for any chemical used.

Types of Hazards in Environmental Science Investigations

Physical Hazards

Hazard Example Control
UV exposure Fieldwork on sunny days Sunscreen, hat, long sleeves
Slips, trips, falls Uneven terrain in fieldwork Appropriate footwear; buddy system
Heat/cold stress Field work in extreme weather Hydration; weather-appropriate clothing
Insect/animal encounters Bee stings, snake bites Awareness; first aid kit; not working alone
Sharp objects Wire, plant thorns, broken glass Gloves; eye protection

Chemical Hazards

Hazard Example Control
pH reagents (acid/alkali) pH test chemicals Gloves; eye protection; SDS consultation
Fertiliser/nutrient solutions Nutrient concentration experiments Avoid skin/eye contact; proper disposal
Pesticides or herbicides Studies near agricultural land Avoid contact; wear PPE

Biological Hazards

Hazard Example Control
Microorganisms Soil or water bacteria Wash hands; avoid mouth contact
Venomous organisms Spiders, snakes, marine stingers Be aware; don’t disturb; have first aid plan
Plant toxins Sap or contact allergens Gloves; identify plants before handling
Pathogen exposure Bird flu (near bird roosts) Masks; gloves; avoid contact with faeces

Ethical Guidelines

Minimising Harm to Organisms

The 3Rs framework (developed for animal research) provides guidance:
- Replacement: Use non-animal methods where possible
- Reduction: Minimise the number of organisms used
- Refinement: Minimise pain, suffering and distress to animals

In environmental field investigations:
- Mark-recapture studies must use non-harmful marks and minimise handling time
- Return all organisms to their exact capture location after processing
- Do not collect or remove organisms without appropriate permits
- Do not disturb nesting sites or critical habitat areas

Environmental Ethics

  • Follow leave-no-trace principles in natural areas
  • Obtain required permits for fieldwork in national parks or reserves (e.g. Parks Victoria Permit)
  • Do not introduce materials (soil, water, organisms) that could spread pathogens or invasive species between sites
  • Avoid trampling on sensitive vegetation beyond minimum necessary for data collection

Data Ethics

  • Record all data honestly — do not alter, fabricate or selectively report results
  • Acknowledge assistance received from others
  • Use authentic data for analysis — do not reuse or copy others’ data without attribution
  • Maintain a logbook as an authentic record of all observations and decisions

Permits and Regulations

Some field investigations require permits:
- Fauna surveys requiring animal capture: Animal ethics approval (required by law for vertebrate research)
- Fieldwork in national parks or reserves: Parks permit
- Vegetation collection: Flora collection permit if sampling is involved
- Private property: Landowner permission

VCAA FOCUS: Investigation reports must include a risk assessment that identifies at least two hazards, their likelihood and consequence, and the specific control measures applied. Vague controls (‘be careful’) score poorly — specify the exact precaution taken.

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