Thousands of chemicals are in daily use; many of these reach the aquatic environment, which serves as a medium of transport and deposition into sediment and organisms. It is often unknown which effects these contaminants, alone or in combination with other stressors, may have on organisms, populations and communities in the aquatic environment. Ecotoxicology strives to identify and mechanistically understand contaminant-biota interactions with the ultimate goal to predict potential adverse effects. There are two general routes to addressing this goal. The first is to understand how organisms and populations respond according to anticipated exposure routes, organisms' genome and physiology, and structure- physico-chemical properties of chemi...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Since effluents are a main source of direct and continuous input of pollutants in aquatic ecosystems...
The field of aquatic toxicology has been expanding rapidly in recent years. The ecotoxicological stu...
Assessing ecological risk requires knowledge of chemical exposure, biological effects caused by chem...
An ultimate goal of toxic substance hydrology is to understand the ecological, biological and human ...
Ecotoxicology faces the challenge of assessing and predicting the effects of an increasing number of...
A large portion of the toxic effects observed in surface waters cannot be attributed to compounds re...
amining tissue residues of contaminants in biota reveals the movement of contaminants within organis...
A large portion of the toxic effects observed in surface waters cannot be attributed to compounds re...
A large portion of the toxic effects observed in surface waters cannot be attributed to compounds re...
A close collaboration between environmental chemistry and biological sciences is required for a comp...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Since effluents are a main source of direct and continuous input of pollutants in aquatic ecosystems...
The field of aquatic toxicology has been expanding rapidly in recent years. The ecotoxicological stu...
Assessing ecological risk requires knowledge of chemical exposure, biological effects caused by chem...
An ultimate goal of toxic substance hydrology is to understand the ecological, biological and human ...
Ecotoxicology faces the challenge of assessing and predicting the effects of an increasing number of...
A large portion of the toxic effects observed in surface waters cannot be attributed to compounds re...
amining tissue residues of contaminants in biota reveals the movement of contaminants within organis...
A large portion of the toxic effects observed in surface waters cannot be attributed to compounds re...
A large portion of the toxic effects observed in surface waters cannot be attributed to compounds re...
A close collaboration between environmental chemistry and biological sciences is required for a comp...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Exposure science, in its broadest sense, studies the interactions between stressors (chemical, biolo...
Since effluents are a main source of direct and continuous input of pollutants in aquatic ecosystems...