Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1897/IEAM_2008-038.1
Title (Primary) Extrapolation concepts for dealing with multiple contamination in environmental risk assessment
Author Altenburger, R.; Greco, W.R.
Source Titel Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management
Year 2009
Department BIOTOX
Volume 5
Issue 1
Page From 62
Page To 68
Language englisch
Keywords Mixture toxicity; Combined effects; Sequential exposure; Models for risk assessment
Abstract This is 1 of 12 papers prepared by participants attending the workshop "Risk Assessment in European River Basins-State of the Art and Future Challenges" held in Liepzig, Germany on 12-14 November 2007. The meeting was organized within the framework of the European Commission's Coordination Action RISKBASE program. The objective of RISKBASE is to review and synthesize the outcome of European Commission FP4-FP6 projects, and other major initiatives, related to integrated risk assessment-based management of the water/sediment/soil environment at the river basin scale.Mixture exposure against several stressors is what organisms in the environment typically experience, and combined effects resulting from this are well documented. Risk management often still focuses on the assessment of individual priority compounds. Because of the large number of possible mixtures and their variability in time, experimental investigation of every conceivable mixture for their adverse effects is not a viable option. Instead, during the past decade, modeling approaches have been discussed in ecotoxicology that allow the prediction of expected combination effects based on the knowledge of the biological activity of the individual components. This contribution summarizes mixture exposure situations where consensus has been achieved about extrapolation techniques. In particular, for simultaneous exposure and for sequential exposure with no intervening recovery, currently available evidence demonstrates reasonable predictability of combined effects from the information of the individual mixture components. By contrast, when organisms are exposed to pulsed exposure with recovery periods or when nonchemical stressors interfere, there is still an open research field as how to account for these types of interaction.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=8
Altenburger, R., Greco, W.R. (2009):
Extrapolation concepts for dealing with multiple contamination in environmental risk assessment
Integr. Environ. Assess. Manag. 5 (1), 62 - 68 10.1897/IEAM_2008-038.1