Prof Dr Beate Escher

MSD310, Hörsaal & online | 13:30-15:00
11. Apr.
11. April 2024 | 13:30 Uhr
Kolloquium

Prof Dr Beate Escher

Chemical cocktails threaten the environment: it’s all in the mix!

Chemical cocktails threaten the environment: it’s all in the mix!

Abstract: An overwhelming number and diversity of organic chemicals are in daily use and enter the environment during or after use and disposal. Chemical pollution is an increasing threat to our environment, to wildlife and to people. The impact of chemical pollution will be amplified by population growth and climate change. However, conventional chemical monitoring programs have been criticized on the basis that they cannot include the full range of chemical pollutants that could occur in the environment including transformation products, and they do not account for the combined effects of mixtures of chemicals. Bioanalytical tools may therefore complement chemical analysis for cost-efficient and comprehensive (bio)monitoring. Bioanalytical tools are in vitro cell-based bioassays that target specific mechanisms of toxicity and give a measure of the toxicity of mixtures of known and unknown chemicals. Bioanalytical tools provide measures of the cumulative effects of mixtures of chemicals that exhibit the same mode of toxic action plus they can give a measure of the cytotoxicity of all chemicals. Using case studies on water quality monitoring and fish kill in the Oder River in 2022, I will illustrate how a combination of chemical analysis and bioanalytical tools in conjunction with mixture modelling can help to understand which fractions of the chemical pollution are known and which are unknown. Improved detection of the presence of mixtures of chemicals in environmental matrices, such as water or sediment but also in biota informs chemical risk assessment and management options.

Homepage Prof Beate Escher

IGB Colloquia open up!

IGB strives to facilitate and accelerate the exchange of knowledge and ideas within and also outside of IGB. One element contributing to inter- and transdisciplinary exchange, and more (scientific) cooperation and innovation, is to open up IGB Colloquia to an interested external audience from science (other research institutes, universities, laboratories) as well as practice (i.e. conservationists, freshwater/land-use managers, authorities, associations). If you would like to join this IGB Colloquium as a guest, we ask you to register until the morning of the colloquium 10 o'clock the latest. After we have checked your registration, you will receive the participation link.

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