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      Individual and molecular level effects of produced water contaminants on nauplii and adult females ofCalanus finmarchicus

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          Adverse outcome pathways: a conceptual framework to support ecotoxicology research and risk assessment.

          Ecological risk assessors face increasing demands to assess more chemicals, with greater speed and accuracy, and to do so using fewer resources and experimental animals. New approaches in biological and computational sciences may be able to generate mechanistic information that could help in meeting these challenges. However, to use mechanistic data to support chemical assessments, there is a need for effective translation of this information into endpoints meaningful to ecological risk-effects on survival, development, and reproduction in individual organisms and, by extension, impacts on populations. Here we discuss a framework designed for this purpose, the adverse outcome pathway (AOP). An AOP is a conceptual construct that portrays existing knowledge concerning the linkage between a direct molecular initiating event and an adverse outcome at a biological level of organization relevant to risk assessment. The practical utility of AOPs for ecological risk assessment of chemicals is illustrated using five case examples. The examples demonstrate how the AOP concept can focus toxicity testing in terms of species and endpoint selection, enhance across-chemical extrapolation, and support prediction of mixture effects. The examples also show how AOPs facilitate use of molecular or biochemical endpoints (sometimes referred to as biomarkers) for forecasting chemical impacts on individuals and populations. In the concluding sections of the paper, we discuss how AOPs can help to guide research that supports chemical risk assessments and advocate for the incorporation of this approach into a broader systems biology framework.
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            Food webs and carbon flux in the Barents Sea

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              Assessment of undiscovered oil and gas in the Arctic.

              Among the greatest uncertainties in future energy supply and a subject of considerable environmental concern is the amount of oil and gas yet to be found in the Arctic. By using a probabilistic geology-based methodology, the United States Geological Survey has assessed the area north of the Arctic Circle and concluded that about 30% of the world's undiscovered gas and 13% of the world's undiscovered oil may be found there, mostly offshore under less than 500 meters of water. Undiscovered natural gas is three times more abundant than oil in the Arctic and is largely concentrated in Russia. Oil resources, although important to the interests of Arctic countries, are probably not sufficient to substantially shift the current geographic pattern of world oil production.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A
                Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A
                Informa UK Limited
                1528-7394
                1087-2620
                August 02 2016
                August 02 2016
                August 02 2016
                August 02 2016
                : 79
                : 13-15
                : 585-601
                Article
                10.1080/15287394.2016.1171988
                f1a0a653-da6a-4511-9f29-5d9da5bff704
                © 2016
                History

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