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Encyclopedia > Ecotoxicology

The term "ecotoxicology" was coined by Truhaut in 1969, who defined it as "the branch of Toxicology concerned with the study of toxic effects, caused by natural or synthetic pollutants, to the constituents of ecosystems, animal (including human), vegetable and microbial, in an integral context” (Truhaut, 1977). Ecotoxicology is alleged to be the integration of toxicology and ecology or, as Chapman (2002) suggested “ecology in the presence of toxicants”. It aims to predict the effects upon natural communities - ‘the ecosystem’- of stressors, be they anthropogenic in origin or otherwise. It differs from Environmental Toxicology in that it integrates the effects of stressors across all levels of biological organisation from the molecular to whole communities and ecosystems. Toxicology (from the Greek words toxicon and logos) is the study of the adverse effects of chemicals on living organisms. ... Ernst Haeckel coined the term oekologie in 1866. ...


The publication of Rachel Carson's seminal volume, Silent Spring, in 1962 catalysed the separation of environmental toxicology- and, subsequently, ecotoxicology- from classical toxicology. The revolutionary element in Carson's work was her extrapolation from single-organism effects to effects at the whole ecosystem and the "balance of nature" (Bazerman et al., 2006). This systemic study is distinctly separate to the anthropocentric nature of classical toxicology and consequently ecotoxicology is a far broader discipline incorporating aspects of classical ecology, behavioural ecology, toxicology, physiology, molecular biology, environmental chemistry and a wealth of other disciplines in studying the movement of toxins through an ecosystem. Carsons Government Photo (1940s) Rachel Louise Carson (May 27, 1907 – April 14, 1964) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-born zoologist and marine biologist whose landmark book, Silent Spring, is often credited with having launched the global environmental movement. ... Silent Spring was written by Rachel Carson and published in September, 1962. ...


References

  • Bazerman, Charles and René Agustin De los Santos. "Measuring Incommensurability: Are toxicology and ecotoxicology blind to what the other sees?" 9 January 2006.

Chapman, P. M. 2002, "Integrating toxicology and ecology: putting the "eco" into ecotoxicology", Marine Pollution Bulletin, vol. 44, no. 1, pp. 7-15. January 9 is the 9th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ... 2006 (MMVI) is a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


Truhaut, R. 1977, "Eco-Toxicology - Objectives, Principles and Perspectives", Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 151-173.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Ecotoxicology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (301 words)
The term "ecotoxicology" was coined by Truhaut in 1969, who defined it as "the branch of Toxicology concerned with the study of toxic effects, caused by natural or synthetic pollutants, to the constituents of ecosystems, animal (including human), vegetable and microbial, in an integral context” (Truhaut, 1977).
Ecotoxicology is alleged to be the integration of toxicology and ecology or, as Chapman (2002) suggested “ecology in the presence of toxicants”.
This systemic study is distinctly separate to the anthropocentric nature of classical toxicology and consequently ecotoxicology is a far broader discipline incorporating aspects of classical ecology, behavioural ecology, toxicology, physiology, molecular biology, environmental chemistry and a wealth of other disciplines in studying the movement of toxins through an ecosystem.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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