| Literature DB >> 25450910 |
Agnieszka Kowalczyk1, Timothy James Martin2, Oliver Richard Price3, Jason Richard Snape4, Roger Albert van Egmond3, Christopher James Finnegan3, Hendrik Schäfer5, Russell James Davenport2, Gary Douglas Bending5.
Abstract
Society's reliance upon chemicals over the last few decades has led to their increased production, application and release into the environment. Determination of chemical persistence is crucial for risk assessment and management of chemicals. Current established OECD biodegradation guidelines enable testing of chemicals under laboratory conditions but with an incomplete consideration of factors that can impact on chemical persistence in the environment. The suite of OECD biodegradation tests do not characterise microbial inoculum and often provide little insight into pathways of degradation. The present review considers limitations with the current OECD biodegradation tests and highlights novel scientific approaches to chemical fate studies. We demonstrate how the incorporation of molecular microbial ecology methods (i.e., 'omics') may improve the underlying mechanistic understanding of biodegradation processes, and enable better extrapolation of data from laboratory based test systems to the relevant environment, which would potentially improve chemical risk assessment and decision making. We outline future challenges for relevant stakeholders to modernise OECD biodegradation tests and put the 'bio' back into biodegradation.Keywords: Biodegradation; Chemical risk assessment; Microbial ecology; OECD tests; Omics; Persistence
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25450910 DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2014.09.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecotoxicol Environ Saf ISSN: 0147-6513 Impact factor: 6.291