Research field
Environmental Toxicology
Environmental toxicology examines how chemical contaminants — pesticides, pharmaceuticals, industrial pollutants, and emerging substances like PFAS — affect organisms, populations, and ecosystems. The field sits at the nexus of analytical chemistry, ecology, molecular biology, and public health, tracking how toxicants are absorbed, metabolized, and passed up food chains with progressively higher concentrations. Endocrine-disrupting compounds and microplastics have become dominant research priorities in the past decade, driven by their pervasiveness and subtle but measurable effects on reproductive and neurological development at parts-per-trillion concentrations. Regulatory agencies including the EPA, ECHA, and WHO rely heavily on this discipline to set exposure limits and approve or restrict chemicals. Practitioners often split time between field sampling, laboratory dosing experiments, and risk-assessment modeling.
Top institutions
UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
Wageningen University
University of Toronto
Stockholm University
Subfields
Key technologies
Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry
Zebrafish Bioassays
In Vitro Reporter Gene Assays
GIS-Based Exposure Mapping
High-Throughput Screening
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