Basel programme 01052014

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Basel 2014 S E TA C E u r o p e

SCiEnCE ACroSS BridgES, BordErS And BoundAriES programme book

SETAC Europe 24th Annual Meeting Basel, Switzerland, 11-15 May 2014 basel.setac.org


Welcome

asel

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Welcome By the SETAC Europe President............................................................................................. 3 By the SETAC Europe Executive Director ......................................................................... 5 By the SETAC World President ...............................................................................................6 By the Co-chairs of the Local Organising Committee................................................. 8 By the Chairs of the Scientific Committee ........................................................................9 Welcome to Basel ........................................................................................................................ 10 Acknowledgements Sponsors of the meeting ...........................................................................................................12 SETAC Europe Partners 2013-2014 ......................................................................................13 SETAC Global Partners and Affiliates .................................................................................13 Annual Meeting organisation ................................................................................................. 14 SETAC Europe Office ..................................................................................................................15

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General information Day by day general overview ..................................................................................................16 Sessions overview ........................................................................................................................22 Short Courses ............................................................................................................................... 30 Practical issues A-Z ......................................................................................................................31 Contribute....................................................................................................................................... 39 About SETAC SETAC: Local and global .........................................................................................................40 SETAC Europe Council .............................................................................................................. 41 SETAC Europe Student Advisory Council ...................................................................... 42 SETAC Europe meetings ......................................................................................................... 43 Students Student Activities........................................................................................................................44 Social Programme Social Activities ............................................................................................................................ 45 Science Slam Science Slam ................................................................................................................................. 47 Awards SETAC Global Awards............................................................................................................... 48

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SETAC SETAC SETAC SETAC

Europe Europe Europe Europe

Welcome

Young Scientist Awards .......................................................................... 50 Best Publication Awards ...........................................................................51 Environmental Education Award .........................................................52 LCA Life-time Achievement Award ....................................................52

Keynote Speakers Sunday 11 May, 18:00 .................................................................................................................. 54 Monday 12 May, 16:30 ................................................................................................................ 55 Tuesday 13 May, 16:30................................................................................................................ 56 Thursday 15 May, 13:55 ...............................................................................................................57 Sustainability Game Digital game for ethics education....................................................................................... 59 Presenter guidelines Presenter guidelines ..................................................................................................................60 Exhibitors Exhibitors guide ........................................................................................................................... 56 Technical sessions Monday 12 May, 8:10–18:30 ...................................................................................................... 99 Platform presentations including special sessions ....................................................102 Poster presentations .................................................................................................................114 Tuesday 13 May, 8:10–18:30 .................................................................................................... 137 Platform presentations including special sessions ................................................... 140 Poster presentations ................................................................................................................ 152 Wednesday 14 May, 8:10–18:30 ............................................................................................ 175 Platform presentations including special sessions ................................................... 180 Poster presentations ................................................................................................................192 Thursday 15 May, 8:10–16:00 ................................................................................................. 213 Platform presentations including special sessions ....................................................216 Poster presentations ...............................................................................................................224 Authors Author index ................................................................................................................................235

By the SETAC Europe President It is my great pleasure to welcome you to Basel for the 24th Annual Meeting of SETAC Europe. Such a big event – actually the biggest yearly meeting on environmental toxicology and chemistry in Europe – is made possible thanks to the involvement of highly committed volunteers. On behalf of the SETAC Europe Council, let me thank all the persons who are contributing to the success of the Meeting this year. My thanks go first to the Scientific and Organising Committees, efficiently led by Kristin Schirmer (Eawag), Juliane Hollender (Eawag), Bettina Hitzfeld (Switzerland Federal Office for the Environment) and Kathrin Fenner (Eawag), respectively. I also acknowledge the invaluable involvement of the Committee Members for creating an outstanding scientific programme and an exciting social programme. This year, about 1800 abstracts were organised into 65 sessions, including five Special Sessions. Both session chairs, co-chairs and presenters therefore deserve a big thank. Their efficient and enthusiastic contribution to the meeting programme indeed warrants dissemination of ‘Science across bridges, borders and boundaries’. Every year, the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting offers a large platform for expert scientific exchanges and education. It is up to every SETAC member to use this unique platform to propose scientific events. This year, on Sunday, the Pharmaceutical Advisory Group is organising a Special Workshop entitled “Weighing up the environmental costs of pharmaceutical use against the benefits to human and animal health and costs of risk management”. On the same day, 5 full-day courses and 2 half-day courses are covering very diverse topics, including testing methods, statistics, probabilistic risk assessment, life-cycle impact assessment, decision-making. Many thanks to the organisers of the workshop and short courses. Thanks also to the Keynote Speakers who are dealing with “The Problems of Persistent Organic Pollutants” (Martin Scheringer, ETH Zürich), “The Notion of Sufficiency” (Thomas Princen, University of Michigan), and “The Use of Omic Approaches in Aquatic Toxicity Testing” (Juliette Legler, Free University of Amsterdam). Do not miss them! As usual, the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting is giving large room and space for a variety of activities organised by the Student Advisory Council (SAC).

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Welcome

Among them, the mentor lunch, and career talks are giving opportunities for students to cross bridges and borders. Many thanks for this! Many thanks also to the student helpers once more contributing to day-to-day organisational tasks. Should you need help, they are right here for you! A SETAC Europe Annual Meeting could hardly be organised without the financial input from sponsors and exhibitors. The 24th Annual Meeting is sponsored by a dozen of public and private partners, and it is my pleasure to thank them all. Special thanks to the SETAC Europe Award Sponsors who contribute, every year, to the recognition of outstanding scientific contributions. SETAC Europe and SETAC Global Partners are also greatly acknowledged for their unfailing support to the Society’s missions and activities throughout the year. In Basel, nearly 50 exhibitors are waiting for your visit. So, please go and discover their products and services in the main exhibition hall. My thanks are also due to the Pensacola office staff members for their always efficient and pleasant contribution to the organisation of the SETAC Europe Annual Meetings. In particular, they are coming to present SETAC Publications, both books and journals. So, please go and share a moment with them. Last, but not least, my greatest thanks go to every member of the Brussels office staff, not only for the hard work they did to make this annual meeting a memorable one, but also for the constant help and support they provided to me and the Council this year. If you have read the above, you may be registered to the 24th SETAC Europe Annual Meeting. So, thank you for this, and enjoy! Laurent Lagadic SETAC Europe President

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By the SETAC Europe Executive Director I am pleased to join SETAC Europe President Laurent Lagadic in welcoming you to the 24th Annual Meeting of SETAC Europe and thanking all those involved in the organisation of this event. An efficient and pleasant collaboration reaches its climax here in these 5 days in Basel, where you will be fed with the state of the science on the wide range of topics in the field of environmental toxicology and chemistry. SETAC Europe is one of five Geographic Units of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. SETAC is unique with these strong organisations acting at the geographical level and SETAC World as an overarching organisation facilitating the exchange and cooperation across the globe. Here in Basel, we are proud to host not only representatives from almost every country in Europe, but also from the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Australia, North America and Latin America. The broad range of countries and disciplines represented at the meeting makes the meeting theme “Science across bridges, borders and boundaries” even more valid. To make you a bit more aware of all the activities of SETAC Europe, I am pleased to present the annual report, available in the SETAC Square. Take a moment to look at it, keep it on your desk, and spread the word to further expand the network and connect the science across the globe. Have a great week! Bart Bosveld SETAC Europe Executive Director

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Welcome

By the SETAC World President I am pleased to join our colleagues from SETAC Europe in welcoming you to the 24th Annual Meeting of SETAC Europe in Basel. The organising committees and office staff have done a great job in pulling together an exciting programme for this year’s meeting. The SETAC Europe Annual Meeting is always one of the great highlights of the SETAC Annual Meeting calendar, renowned for its outstanding science, professional networking and training, and for linking to our global community. This year’s meeting in Basel will be no exception. SETAC is truly a global professional scientific society with membership in all regions of the world. Our much respected and appreciated scientific programme draws on the best environmental scientists and practitioners from governments, business and academia around the world. Society membership is currently over 5800 professionals, representing more than 110 countries. Through our Geographic Unit networks in North America, Latin America, Asia Pacific, Africa and Europe, we are able to address international as well as regional and local environmental problems and challenges. Most importantly, our science is particularly valued for its tri-partite foundation, representing views from government, business and academia. SETAC remains active within significant global initiatives such as the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management (SAICM), and continues to collaborate with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and the International Standards Organisation (ISO). Since 2002, the UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle Initiative has been the most visible and broad collaboration with UNEP and we have now expanded this relationship by working with the UNEP Global Environmental Facility (GEF). This UNEP GEF collaboration is developing an online toolkit for developing countries and emerging economies to inventory their mercury exposure sources and to assist with identifying and prioritizing management approaches. Within SETAC we have launched our own internal “Global Horizon Scanning” initiative, which will assess the top environmental issues worldwide and use the outputs from this inititative to help focus SETAC activities in the future. The first phase of this Global Horizon Scanning initiative has already started and involves consulting with our membership in each of our 5 Geographical Units. At this meeting in Basel, we are collecting the top research needs in Europe and you can provide your input to the project in the SETAC Square in the exhibition hall. The World Council is particularly proud of the opportunities all of our programs offer to our members throughout their professional careers, in all geographies, and across

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the broad range of scientific disciplines encompassed by SETAC member interests. Our scientific programming is anchored by our well-attended annual meetings in key regions of the world, with Basel the key SETAC Europe meeting for 2014, and Adelaide and Vancouver hosting the key SETAC Asia Pacific and SETAC North America meetings later this year. Our well respected journals, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (ET&C) and Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (IEAM), which continue to attract leading research and review articles, entered a new contract with Wiley last year. One of the benefits of this new contract was the removal of page charges for our members. This was a much welcomed benefit which hopefully will continue encourage our members to publish their best science with SETAC. SETAC’s global and regional workshops and symposia encourage the opportunity for scientific dialogue and debates on important and emerging scientific issues that can impact policy decisions. Upcoming workshops and symposia for this year include: ecosystem services, environmental mixtures, bioavailability and life cycle analysis. SETAC Advisory Groups continue to expand in response to member interest, and we are particularly proud of their interest in working together across disciplines to tap the great potential of our interdisciplinary expertise and passion of our members. SETAC’s global programme is also well complemented by the local activities of our regional chapters and branches, which are active on all continents as they address key issues of interest to local citizens and communities. SETAC’s training and capacity-building efforts encompass outstanding programming such as short courses at geographic and regional annual meetings, successful distance learning via well-attended webinars, regular podcasts from IEAM and major international capacity-building events related to SAICM. We hope that you will take advantage of the many outstanding short courses, platforms and poster presentations being offered in Basel this year. My colleagues on the SETAC World Council and I encourage you to be as active within the SETAC community as possible. Your contributions as individual members, and ours as a Society, will continue to ensure that SETAC is a world scientific leader in Environmental Science for years to come. We are honored that you are joining us here in Basel. I personally look forward to meeting you during the conference week and hearing your thoughts about SETAC and how we can build further on our steady success. Enjoy the conference, and your time in Basel! Peter Campbell, SETAC President

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Welcome

Welcome

By the co-chairs of the Local Organising Committee

By the Chairs of the Scientific Committee

Dear colleagues and friends

Dear all

We would like to extend a warm welcome to all colleagues attending this event. Science across bridges, borders and boundaries - the motto of the first SETAC Annual Meeting in Switzerland - describes the city of Basel as well as our conference. Basel is a vibrant city with well-known research institutions and universities as well as international chemical and pharmaceutical companies lying on both sides of the Rhine at the Three Countries Corner of Switzerland, Germany and France. Switzerland is famous for its chocolate and its watches, but it is also famous for its world class academic institutions and strong research in the fields of environmental toxicology and chemistry. Switzerland is also a country with a very diverse culture; in a population of about 8 million people, 4 official languages are spoken and cultural borders between Italian, French and German “cultures” are routinely bridged.

After an intense period of preparation, we are very happy to welcome you to the SETAC Europe 2014 meeting in Basel. “Science across bridges, border and boundaries” is the theme of our meeting, a theme that you will encounter and experience in many different ways this week. In the true spirit of SETAC, let us use the meeting to bridge science and policy, dissolve borders between experimentalists and modellers, and link the boundaries of environmental compartments. Many other activities reflect our theme – the opportunities will be boundless!

We hope that this setting will reflect on the scientific discussions and will encourage us all to think across disciplinary boundaries to develop new ideas for scientific quests and to provide solutions for the challenging problems that face regulators, researchers and developers of new products alike. Take the chance to explore the City of Basel, including its art collections and other fascinating museums. We will also revive the SETAC fun run for you to explore Basel from a different perspective. Finally, our social events will take you to some of Basel’s historical landmarks and more recent “places-to-be”. The local organising committee (LOC) has tried to bring you to a location that has everything for a great conference. This would not have been possible without the fantastic support by the SETAC Europe office and the initiative of all LOC members – A big THANK YOU to all of you.

So let us enjoy this meeting. On behalf of the members of the scientific committee, welcome to the 24th Annual Meeting of SETAC Europe. We wish you a wonderful and inspiring time.

On behalf of the LOC, welcome to Basel and have a successful conference and a most enjoyable stay in Switzerland. Kathrin Fenner, Eawag Bettina Hitzfeld, Federal Office for the Environment

J. Hollender

B. Hitzfeld

Kristin Schirmer, Eawag Juliane Hollender, Eawag K. Fenner

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At this point we would like to thank the Scientific Committee, the SETAC Europe office, the Local Organising Committee and, in fact all of you for the great enthusiasm and hard work that was required to put together the exciting programme we now have. We are eager to welcome our keynote speakers who will cover selected themes of science, policy and socio-economics. Over the course of this conference, you are invited to choose from nine environmental toxicology and chemistry tracks with sixty regular sessions. Five special sessions are awaiting you; two of them explicitly offer a Swiss perspective. The session on chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems addresses the challenges Switzerland encounters and the strategies it pursues as an industrialised and densely populated country in the context of its water resources. Swiss chocolate production will be explored in another special session as case study to demonstrate the integrative facets of sustainability, ecosystem services and footprint concepts. A new event that we are delighted to introduce is the first ever SETAC Science Slam: the finalists will perform on stage to communicate their science to us in novel ways on Wednesday afternoon – not to miss! Finally, we would like to support the Global Horizon Scanning Research Prioritisation Project; more information at the SETAC Square in the exhibition hall.

K. Schirmer

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Welcome

Welcome

About Basel

city offers its inhabitants and visitors alike. The Rhine is the artery carrying the lifeblood of the city, it provides recreation, inspiration and has moulded the history and architecture of the city. In the summer months Basel’s inhabitants, students and businessmen flock to the river’s banks to sunbathe, promenade and generally let their cares melt away in the sunshine. Many also indulge in a special leisure activity that brings exceptional enjoyment - a swim in the Rhine. It is often said that the Mediterranean seems very close to the city, and if you mix with Basel’s inhabitants you will soon discover why.

Traditional and modern Basel’s Old Town is one of the prettiest and most intact in the whole of Europe. It is one of very few cities in the world, where historic buildings from the 15th century harmoniously blend with modern construction from internationally-renowned contemporary architects. Back before our calendar began, Basel had already been settled by the Celts. In 30 B.C. the city’s strategically favourable position led the Romans to station its military forces on the hill now occupied by the cathedral. In 1225 the first wooden bridge was then built across the Rhine. It was reconstructed in stone in the early 20th century and is now called the Mittlere Rheinbrücke. One key event in the development of the city was the founding of the University in the year 1460. Many of Europe’s greatest minds came to Basel, which became a veritable centre of humanism and book printing. The Reformation in the 16th century witnessed the growth of the silk weaving and dyeing industries which in turn gave rise to today’s pharmaceutical and chemical companies. The once fortified settlement is today a financial and commercial hub and a celebrated city of culture. It hosts nearly 40 museums with long-established collections and spectacular special exhibitions. They are the foundation of Basel’s reputation as a city of art and museums. The Rhine is life The Rhine is the true lifeblood of Basel and the city’s enduring landmark. As one of the most important trading routes, it has had a huge influence on the development of the city. Today it contributes greatly to the quality of life the

Basel is so easy to get to Only a 15-minutes drive from the city centre, Basel’s EuroAirport (BSL) is served by a number of international airlines including low-cost carriers. Together with neighbouring Zurich Airport, it enjoys connections to all European airports and to more than 200 intercontinental destinations. Located in the centre of Europe, Basel is a major transportation hub. Its three railway stations – the Swiss SBB, French SNCF and German Badischer Bahnhof offer excellent Travel to Basel Exhibition connections to far and wide. A5

France EuroAirport BaselMulhouse

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A35 Basel – Kl’hüningen Riehen Bad. Bahnhof

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Nestled in the heart of Europe in the triangle where Switzerland, Germany and France meet, Basel is a pocket-sized metropolis that combines proverbial Swiss quality with a multicultural population.

River Rhine

Basel – Switzerland’s capital of art and culture

SBB / SNCF Swiss and French Railway Station

A2 Bern / Zürich

No QR-Code Reader? Download at App-Store.

MCH Swiss Exhibition (Basel) Ltd. | CH - 4005 Basel info@messe.ch | www.messe.ch

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AcKNoWleDGemeNTS

Sponsors of the meeting

AcKNoWleDGemeNTS

SETAC Europe Partners

BU Nrune l IVERSITY

Bronze

Silver

Gold

Platinium

L O N D O N

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SETAC Global Partners and Affiliates

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orGANiSATioN

Local organising committee

SETAC Europe Office

Bettina Hitzfeld, Federal Office for the Environment (Co-Chair) Kathrin Fenner, Eawag (Co-Chair) Ksenia Groh, Eawag Birgit Hoeger, Novartis Stefan Hoeger, IES Katja Knauer, Federal Office for Agriculture Eva Lammer, BASF Schweiz AG Thomas Poiger, Agroscope Martin Scheringer, ETH Zürich Marc Suter, Eawag Inge Werner, Swiss Centre for Applied Ecotoxicology Eawag-EPFL Armin Zenker, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland

Bart Bosveld Executive Director bart.bosveld@setac.org

Scientific committee Kristin Schirmer, Eawag, Switzerland (Chair) Juliane Hollender, Eawag, Switzerland (Vice-chair) Thomas Backhaus, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Carlos Barata, IDAEA - CSIC, Spain Stephanie Bopp, EC - Joint Research Centre, Italy Barbara Demeneix, WatchFrog/UMR CNRS, France Virginie Ducrot, INRA, France Sabine Duquesne, UBA, Germany Francesco Falciani, Liverpool University, UK Kathrin Fenner, Eawag, Switzerland Laurence Hand, Syngenta, UK Richard Handy, University of Plymouth, UK Anu Kapanen, ECHA, Finland Pim Leonards, VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands Jörg Römbke, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany Diederik Schowanek, Procter & Gamble, Brussels Innovation Centre, Belgium Vera Slaveykova, University of Geneva, Switzerland Christoph Studer, Swiss Federal Office for Public Health, Switzerland Jos van Gils, Deltares, the Netherlands Marjan Vracko, National Institute of Chemistry, Slovenia Alessandra Zamagni, ENEA, Italy

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orGANiSATioN

Roel Evens Scientific Project Manager roel.evens@setac.org Filip Gunst Accounts accounts@setac.org Barbara Koelman Office & Meeting Manager barbara.koelman@setac.org Sarah Spanoghe Membership Coordinator sarah.spanoghe@setac.org Veerle Vandeveire Finances & Meeting Registration Manager veerle.vandeveire@setac.org Valerie Verstappen Communications Coordinator valerie.verstappen@setac.org

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Friday 9 May 2014 Time

Meeting

09:00 - 16:00 SETAC World Council

20:00 - 22:00 Welcome Reception Location Miami

Saturday 10 May 2014 Time

Meeting

09:00 - 16:00 SETAC World Council Long Range Planning

07:30 - 21:00

08:00 - 12:00

Location

Registration

Entrance Hall

Short Course 12 - Environmental Fish Diseases, Diagnosis and management

Hongkong

Shanghai 2

Short Course 6 - Modelling human and ecosys08:00 - 17:00 tems exposure and impacts for life-cycle assess- Guangzhou ment: the USEtox® consensus model Short Course 8 - Statistical issues in the design 08:00 - 17:00 and analysis of ecotox experiments

Mexico

Short Course 10 - The Endocrine System: Global 08:00 - 17:00 Perspectives on Testing Methods and Evaluation of Endocrine Activity

Nairobi

09:00 - 16:00 SETAC Europe Council 10:00 - 14:30 14:00 - 17:00

Risk-based Weight of Evidence (WoE) Environmental Assessments SETAC GLB Board of Directors

18:00 - 20:00 Opening and Awards Ceremony

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Meeting

Location

07:30 - 18:30

Registration

Entrance Hall

07:45 - 08:10

Poster setup

Exhibition Hall

08:10 - 10:15

Platform sessions

08:10 – 12:50

Special Session SS02 - REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges

10:00 - 18:30

SETAC Square

Exhibition Hall

10:15 - 10:45

Coffee break and poster sessions

Exhibition Hall

10:30 - 12:00

Global Partners Council Meeting

Nairobi

10:45 - 12:50

Platform sessions

12:00 - 14:00

Global Science Committee

12:00 - 14:00

IEAM Editors Luncheon

12:50 - 13:55

Meeting of the Freshwater salinization Advisory Group

12:50 - 13:55

Student Mentor Lunch

San Francisco

12:50 - 13:55

Lunch and poster sessions

Exhibition Hall

13:55 - 16:00

Platform sessions

14:00 - 16:00

Regionalised LCIA: State-of-the-art, new developments, implementation and software

15:00 - 16:30

Regional Branch Presidents Meeting

Boston 1

Short Course 1 - Advances in environmental and 08:00 - 17:00 human risk assessment - a transatlantic perspec- Shanghai 1 tive Short Course 5 - How to best conduct aquatic 08:00 - 17:00 ecotoxicity tests according to the International Guidelines

Exhibition Hall

Time

Miami

Meeting

Short Course 11 - Application and interpretation of the new life cycle impact assessment meth08:00 - 12:00 odology IMPACT World + that considers regionalisation

Meet the Student Advisory Council (@ SETAC Square)

Monday 12 May 2014 Location

Sunday 11 May 2014 Time

20:30 - 21:30

Exhibition Hall

Miami Rio Hongkong San Francisco

16:00 - 16:30

Coffee break and poster sessions

16:00 - 18:00

USEtox Community of Users - 3rd Meeting

Montreal

Mexico Rio Nairobi

Miami Mexico Exhibition Hall Rio

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16:00 - 18:00

SETAC Europe Finance Committee meeting

16:15 - 17:15

Nano Advisory Group Meeting

16:30 - 17:15

Keynote speaker

DAy by DAy overvieW

Miami

11:30 - 13:00

SETAC Europe Student Advisory Council

Kairo 1/2

12:00 - 14:00

ET&C Editor/Editorial Board Lunch

Auditorium Montreal

12:30 - 14:00

Fun run

Nairobi Miami

12:50 - 13:55

Lunch and poster sessions

Exhibition Hall

Delhi

12:50 - 13:55

Thermo Fisher lunch seminar - Progress in Environmental Analysis without Frontiers

San Francisco

Nairobi

13:55 - 16:00

Platform sessions

Poster sessions and social

Exhibition Hall

14:00 - 15:00

Bioaccumulation Science Advisory Group meeting

17:30 - 18:30

Meet the Student Advisory Council (@ SETAC Square)

Exhibition Hall

15:00 - 16:30

Career Talks

17:30 - 19:00

SETAC DOTTS Advisory Group Annual Meeting

Mexico

15:00 - 17:00

Publishing Session Room

18:30 - 20:00

Metals Advisory Group meeting

16:30 - 19:30

Sustainability Ethics Game

17:00 - 19:00

Endocrine Disrupter Testing & Risk Assessment Advisory Group Meeting

17:15 - 18:30

SE Science Committee meeting

17:15 - 18:30

Boston 1

Boston 2

Time

Meeting

Location

07:30 - 18:30

Registration

Entrance Hall

Poster setup

Exhibition Hall

07:45 - 08:10

08:00 - 09:00 Sediment Advisory Group 08:10 - 10:15

Platform sessions

08:10 – 12:50

Special Session SS01 - Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems – challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective

09:00 - 11:00

Publications Advisory Committee Meeting

10:00 - 13:00

SWC Finance Committee

10:00 - 18:30

SETAC Square

10:15 - 10:45

Coffee break and poster sessions

10:30 - 12:00

Plant Advisory Group Steering Committee

10:45 - 12:50

Platform sessions

Mexico San Francisco Rio Exhibition Hall

16:00 - 16:30

Coffee break and poster sessions

16:00 -17:30

Plant Advisory Group open meeting

Miami

16:00 - 18:00

SETAC Europe SESSS10 (private)

Mexico

Tuesday 13 May 2014

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Guangzhou

16:00 - 18:00

Italian Branch Annual Meeting

16:15 - 17:30

UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle Initiative: Update on phase 3 activities

16:15 - 18:30

Improved Fate Modeling for Metals Hazard and Risk Assessment: The Unit World Model, Status and Boundaries

Osaka/ Samarkand

16:30 - 17:15

Keynote speaker

Auditorium Montreal

16:30 - 17:30

EVOGENERATE workgroup meeting

Nairobi

16:30 - 18:30

SETAC EMAG PEST Advisory Group

Kairo 1/2

17:15 - 18:30

Poster sessions and social

Exhibition Hall

17:30 - 18:30

Exhibition Hall

Meet the Student Advisory Council (@ SETAC Square)

Exhibition Hall

17:30 - 19:00

Soils Advisory Group meeting

Rio

17:30 - 19:00

AM15 Organising Committee Meeting

19:30 -...

Student Party

Rio 2

Shanghai 3/4 Miami Mexico Exhibition Hall

Guangzhou Sydney

Delhi Rio Rhypark

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Wednesday 14 May 2014

20

16:30 - 18:00

Sustainability Ethics Game

Boston 1 Nairobi

Time

Meeting

Location

17:15 - 18:15

SETAC Wildlife Toxicology Advisory Group

07:30 - 18:30

Registration

Entrance Hall

17:15 - 18:30

Poster sessions and social SETAC Animal Alternatives Advisory Group

Poster setup

Exhibition Hall

17:30 - 18:30

07:45 - 08:10

17:30 - 18:30

Meet the Student Advisory Council (@ SETAC Square)

Exhibition Hall

19:00 -...

Congress Banquet

Volkshaus

08:10 - 10:15

Platform sessions

Exhibition Hall

10:00 - 18:30

SETAC Square

Exhibition Hall

10:15 - 10:45

Coffee break and poster sessions

Exhibition Hall

10:45 - 12:50

Platform sessions

10:45 - 12:50

Special Session SS03 - Research on communication and communication of research – pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach

11:00 - 12:00

SETAC Europe Student Assembly

12:50 - 13:55

Lunch and poster sessions

13:00 - 14:30

SETAC Europe Annual General Assembly

13:55 - 16:00

Platform sessions

13:55 - 16:00

Special Session SS05 - Bridging the gap between LCA scientific research and application by practitioners

14:00 - 16:00

SETAC Global Mercury Partnership

14:30 - 16:00

SETAC Europe Council Meeting

16:00 - 16:30

Coffee break and poster sessions

16:00 - 17:30

SETAC-MAgPIE Workshop Scientific Committee Meeting

16:15 - 17:30

UNEP Consumer Information Programme and UNEP/SETAC project on ‘Hotspot Analysis’

16:30 - 18:00

Science Slam

Exhibition Hall Rio

Thursday 15 May 2014 Time

Meeting

Location

07:30 - 15:00

Registration

Entrance Hall

07:45 - 08:10

Poster setup

Exhibition Hall

08:10 - 10:15

Platform sessions

10:00 - 14:00

SETAC Square

Exhibition Hall

10:15 - 10:45

Coffee break and poster sessions

Exhibition Hall

10:45 - 12:50

Platform sessions

10:45 - 12:50

Special Session SS04 - Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production

Shanghai 3/4

Shanghai 3/4

12:50 - 13:55

Lunch and poster sessions

Exhibition Hall

Miami

13:00 - 14:00

Meet the Student Advisory Council (@ SETAC Square)

Exhibition Hall

13:55 - 15:30

Closing Ceremony

13:00 - 19:00

AMAP POPs expert group meeting

Shanghai 3/4 MCH Lounge

MCH Lounge

Nairobi Exhibition Hall

Auditorium Montreal Rio

Rio Sydney Auditorium Montreal

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Montreal

Sydney Singapore

NANO05 - FA EFFECTS OF N ENV REALIS CONDITION

Shanghai 1/2

LCAS02 MODELLIN FUTURE-ORIEN LCA

Shanghai 3/4

ET09 WASTEWAT

RA08 RA08 RA08 RA08 RA10 - IN VITRO RA13 - RA OF RA10 ET08 - SOIL BIODIV - SOIL EXM04 BIODIV - CHEM EXM04 - CHEM CHEM- IN RA13 VITRO - RA OF RA13 CHEM - RA OF CHEM RA13 - RA ET08 OF CHEM - SOIL BIODIV ET08 - SOIL ET08 BIODIV - SOIL ET08 BIODIV - SOIL ET08 BIODIV EXM04 - CHEM EC02 - PLASTICS REGULATORY RA OF REGULATORY RA OF EC02 - PLASTICS REGULATORY RA OF REGULATORY RA OF BIOASSAYS IN RA & ECOTOX MIXTURES BIOASSAYS INMIXTURES RA MIXTURES MIXTURES& ECOTOX & ECOTOX & ECOTOX& ECOTOX & ECOTOX BIOAVAIL IN SOILS BIOAVAIL BIOAVAIL IN SOILS IN SOILS PESTICIDES PESTICIDES PESTICIDES PESTICIDES

EXM04 - CHEM BIOAVAIL IN SOILS

Delhi

RA08 REGULATORY R PESTICIDE

EFM03 EFM03 CHEM04 - CHEM04 EFM01 - AOP IN - AOP IN EFM01 EFM01 - AOPCHEM04 IN ET03 - - EVOLUT, CHEM04 - EXM02 -ET03 - EVOLUT, EXM02 - EXM02 EXM02 STATISTICAL EXM01 - PASSIVE EC03 - PERSONAL EC03 - PERSONAL EXM01 - PASSIVE STATISTICAL EXM01 - PASSIVE INNOVATIONS IN MULTIGENERAT ECOTOX & ECOTOX & ECOTOX INNOVATIONS & IN INNOVATIONS IN INNOVATIONS & BIOACCUMULATIO IN MULTIGENERAT BIOACCUMULATIO & BIOACCUMULATIO BIOACCUMULATIO CHALLENGES IN CARE PRODUCTS CARE PRODUCTS SAMPLING CHALLENGES IN SAMPLINGSAMPLING CHEM REGULATIONS N REGULATIONS REGULATIONS ENV ANALYT CHEM ENV ANALYTENV ANALYT EPIGENETICS CHEM ENV IN ERA ANALYT CHEMN EPIGENETICS IN ERAN N ECOTOX ECOTOX

EXM01 - PASSIVE SAMPLING

Kairo 1/2

EFM01 - AOP ECOTOX & REGULATIO

LETES01 LETES01 LETES01 - LETES01 - LETES01 - LETES01 LETES02 - ECOSYST LETES02 - LETES02 ECOSYST- ECOSYST EXM06&- MODEL ET01 - TROPICAL & ET01 - TROPICAL EXM06&- MODEL ET01 - TROPICAL ET01 -&TROPICAL & ET01 -&TROPICAL ET01 - TROPICAL EXM06 - MODEL EXM06 - MODEL EXM06 - MODEL EXM06 - MODEL SERVICES & COMMUNITY & COMMUNITY & COMMUNITY & COMMUNITY & COMMUNITY & COMMUNITY & SERVICES & SERVICES & CHEM FATECHEM & EXPFATE POLAR ECOTOX POLAR ECOTOX CHEM FATE &POLAR EXP ECOTOX POLAR ECOTOX POLAR ECOTOX POLAR ECOTOX CHEM & EXP FATECHEM & EXPFATE & EXP CHEM FATE & EXP VALUATION ECOSYST ECOTOX ECOSYST VALUATION ECOTOX ECOSYST ECOSYST ECOTOX ECOSYST ECOTOX ECOSYST ECOTOX IN ERA ECOTOX VALUATION IN ERA IN ERA

LETES02 - ECOSYST SERVICES & VALUATION IN ERA

RA01 - PLANTS & POLLUTANTS

CHEM02 - ENV EXM08 - SORPTION CHEM01 - BIODEGR EXM08 - SORPTION CHEM02 CHEM01 - ENV - BIODEGR RA01 - PLANTS & - PLANTS & RA11 - PBT ET11 - WILDLIFE ET11 & - WILDLIFE RA01 RA01 - PLANTS ET11 - WILDLIFE ET11 - WILDLIFE RA11 - PBT EXM05 - MERCURY & ENV BIODEGR EXM05 RATES &- MERCURY & ENV FATE & OFBIOAVBIODEGR ORG RATES & FATE OF ET06 - PERIPHYTON ET06 - PERIPHYTON & BIOAV ORG EXM05 - MERCURY POLLUTANTS SUSBSTANCES EC0TOX EC0TOX POLLUTANTS POLLUTANTSEC0TOX EC0TOX SUSBSTANCES PATHWAYS CHEM CHEM PATHWAYS CHEM CHEM

EXM05 - MERCURY

EXM03 - HUMAN EXPOSURE

RA04 - EQS: FROM RA09 - EFFICIENCY EFM02RA09 - EFFICIENCY EFM02 - EFM02 EFM02 RA04 - - EQS: FROM RA04 - EQS: FROM EXM07 - PREDICT RA03 - SEDIMENT EXM03 - HUMAN EXM03 - HUMAN EXM03 - HUMAN RA03 - SEDIMENT EXM07 - PREDICT MECHANISTIC EXM09 - METALS EXM09 - METALS SCIENCE TO OF RISK MITIG OF - METALS MECHANISTIC OF RISK MITIG MECHANISTIC OF MECHANISTIC SCIENCE TO SCIENCE TO EXM09 - METALS EXM09 MOL PROPERTIES TOXICOLOGYEXPOSURE EXPOSURE EXPOSURE TOXICOLOGY MOL PROPERTIES EFFECT MODELING EFFECT MODELING REGULATION PESTICIDES EFFECT MODELING PESTICIDES EFFECT MODELING REGULATION REGULATION

RA04 - EQS: FROM SCIENCE TO REGULATION

RA12 - POLLINATOR RA12 - POLLINATOR ET07 - ANIMAL ET07 - ANIMAL ET07 - ANIMAL EC01 - PHARMA SS02 - REACH SS02 - REACH EC01 - PHARMA EC01 - PHARMA EC01 - PHARMA EC01 - PHARMA ET02 - ENV OMICS EC01 - PHARMA ET02 - ENV ET02 OMICS - ENVET02 OMICS - ENV ET02 OMICS - ENV OMICS ET02 - ENV OMICS SS02 - REACH RA RA ALTERNAT ALTERNATALTERNAT

ET07 - ANIMAL ALTERNAT

Singapore

Sydney

CHEM03 - IDENT & CHEM03 - IDENT CHEM03 & -CHEM03 IDENT & - IDENT CHEM03 & - IDENT & CHEM03 - IDENT & ET05 - MARINE & ET05&- MARINE ET05 -&MARINE ET05&- MARINE & ET05 - MARINE & ET05 - MARINE RA06 - ENDOCRINE RA06 - ENDOCRINE MODEL - FISH ET04 MODEL - FISH ET04 MODEL - FISH MODEL ET04 - FISH MODEL RA06 - ENDOCRINE RA06 - ENDOCRINE ET04 - FISH MODEL ET04 - FISH ET04 PRIORIT PRIORIT PRIORIT PRIORIT PRIORIT PRIORIT COASTAL ECOTOX & COASTAL ECOTOX COASTAL COASTAL & ECOTOX COASTAL&ECOTOX & ECOTOX & COASTAL ECOTOX & DISRUPTORS SPECIES SPECIES SPECIES SPECIESHAZARDOUS SPECIESHAZARDOUS DISRUPTORS DISRUPTORS DISRUPTORS SPECIES HAZARDOUS HAZARDOUS HAZARDOUS HAZARDOUS RA RA RA RA RA RA EMERGING POLL EMERGING EMERGING POLL EMERGING POLL POLL EMERGING POLL EMERGING POLL NANO05 - FATE & NANO05 - FATE & -NANO05 NANO06 & - FATE & NANO05 - FATE & NANO05 FATE & - FATE NANO05 NANO06 NANO06 NANO04 - FATE & NANO02 - DETECT NANO01 - BIONANO01 - BIONANO01 - BIONANO01 - BIONANO06 NANO04 - FATE & NANO02 - DETECT EFFECTS OF NPS IN EFFECTS OFEFFECTS NPS IN OF EFFECTS NPS IN OF NPS IN EFFECTS OF NPS IN NANO07 - CARBON NPS INOFEFFECTS TOX - ERA OF MECHANISTIC TOX NANO07 - CARBON NANO03 - ERA OF MECHANISTIC NANO03 & CHARACT OF OF NMS IN MECHANISTIC TOX OF EFFECTS & CHARACT NANO OFINTERPHASE NANO INTERPHASE NANO INTERPHASE NANO INTERPHASE MECHANISTIC TOX OF EFFECTS OF NMS IN ENV REALISTIC ENV REALISTIC OF ENGINEERED ENV REALISTIC BASED NMS ENV REALISTIC ENV REALISTIC ENV REALISTIC OF ENGINEERED NMS BASED NMS NMS NMS ENGINEERED NMS SOIL NMSINTERACTIONS INTERACTIONS INTERACTIONS INTERACTIONS ENGINEERED NMS SOIL CONDITIONS CONDITIONS NMS CONDITIONS CONDITIONS CONDITIONS CONDITIONS NMS Shanghai 1/2

LCAS02 LCAS02 - LCAS02 LCAS06 - TEACH LCAS02 LCAS05 - TEACH LCAS06 LCAS05 LCAS04 - SOCIAL & LCAS01 - LCAS01 - LCAS01 - LCAS01 LCAS01LCAS04 - SOCIAL & LCAS01 LCAS06 MODELLING MODELLINGMODELLING SUSTAINABILITY: MODELLING SUSTAINABILITY: AND LCAS03 - POLICYAND LCAS03 - POLICY LCAS03 - POLICY LCAS03 - POLICY MONETARISED ADVANCEMENTS IN ADVANCEMENTS MONETARISED ADVANCEMENTS IN ADVANCEMENTS IN ADVANCEMENTS IN SUSTAINABILITY: IN ADVANCEMENTS IN FUTURE-ORIENTED FUTURE-ORIENTED BENCHM, CERT & COMMUNICATE FUTURE-ORIENTED FUTURE-ORIENTED COMMUNICATE BENCHM, CERT & ASSESSMENT ASSESSMENT ASSESSMENT ASSESSMENT IMPACT IN LCA LCIA IMPACT IN LCA LCIA LCIA LCIA LCIA BENCHM, CERT & LCA LCIA LCA LCA LCA LCA LCA SUSTAINABILITY LCA SUSTAINABILITY Shanghai 3/4

EC04 - POLYEC04 & - POLY- & EC04 - POLY- & EC04 - POLY- & SS05 - FROM LCA SS01 - SUSTAIN OF SS01 - SUSTAIN SS01OF - SUSTAIN OF SS01 - SUSTAIN OF SS05 - FROM LCA ET10 - MULTIPLE ET10 - MULTIPLE ET09 SS03 PERFLUORINATED ET09 - ET09 ET09 ET09 SS03 -PERFLUORINATED SS04 - SUSTAINABILITY SS04 - SUSTAINABILITY PERFLUORINATED PERFLUORINATED TO AQUAT ECOSYST - AQUAT ECOSYST AQUAT RESEARCH TO STRESSORSRESEARCH & STRESSORS & - ECOSYST - AQUAT ECOSYST WASTEWATER WASTEWATER COMMUNICATION ALKYL ALKYL WASTEWATER WASTEWATER WASTEWATER COMMUNICATIONALKYL OF SWISS CHOCOLATE OF SWISS CHOCOLATE ALKYL APPLICATIONS SWISS PERSPECTIVE SWISS PERSPECTIVE SWISS PERSPECTIVE SWISS PERSPECTIVE APPLICATIONS COMM RESPONSES COMM RESPONSES SUSBSTANCES SUSBSTANCES SUSBSTANCES SUSBSTANCES

Osaka/ Samarkand

EFM01 - AOP IN ECOTOX & REGULATIONS

Kairo 1/2

Delhi

ET09 WASTEWATER

LCAS06 SUSTAINABILITY: BENCHM, CERT & LCA

Boston 2 Boston 1

ET05 - MARIN COASTAL ECOT RA

Osaka/ Samarkand

AM1 08:10 - 10

SS02 - REAC

SS02 - REACH

Montreal

ROOM

MONDAY 12th MAY 2014 MONDAY 12th MAY 2014TUESDAY 13th MAY 2014 TUESDAY 13th MAY 2014 WEDNESDAY 14th MAY 2014 WEDNESDAY 14th THURSDAY MAY 2014 15th MAY 2014THURSDAY 15th MAY 2014 AM1 AM2 AM1 PM AM2 AM1 PM AM2 AM1 PM AM2 AM1 PM AM2 AM1 PM AM2 AM1 PM AM2 AM1 AM2 08:10 - 10:15 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 13:55 - 16:00 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 13:55 - 16:00 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 13:55 - 16:00 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 13:55 - 16:00 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 13:55 - 16:00 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 13:55 - 16:00 10:45 - 12:50 08:10 - 10:15 10:45 - 12:50

ROOM

SeSSioNS overvieW

Boston 2 Boston 1

Boston 2 Boston 1

Osaka/ Samarkand

Kairo 1/2

Delhi

Shanghai 3/4

Shanghai 1/2

Singapore

Sydney

Montreal

ROOM

SeSSioNS overvieW

ET01 - TROPIC POLAR ECOT

RA01 - PLANT POLLUTAN

EXM03 - HUM EXPOSUR

LCAS - Life cycle analysis and sustainability LCAS - Life cycle analysis and sustainability EXM - Exposure, bioavailability and EXM bioaccumulation - Exposure, bioavailability and bioaccumulation LETES - Landscape ecotoxicology LETES and management, - Landscape ecotoxicology ecosystem services and management, ecosystem services

LCAS - Life cycle analysi

RA - Risk assessment, regulation and RA - public Risk assessment, perception regulation and public CHEM perception - Environmental and analytical CHEM chemistry - Environmental and analytical ET - Aquatic chemistry and terrestrial ecotoxicology ET - Aquatic and terrestrial EFM - Effect ecotoxicology modelling and predictive EFM -toxicology Effect modelling and predictive toxicology

RA - Risk assessment, re

NANO - Fate and Effects of Nanomaterials NANO - Fate and Effects of Nanomaterials EC - Emerging contaminants and EC effects - Emerging contaminants and SSeffects - Special sessions

NANO - Fate and Effects

22

SS - Special sessions

23


SeSSioNS overvieW

SeSSioNS overvieW

LCA - Life Cycle Analysis and sustainability Session Abbreviation Session Title

Platforms

Posters

EXM05 - Mercury Biogeochemistry and Policy

TH

TH

Boston 1

EXM06 - MODEL CHEM FATE & EXP

EXM06 - Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context

TU

TU

Osaka / Samarkand

EXM07 - PREDICT MOL PROPERTIES

EXM07 - Predicting molecular properties of environmental contaminants

WE

WE

Boston 2

Room

LCAS01 - Advancements in life cycle LCAS01 - ADVANCEimpact assessment and footprint MENTS IN LCIA method development

TU

LCAS02 MODELLING FUTURE-ORIENTED LCA

LCAS02 - Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios

MO

MO

Shanghai 1/2

EXM08 - SORPTION & BIOAVAIL ORG CHEM

EXM08 - Sorption and bioavailability of organic chemicals: mechanisms and applications in innovative remediation

TU

TU

Boston 1

LCAS03 - POLICY ASSESSMENT

LCAS03 - Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries

WE

WE

Shanghai 1/2

EXM09 - METALS

EXM09 - Bioavailablity and effects of metals and metal mixtures (*)

TU

TU

Boston 2

LCAS04 - SOCIAL & MONETARISED IMPACT IN LCA

LCAS04 - Delving into the social and monetarised environmental impacts during the evaluation process of the Life Cycle of products in order to be able to take all three pillars of sustainability into account

MO

LCAS05 - Teaching and communiLCAS05 - TEACH cating sustainability – paving the AND COMMUNICATE way to a common understanding SUSTAINABILITY and meaningful actions LCAS06 - SUSTAINABILITY: BENCHM, CERT & LCA

LCAS06 - Toward sustainability: benchmarks, certification and LCA

TU

Shanghai 1/2

LETES - Landscape ecotoxicology and management, ecosystem services

WE

TH

MO

WE

TH

Shanghai 1/2

Shanghai 1/2

Shanghai 1/2

Session Abbreviation

Session Abbreviation LETES01 COMMUNITY & ECOSYST ECOTOX

Session Title LETES01 - Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology

LETES02 - ECOSYST LETES02 - Ecosystem structures SERVICES & and functions and their valuation in VALUATION IN ERA Ecological Risk Assessment LETES03 LANDSCAPE ECOTOX

Platforms

Posters

Room

WE

WE

Osaka/ Samarkand

TH

TH

Osaka / Samarkand

MO

poster area

LETES03 - Landscape ecotoxicology and spatially explicit risk assessment of toxicants

RA - Risk assessment, regulations and public perception

EXM - Exposure, bioavailability and bioaccumulation

24

EXM05 - MERCURY

Session Abbreviation

Session Title

Platforms

Posters

Room

EXM01 - PASSIVE SAMPLING

EXM01 - Applications of innovative passive sampling and dosing

TH

TH

Kairo 1/2

EXM02 - BIOACCUMULATION

EXM02 - Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling

WE

EXM03 - HUMAN EXPOSURE

EXM03 - Human exposure to emerging contaminants: monitoring and modeling

MO

MO

Boston 2

EXM04 - CHEM BIOAVAIL IN SOILS

EXM04 - Measuring and modelling chemical bioavailability in soils

TH

TH

Delhi

WE

Kairo 1/2

RA01 - PLANTS & POLLUTANTS

Session Title

Platforms

Posters

Room

RA01 - Plants and pollutants in the environment

MO

MO

Boston 1

MO

poster area

RA02 - Assessing the risk of environRA02 - AMPHIBIANS mental pollutants on amphibians and & REPTILES reptiles RA03 - SEDIMENT TOXICOLOGY

RA03 - Current Developments and Challenges on Sediment toxicology in Scientific and Regulatory Contexts

MO

MO

Boston 2

RA04 - EQS: FROM SCIENCE TO REGULATION

RA04 - Developments in Environmental Quality Standards: bridging the gap between science and practical regulatory implementation

TH

TH

Boston 2

25


SeSSioNS overvieW

SeSSioNS overvieW

RA05 - MINING

RA05 - Effects of Mining on the Local Environment

RA06 - ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS

RA06 - Endocrine Disruptors: Exposure, Hazard & Risk Assessment

RA07 - FRACKING, SEISM & SPILLS

RA07 - Fracking, seismics and spills: Environmental risk assessment of oil and gas exploration and production

RA08 - REGULATORY RA OF PESTICIDES

RA08 - How can scientific advances support regulatory risk assessment for pesticides?

RA09 - Monitoring the efficiency of RA09 - EFFICIENCY risk mitigation measure protecting OF RISK MITIGATION the environment from pesticide OF PESTICIDES exposure and effects RA10 - IN VITRO BIOASSAYS IN RA

RA11 - PBT SUSBSTANCES

RA10 - Novel approaches to incorporate in vitro bioassays in risk assessment RA11 - Persistent, Bioaccumulative and Toxic (PBT) substances – identification, assessment and regulatory decision making with a special focus on socio-economic aspects

TH

TU

poster area

TH

Sydney

TU

MO

MO

Boston 2

MO

MO

Delhi

Boston 1

RA12 - POLLINATOR RA

RA12 - Pollinator risk assessment: past, present and future

MO

MO

Montreal

RA13 - RA OF CHEM MIXTURES

RA13 - Risk assessment of chemical mixtures: strategies, bottlenecks, and the steps ahead

TU

TU

Delhi

CHEM - Environmental and analytical chemistry Session Abbreviation

26

Session Title

Platforms

Posters

Room

CHEM01 - BIODEGR & ENV FATE OF CHEM

CHEM01 - Biodegradation and Environmental Fate of Chemicals - Regulatory Acceptance of Non-Standard Tests

CHEM02 - ENV BIODEGR RATES & PATHWAYS

CHEM02 - Environmental biodegradation rates and pathways: Dependence on environmental conditions

CHEM03 - IDENT & PRIORIT HAZARDOUS EMERGING POLL

CHEM03 - Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants

WE

WE

Sydney

CHEM04 - INNOVATIONS IN ENV ANALYT CHEM

CHEM04 - Innovations in environmental analytical chemistry: the quest for pollutants at trace levels

TU

TU

Kairo 1/2

WE

WE

WE

WE

Session Title

Platforms

Posters

Room

ET01 - TROPICAL & POLAR ECOTOX

ET01 - Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions

MO

MO

Osaka / Samarkand

ET02 - ENV OMICS

ET02 - Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors

WE

WE

Montreal

ET03 - EVOLUT, MULTIGENERAT & EPIGENETICS IN ERA

ET03 - Evolutionary, multigenerational and epigenetic effects of pollutants: providing scientific support to long-term ERA

TU

TU

Kairo 1/2

ET04 - FISH MODEL SPECIES

ET04 - Fish model species in environmental toxicology

TU

TU

Sydney

ET05 - MARINE & COASTAL ECOTOX & RA

ET05 - Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment

MO

MO

Sydney

ET06 - PERIPHYTON

ET06 - Periphyton as bioindicator and community model – critical review, work in progress, future perspectives

MO

MO

Boston 1

ET07 - ANIMAL ALTERNATIVES

ET07 - Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3Rs): Animal alternative approaches in ecotoxicology and risk assessment

TH

TH

Montreal

ET08 - SOIL BIODIV & ECOTOX

ET08 - Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology

WE

WE

Delhi

ET09 - WASTEWATER

ET09 - Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation

MO

MO

Shanghai 3/4

ET10 - MULTIPLE STRESSORS & COMM RESPONSES

ET10 - What do we know about the effects of multiple stressors and community responses on aquatic ecosystems?

TH

TH

Shanghai 3/4

ET11 - WILDLIFE EC0TOX

ET11 - Wildlife ecotoxicology: from acute toxicity to low level, chronic exposure related effects

TU

TU

Boston 1

Delhi

TU

WE

Session Abbreviation

poster area

TU

WE

ET - Aquatic and terrestrial ecotoxicology

Boston 1

Boston 1

27


SeSSioNS overvieW

SeSSioNS overvieW

EFM - Effect modelling and predictive toxicology Session Abbreviation

Session Title

EC - Emerging contaminants and effects Platforms

Posters

Room

EFM01 - AOP IN ECOTOX & REGULATIONS

EFM01 - Advancing Adverse Outcome Pathways for Integrated Toxicology and Regulatory Applications

MO

EFM02 - MECHANISTIC EFFECT MODELING

EFM02 - Mechanistic effect modeling - beyond concentration response and constant environments

WE

WE

Boston 2

EFM03 - STATISTICAL CHALLENGES IN ECOTOX

EFM03 - Statistical challenges in ecotoxicology

WE

WE

Kairo 1/2

MO

Kairo 1/2

NANO - Fate and effects of nanomaterials Session Abbreviation NANO01 BIO-NANO INTERPHASE INTERACTIONS

28

Session Title NANO01 - Biophysical Interactions at the Bio-nano Interface: Relevance for Aquatic Nanotoxicology

Platforms

Posters

Room

WE

WE

Singapore

Session Abbreviation

Session Title

Platforms

Posters

Room

EC01 - PHARMACEUTICALS

EC01 - Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field.

TU

TU

Montreal

EC02 - PLASTICS

EC02 - Macro, micro and nanoplastic pollution in the aquatic and terrestrial environments: Sources, fate, exposure and ecological and toxicological impacts

TU

TU

Delhi

EC03 - PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS

EC03 - Personal care products in the environment: strengthening science to support regulation

MO

MO

Kairo 1/2

EC04 - POLY- & PERFLUORINATED ALKYL SUSBSTANCES

EC04 - Recent advances and critical future research directions for polyand perfluorinated alkyl substances (PFASs)

TU-WE

WE

Shanghai 3/4

Platforms

Posters

SS - Special sessions Session Abbreviation

NANO02 - Detection and characterNANO02 - DETECT isation of nanomaterials in complex & CHARACT OF NMS aqueous matrices

TU

NANO03 - ERA OF NMS

NANO03 - Environmental risk assessment of nanomaterials: open issues, pitfalls and recommendations

WE

WE

Singapore

NANO04 - FATE & EFFECTS OF NMS IN SOIL

NANO04 - Fate and effects of nanomaterials in soil

TU

TU

NANO05 - FATE & EFFECTS OF NPS IN ENV REALISTIC CONDITIONS

NANO05 - Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions

MO

MO

NANO06 - MECHANISTIC TOX OF ENGINEERED NMS

NANO06 - Mechanistic toxicology of engineered nanomaterials: state of the art and future perspectives

TH

TH

Singapore

NANO07 - CARBON BASED NMS

NANO07 - Usage, fate and risk of carbon based nanomaterials.

TU

TU

Singapore

TU

Singapore

Session Title

Room

SS01 - SUSTAIN OF AQUAT ECOSYST - SWISS PERSPECTIVE

SS01 - Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems – challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective

TU

TU

Shanghai 3/4

SS02 - REACH

SS02 - REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges

MO

MO

Montreal

Singapore

SS03 - COMMUNICATION

SS03 - Research on communication and communication of research – pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach

WE

WE

Shanghai 3/4

Singapore

SS04 - SUSTAINABILITY OF SWISS CHOCOLATE

SS04 - Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production

TH

TH

Shanghai 3/4

SS05 - FROM LCA RESEARCH TO APPLICATIONS

SS05 - Bridging the gap between LCA scientific research and application by practitioners (*)

WE

WE

Shanghai 3/4

29


ShorT courSeS

PrAcTicAl iSSueS A-Z

On Sunday 11 May 2014, a range of half- and full-day short courses are scheduled prior to the opening of the congress. Registration is open to all. Short courses at SETAC Annual Meetings provide educational opportunities to the members and our guests. Teaching a short course also provides an excellent opportunity for getting to know (young) people working in the same field of interest and thus forming networks. Following short courses (with leading instructors) will be available at the SETAC Europe 24th Annual Meeting:

Abstract book About 1800 abstracts have been accepted for presentation during poster and platform sessions at the SETAC Europe 24th Annual Meeting. The abstracts and extended abstracts are available online at basel.setac.org. A hard copy of the abstract book can be purchased for 50€ at the registration desk, USB-sticks are for sale for 20€. Address

Full day courses (08:00 - 12:00 and 13:00 - 17:00):

Room Shanghai 1

The conference centre is easily accessible by public transport. The city centre has a good public transport system connecting all parts of the city. The general venue contact details are:

How to best conduct aquatic ecotoxicity tests according to the International Guidelines Hans Rufli (Ecotoxsolutions, Switzerland)

Shanghai 2

Congress Center Basel MCH Messe Schweiz (Basel) AG Messeplatz, CH-4005 Basel

Modelling human and ecosystems exposure and impacts for life-cycle assessment: the USEtox® consensus model Peter Fantke (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark)

Guangzhou

Airport

Statistical issues in the design and analysis of ecotox experiments John W. Green (DuPont, USA)

Mexico

Advances in environmental and human risk assessment - a transatlantic perspective Martin F. Wilks (Swiss Centre for Applied Human Toxicology, Switzerland)

The Endocrine System: Global Perspectives on Testing Methods and Evaluation of Endocrine Activity Ellen Mihaich (Environmental and Regulatory Resources, USA)

Half day courses (08:00 - 12:00):

Nairobi

Room

Application and interpretation of the new life cycle impact assessment methodology IMPACT World + that considers regionalisation Cécile Bulle (École Polytechnique de Montréal, Canada)

Boston 1

Environmental Fish Diseases, Diagnosis and Management Salah H. Afifi (Assiut University, Egypt)

Hongkong

For a last-minute registration to one of the courses, please contact SETAC staff at the registration desk.

30

T +41 58 206 28 28 W: www.congress.ch E: info@congress.ch

Only a 15-minutes drive from the city centre, Basel’s EuroAirport (BSL) – by the way the only bi-national airport in the world – is served by a number of international airlines including low-cost carriers. Together with neighbouring Zurich Airport, it enjoys connections to all European airports and to more than 200 intercontinental destinations. EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg BSL Zürich Airport ZRH T +41 61 325 25 12 T +41 900 300 313 (CHF 2.-/min) W: www.euroairport.com/en/ W: www.zurich-airport.com/ A shuttle bus runs between EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg and the city centre (bus no. 50, final stop Basel Bahnhof SBB, travel time 13 min.). On the day of arrival, the reservation confirmation from the hotel guarantees a free transfer by public transport from the EuroAirport to the hotel. From Zurich Airport to Basel: from the train station of the Swiss Federal Railway (SBB) inside Zurich Airport you have several train connections to Basel Swiss railway station (Basel SBB). Every 4 min. after the hour (6:04, 7:04, 8:04, 20:04, 21:04) a direct train from Zurich Airport/Zürich Flughafen to Basel SBB (travel time: 1h 20min) and several other train connections changing once at

31


PrAcTicAl iSSueS A-Z

PrAcTicAl iSSueS A-Z

Zurich railway station/Zürich HB. For the timetable visit www.sbb.ch.

Codes and calling

Bank and exchange Switzerland uses the Swiss franc (CHF), in tourist regions the Euro is often accepted as well. The rate of the franc seems to follow that of the euro very closely. Foreign currency and travellers cheques can be exchanged at banks, post offices, travel agents, bureau de change kiosks and some hotels throughout the city. Credit cards are widely accepted and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) or cash machines can be found throughout the city and in the airport. Business Centre at the Congress Center Basel The centre has a well-equipped information & business centre for visitors. Available services include: • PC Use/Internet Access • Photocopying • Printing • Scanning • Faxing Basel tourist information Information on Basel is available at the tourist information desk run by Basel Tourism near the SETAC Square in the exhibition hall in the conference centre. For opening hours visit the information desk. In addition there are two tourist information offices in Basel: Tourist Information Office in the Stadt-Casino, at Barfüsserplatz (tram stop: Barfüsserplatz) Opening hours Mon-Fri 9:00 –18:30 Sat 9:00 –17:00 Sun 10:00 –15:00

Tourist Information Office in the railway station Basel SBB (tram stop: Basel Bahnhof SBB) Opening hours Mon-Fri 8:30 –18:00 Sat 9:00–17:00 Sun 9:00 –15:00

Cellular phones Cellular phones must be switched off during all sessions.

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The country code for Switzerland is +41. To make an international call from Basel, dial 00 then the code for the country you wish to call, followed by the subscriber number. Basel’s area code (for landline numbers) is 061. When calling from outside the country, drop the leading 0 and use the Swiss international dial code +41. Conference centre The Congress Centre Basel – the largest of its kind in Switzerland – forms part of the MCH Group and is benefitting from its dynamic development. The group runs three modern exhibition, congress and event facilities in Basel, Zurich and Lausanne. These form a national “tripole” with infrastructure offerings that ideally complement each other in terms of exhibition surface and geographical catchment area. The Congress Centre Basel offers a total of 25 meeting rooms. Congress hours and Opening hours registration desk

• Sunday 11 May • Monday 12 May • Tuesday 13 May • Wednesday 14 May • Thursday 15 May

Congress hours 18:00–22:00 8:10–18:30 8:10–18:30 8:10–18:30 8:10–16:00

Opening hours registration desk 7:30-21:00 7:30-18:30 7:30-18:30 7:30-18:30 7:30-15:00

Electricity The standard voltage throughout Switzerland is 230 V; Plug J. You will need a voltage converter, and plug adapter in order to use U.S. appliances. We recommend getting a universal adapter and converter kit. Emergency numbers Please note the emergency telephone numbers: • 117: Police (“Polizei”) • 144: Emergency medical help ( “Sanität”) • 118: Fire brigade (“Feuerwehr”)

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Exhibition An exhibition will be conducted jointly with the congress. The exhibition is open to all congress participants. The official opening will take place Sunday 11 May at 20:00 in Hall 4. These are the opening hours: • Sunday 11 May | 20:00–22:00 • Monday 12 May | 08:30–18:30 • Tuesday 13 May | 08:30–18:30 • Wednesday 14 May | 08:30–18:30 • Thursday 15 May | 08:30-14:00 First aid One paramedic and one first aid attendant are present in the conference centre from 10:00 – 18:00. The first aid room is situated in the 2nd floor next to the escalator and the toilets.

PrAcTicAl iSSueS A-Z

the booked hotel. This allows free use of public transport in the city of Basel and its environs (zones 10, 11, 13 and 15, inclusive EuroAirport) for the entire duration of the stay (max. 30 days). On the day of arrival, the reservation confirmation from the hotel guarantees a free transfer by public transport from the station or the EuroAirport to the hotel. For timetable and network of the public transport system, visit www.bvb-basel.ch. Photography Photography, filming and interviews at the congress are allowed with permission from the SETAC Europe Executive Director. Photographs will be taken at the meeting. By registering for this meeting, delegates allow SETAC Europe to use their photo in any SETAC-related publication and/or website. Press

Internet corner An internet corner is located near the registration area. Insurance The organisers do not accept responsibility for any personal damage or loss of personal belongings. Participants are responsible for their own health and travel insurance. Language All presentations during the congress will be conducted in English, the official language of SETAC Europe. There will be no translation provided.

Journalists are welcome at the 24th SETAC Europe Annual Meeting. By showing their credentials (press card 2014), media operators obtain a free registration to the congress, meeting materials and a press kit. Contact the communications coordinator at the registration desk. Print shop For printing of large posters, you can find several print shops in the city centre (e.g. see Yellow Pages) and these can be accessed readily by public transport e.g. from the CCB tram station to the center of Basel. There is a print shop close to the conference centre, between the Claraplatz and the Wettsteinplatz, in the Riekentorstrasse 33. It is open Tuesday-Thursday from 11:30 – 18:00, and on Saturday from 11:30 – 14:00. More information on www.dalternative.ch.

Lost and found Restaurants Found items should be returned to the registration desk. Mobility Ticket Each guest staying in Basel receives a free Mobility Ticket when checking in at

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During the congress, lunch is provided in the exhibition hall, this is included in the registration fee. Lunch is being served as a buffet with mainly traditional dishes, including vegetarian food. After a busy day at the conference center, you will be spoilt for choice with

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PrAcTicAl iSSueS A-Z

the city’s eclectic selection of bars and restaurants. From traditional Swiss fare to Indian, sushi to tapas, local wines to cocktails, every taste is catered for. Around the Congress Center Basel there is a wide choice of restaurants and bars. And if after all that you still have the energy to party, you can check out the city’s buzzing nightlife - clubbing, comedy, music, theatre or film - the choice is yours.

Center Basel and offers numerous shopping and dining options. Two minutes walking from the conference centre, you can find the supermarket COOP with food and non-food segments. This supermarket is open Monday to Friday 7:30 – 20:00 and Saturday 7:30 – 18:00 (closed on Sundays). Other main shopping streets are Freie Strasse and Spalenberg (take tram no. 6 to stop Marktplatz).

Safety

Some shopping suggestions: • Department Store Manor: Greifengasse 22 Tram stop: Greifengasse • Department Store Globus: Marktplatz 2 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Pharmacy St. Clara Apotheke, Clarastrasse 22 Tram stop: Clarastrasse • Shoes Navyboot: Freie Strasse 44 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Souvenirs Läckerli Huus: Greifengasse 2 Tram stop: Greifengasse • Souvenirs Tourist Information Stadt-Casino am Barfüsserplatz Tram stop: Barfüsserplatz • Watches and Jewellery Bucherer: Freie Strasse 40 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Watches and Jewellery Gübelin: Freie Strasse 27 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Watches and Jewellery Mezger: Freie Strasse 101 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Young Designers Erfolg: Spalenberg 36 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Young Designers For Art: Spalenberg 50 Tram stop: Marktplatz • Young Designers Tarzan: Spalenberg 39 Tram stop: Marktplatz

Basel is a very peaceful city, relative to its size. The rate of criminality is very low according to international statistics. Even single travelers who enjoy nightlife, usually feel secure after midnight. Basel folks are very helpful and most of them speak English. Security In the conference centre and during social events, you should always wear your badge. Stewards and students are instructed to refuse admission to anyone not wearing a meeting badge. Lost badges can be replaced at the registration desk for 5 € upon showing registration confirmation/invoice and passport or ID card. SETAC Square The SETAC Square, previously known as the SETAC bookshop, has been set up in the entrance of the exhibition hall. It is open from Monday – Wednesday from 10:00 – 18:00 and Thursday from 10:00 – 14:00. It is a meeting and information point, open to all, SETAC members and non-members. Shopping Shops in the city center are generally open Monday to Friday 09:00 – 18:30 (on Thursday until 20:00), Saturday 09:00 – 17:00 and closed on Sundays.

For more shopping possibilities in Basel go to www.shoppingcitybasel.com. When shopping in Switzerland, look for watches, crystal, embroidered items, clocks, pottery, Swiss army knives, lace, cowbells, antiques, cutlery, ski clothing and equipment, shoes, chocolate, cheese, and liquors. The shopping street Clarastrasse starts around the corner of the Congress

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Smoking policy Smoking is prohibited inside the congress centre and the exhibition areas. It is also prohibited inside all public places.

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coNTribuTe

Tipping

Student travel fund

There are no hard and fast rules for tipping in Switzerland. If you are happy with the service, round up for good service, if you like, but consider the invoice to include everything.

The SETAC Europe Council established a programme to encourage participation of SETAC member students in SETAC Europe Annual Meetings. The aim of the programme is to contribute to the education and to facilitate the development of a professional career of promising students in the field of environmental toxicology and chemistry. The encouragement is provided via registration grants (supported with 10.000 € per annum by the SETAC Europe re-investment fund) and travel grants (supported by the Student travel fund).

Taxi service There are taxi ranks throughout the city. A taxi drive from EuroAirport to the Congress Centre Basel costs approximately 45 CHF.

SETAC Africa fund Travel to the Conference Centre (tram stop Messeplatz/Exhibition Square) Take tram no. 2 (during rush hour in the morning and evening as well tram no. 1) from the Swiss or French (SBB/SNCF) railway station; you will reach the Congress Center Basel in 10 minutes. From the German (DB) station (Badischer Bahnhof) you will be at “Messeplatz/Exhibition Square” in 3 minutes by tram no. 2 or 6. From the Old Town take tram no. 6 or 14 to “Messeplatz/Exhibition Square”. If you stay in a hotel in Basel, you will receive the free Mobility-Ticket, which gives you unlimited use of all public transport in and around the city for the duration of your stay. When you check into the hotel, you will automatically be given a Mobility-Ticket. No waiting around or puzzling over vending machines – because you’ve got the Mobility-Ticket!

Your contribution supports the further development of SETAC Africa. SETAC Africa was established in January 2013 as an independent Geographical Unit. The activities of SETAC Africa are greatly depending on the availability of funds. Your contribution helps SETAC Africa to achieve its goals and implement the SETAC mission Environmental Quality through Science® across the African continent. Go to the website setac.org > get involved > contribute > SETAC Europe to donate online, or go to the registration desk and put your donation in the special boxes.

WiFi Free wireless internet will be available within the conference centre during the congress and is sponsored by ENVIRON. As the system only allows a limited number of concurrent wifi users, we courteously ask you to be connected with the internet for max 10 minutes per hour. In order to access the internet, please select SETAC_2014, and log in with the following information: user ID: 2430733678, and password: 1808

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AbouT SeTAc

AbouT SeTAc

SETAC: Local and global

SETAC Europe Council 2013-2014

The Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) is a not-for-profit, global professional society established in 1979 to provide a forum for individuals and institutions engaged in education, research and development, ecological risk assessment and life-cycle assessment, chemical manufacture and distribution, management and regulation of natural resources, and the study, analysis, and solution of environmental problems. SETAC is an open and democratic organisation that operates in a broad social context, reflecting the needs of the environment and people. Application of sound science plays a key role in this process. Membership worldwide comprises about 5500 professionals in the field of chemistry, toxicology, biology, and ecology: atmospheric, health, and earth sciences; and environmental engineering.

Executive Committee President ı Laurent Lagadic, INRA, FR Vice-President ı Mónica Amorim, University of Aveiro, PT Treasurer ı Jose Julio Ortega Calvo, CSIC, ES Immediate Past-President ı Paolo Masoni, ENEA, IT

SETAC Europe SETAC Europe is one of five Geographic Units (GUs) of the global Society, established to promote and undertake activities of SETAC in Europe, and to support activities of SETAC in Russia, the Middle East and Africa. As a GU, we share the mission of the global Society. SETAC Europe is dedicated to the use of multidisciplinary approaches to examine the impacts of stressors, chemicals, and technology on the environment. The Society also provides an open forum for scientists and institutions engaged in the study of environmental problems, management and regulation of natural resources, education, research and development, and manufacturing. SETAC Europe is incorporated in Belgium as a not-for-profit organisation. The society is governed according its articles of association and by-laws. SETAC Europe maintains its administrative office in Brussels, Belgium. SETAC Europe is governed by a Council, elected by the general membership at the Annual General Assembly which convenes every year during the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting. This year the Assembly is in Basel on Wednesday 14 May (MCH Lounge, 13:00–14:30).

Council members Anne Alix, Dow AgroSciences, UK Tania Alvarez, EcoRisk Solutions Ltd., UK Gertie Arts, Alterra, Wageningen UR, NL Thomas Backhaus, University of Gothenburg, SE Carlos Barata, CSIC, ES Anna Barra Caracciolo, IRSA, IT Bart Bosveld, SETAC Europe, BE (ex officio) Karel De Schamphelaere, Ghent University, BE Brian Harvey, Syngenta, UK Tim Kedwards, SC Johnson Ltd., UK Kari Lehtonen, Finnish Environment Institute, FI Gerd Maack, Federal Environment Agency, DE Merab Mirtskhulava, National Center for Diseases Control, GE Alberto Pistocchi, GECOsistema srl, IT Ilse Schoeters, Rio Tinto, UK Student Representative Dragan Jevtić, Jagiellonian University, PL

From left to right: Ipek Goktepe, Kirit Wadhia, Bart Bosveld, Laurent Lagadic, Kari Lehtonen, Anne Alix, Dragan Jevtić, Karel De Schamphelaere, Mónica Amorim, Paolo Masoni, Alberto Pistocchi, Carlos Barata, Brian Harvey, Anna Barra Caracciolo, Gertie Arts, Jose Julio Ortega

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AbouT SeTAc

AbouT SeTAc

Student Advisory Council

Past SETAC Europe Annual Meetings

The SETAC Europe Student Advisory Council (SAC Europe) is a group of 10 students from all over Europe, in charge of initiating and coordinating student activities within SETAC Europe. Apart from student activities taking place during SETAC Europe annual meetings (mentor lunches, career talks), they have been organising unique for students, by students biennial conferences known as Young Environmental Scientist (YES) Meetings. By taking part in the work of the SETAC Europe Council, the SAC is doing everything to continually represent students’ interests within the Society. To find out more about the SAC and to become active within SAC Europe, stop by the SAC stand located at the SETAC Square in the exhibition hall. On page 44 you can find more detailed information on the SAC activities in Basel. To stay in touch with the SAC all year long and to benefit from different student opportunities within SETAC, follow the SAC on Facebook and Twitter – keep yourself updated!

2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002

Glasgow, United Kingdom Berlin, Germany Milano, Italy Seville, Spain Gothenburg, Sweden Warsaw, Poland Porto, Portugal The Hague, the Netherlands Lille, France Prague, Czech Republic Hamburg, Germany Vienna, Austria

2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991

Madrid, Spain Brighton, United Kingdom Leipzig, Germany Bordeaux, France Amsterdam, the Netherlands Taormina, Italy Copenhagen, Denmark Brussels, Belgium Lisbon, Portugal Potsdam, Germany Sheffield, United Kingdom

Future SETAC meetings in Europe 10th SETAC Europe Special Science Symposium Bioavailability of organic chemicals: Linking science to risk assessment and regulation 14-15 October 2014 | Brussels, Belgium | sesss10.setac.org 20th SETAC Europe Case Studie Symposium LCA in promoting eco-innovation and sustainability: education, research and application 26-28 November 2014 | Novi Sad, Serbia | lcanovisad.setac.org 4th Young Environmental Scientists (YES) Meeting 14-19 March 2015 | Petnica Science Centre | Serbia | yes2015.setac.org SETAC Europe 25th Annual Meeting Environmental protection in a multi-stressed world: challenges for science, industry and regulators 3-7 May 2015 | Barcelona, Spain | barcelona.setac.org SETAC Europe 26th Annual Meeting 22-26 May 2016 | Nantes, France

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Meet the Student Advisory Council

Social Activities

Stop at the SETAC Square and visit the stand of the SETAC Europe Student Advisory Council (SAC Europe). SAC members will be there to meet you during the Welcome Reception on Sunday evening and the daily poster sessions in the evening. Learn more about student opportunities within SETAC, find out how to become part of the SAC, and help coordinate student activities within the Society. Hope to see you there!

The SETAC Europe 24th Annual Meeting will undoubtedly be a great scientific event, but we should not forget the social programme during the meeting. All participants (+ accompanying partners) are kindly invited to join at the social events, taking place after the meeting presentations.

Student Mentor Lunch

When: 20:00 Where: conference centre, exhibition hall Registration is free and can be done during the meeting registration process.

The Student Mentor Lunch will take place on Monday 12 May from 12:50 to 13:55 (Room San Francisco), kindly supported by Ebeam. While enjoying your lunch, get in touch with established scientists from all over the world. Build on your own network and get to know not only senior scientists but also other students of SETAC. Tickets for this event are free and will be available at the on-site registration desk on Monday morning 12 May. Please note that the Mentor Lunch is limited to approx. 70 participants - tickets will be distributed on a first-come-first-serve basis! Career Talks Were you ever interested in how to get over a first few years after obtaining your PhD? Are the first steps for a young graduate what you envision them to be? Do you think insight in early years of work in different sectors can help you to choose your job? Visit our career talks, taking place on Tuesday 13 May from 15:00 to 16:30 (Room San Francisco). Three young scientists in early stages of their post-PhD careers will be there to tell you more on how to get through the period following your PhD defence. No need to register - this event is open to everyone! SETAC Europe Student Assembly The Assembly will be held on Wednesday 14 May from 11:00 to 12:00 (Room San Francisco). Join this meeting to be informed on past, ongoing, and future student activities within SETAC. Elect new SAC members representing you within the Society for the following two years. The Assembly is open to all SETAC Europe student members.

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Sunday 11 May: Welcome reception with drinks and fingerfood

Tuesday 13 May: Fun Run When: 12:30 Where: conference centre, meet in room Miami In order to keep the balance between mental and physical health for all participants of the SETAC Basel 2014 Meeting, the Local Organising Committee has planned a fun run. The run is scheduled for Tuesday 13 May during the lunch break. Runners will gather at 12:30 sharp and will return to the congress centre at 14:00. Changing rooms and showers will be available close to the running course, towels and soap will be provided. The distance is 5 km and the run will take place in the nice green area of the Wiese Park. You will run in small groups together with a guide. The maximum running time will be limited to 40 minutes in order to be back in time for the next scientific session. Drinks and snacks will be available directly after the run. A lunch box will be provided in the congress centre. There are no official individual time measurements, but you can register your time yourself and communicate the result to the organising committee. The results, together with some pictures, will be presented during the closing ceremony. Every runner receives a SETAC fun run t-shirt and will also participate in a tombola. Let’s have fun, relax and see the sporty side of Basel! It is not a competition, but a chance for active networking in its most serious meaning. Price: 20₏. Registration on site is still possible.

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ScieNce SlAm

Tuesday 13 May: Student party

First ever SETAC Science Slam

When: 19:30 Where: Restaurant Rhypark, Muelhausstrasse 17, 4056 Basel A BBQ in a spectacular beach atmosphere on the Rhine bank, followed by a fantastic Swiss disco led by a professional Dj. This event is sold out. Wednesday 14 May: Conference banquet

Have you ever wondered if you manage to bring your ideas and research results across to fellow scientists, regulators, industrial partners or the public in an enjoyable and memorable manner? And have you ever wished to have the platform and support to present your research in new, electrifying ways? Then this one is for you: come and check-out the first ever SETAC Science Slam on Wednesday afternoon, running from 16:30-18:00 in Auditorium Montreal.

When: 18:45 – meet at the registration desk for a 5-minutes walk to the Volkshaus Where: Volkshaus, Rebgasse 12-14, 4058 Basel Volkshaus Basel is situated right in the centre of Kleinbasel, just a few steps away from Claraplatz and only 5 minutes from Messe Basel. First, you will be served apéro in the gardens... then move on to a delicious dinner in the banquet hall... Finish up the day with a dessert and a wild dance in the disco! Tickets for this great gastronomic and networking event are for sale at the registration desk. Price: 95€.

The concept? Our finalists, who applied by sending in a video clip, will compete against each other and show their research on stage. They each have exactly 8 minutes to present. Anything is allowed: slides, songs, sketches… The audience, meaning YOU, will vote on who will become the SETAC Europe Science Slammer of the year. Attractive prizes are waiting for our Science Slammers who put enormous effort into what you are going to see. So come and support them, cheer for them, have a great time and find out for yourself how science can be communicated in new, exciting ways. When: Wednesday 14 May from 16:30-18:00 Where: Auditorium Montreal

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AWArDS

AWArDS

SETAC Global Awards

ET&C Best Paper Award

Founders Award

Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry “Plant consumption by grizzly bears reduces biomagnification of salmon-derived PCBs, BBDEs, and organochloride pesticides“ by Jennie R. Christensen, Mark Yunker, Misty Macduffee, and Peter S. Ross (Volume 32, Issue 5).

Samuel N. Luoma, University of California-Davis. The Founders Award is the highest SETAC award and is given to an individual who has had an outstanding career in environmental sciences and whose clearly identifiable contributions to the development of the science are consistent with the goals of SETAC. Herb Ward Exceptional Service Award George Cobb, Baylor University. This award was renamed in 1999 to honor Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry’s founding Editor-in-Chief C. Herb Ward for his important contributions to the founding and development of SETAC, this award recognizes any past or present SETAC member who has performed longterm, exceptionally high-quality service to the Society. SETAC/ICA Chris Lee Award Monica D. Poteat, North Carolina State University. This award is sponsored by SETAC and the International Copper Association, this award recognizes the leadership and technical contributions of the late Chris Lee by providing up to $5,000 to a graduate student or recent graduate whose ongoing research focuses on fate and effects of metals in the environment. ET&C Best Student Paper Award

IEAM Best Paper Award Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management “Ecosystem services and environmental decision making: seeking order in complexity” by Sabine Apitz (Volume 9, Issue 2).

Global Partners Capacity-Building Award John Giesy, University of Saskatchewan. This award recognizes individuals or groups for their contribution toward building capacity in the environmental sciences in countries with developing economies. SETAC/Procter & Gamble Fellowship Ling Jin, University of Queensland. This fellowship is sponsored by The Procter & Gamble Company and provides $15,000 for one year of PhD studies in environmental science, rotating among candidates from Europe and Africa, Asia/Pacific and Latin America, and North America.

Yamini Gopalapillai, University of Guelph. This award is given annually to the best published or accepted student paper in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, the best student paper winner is selected on the basis of recommendations from the author’s advisor and the ET&C Editorial Board.

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AWArDS

SETAC Europe Awards

Tom Feijtel Best Poster Award 2013

Following SETAC Europe awards are announced on Sunday 11 May during the Opening Ceremony at 18:00: • The SETAC Europe/NOACK-LABORATORIES Environmental Education (EEA) award honours activities in the dissemination of knowledge on environmental sciences. • SETAC Europe Award for Life-time Achievement in Life Cycle Assessment, made available by EDANA. • The SETAC Europe Best Publication Awards including: • the Eurofins award for the best publication in Chemical analysis and Environmental monitoring; • the SETAC award for the best publication in Risk assessment, Modelling and Theoretical studies; and • the RifCon award for the best publication in Ecotoxicology, Eco- epidemiology and Biological/Biochemical studies.

The winner of the best poster is Kevin King Yan Ho from The University of Hong Kong, with his presentation “Organotin contamination in market seafood and its implication for human health risk in Hong Kong” in the session Human health and toxicology.

On Thursday 15 May at 13:55, during the Closing Ceremony, the 2014 SETAC Europe Young Scientist Awards will be announced, including: • the ECETOC Best Platform Presentation Award • the Tom Feijtel Best Poster Award

SETAC Europe Best Publication Awards (BPA) Eurofins BPA in Chemical Analysis and Environmental Monitoring Iria González Mariño (Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research of Milan (Italy), was honoured with the Eurofins Best Publication Award in Chemical Analysis and Environmental Monintoring with her paper entitled “Investigation of the transformation of 11-nor-9-carboxy-9-tetrahydrocannabinol during water chlorination by liquid chromatography–quadrupole-timeof-flight-mass spectrometry” published in Journal of Hazardous Materials 261 (2013) 628– 636. SETAC BPA in Risk Assessment, Modelling and Theoretical studies

SETAC Europe Young Scientist Awards 2013

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The Young Scientist Awards (YSA) honour a young scientist (MSc student or within 3 years from graduation or PhD student) for the Best Platform Presentation and the Best Poster Presentation at the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting. The winners of the 2013 Young Scientist Awards are listed on the following pages. The winners of the 2014 Young Scientist Awards will be presented at the closing ceremony on Thursday 15 May and detailed in the 2015 programme book.

The SETAC Award for the best publication in Risk assessment, Modelling and Theoretical Studies is awarded to Dieter De Coninck (Ghent University, Belgium). His paper was entitled “An approach to assess the regulatory relevance of microevolutionary effects in ecological risk assessment of chemicals: a case study with cadmium” by Dieter De Coninck, Colin Janssen, Karel De Schamphelaere, published in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry; 2014; 33(2): 453-457; DOI:10.1002/etc.2434.

ECETOC Best Platform Award 2013

RifCon BPA in Ecotoxicology

The winner of the best platform presentation is Julita StadnickaMichalak from Eawag in Switzerland, with a presentation entitled “Predicting toxicity to fish based on in vitro data in the session Alternative Methods for Evaluating Toxicity: Methods, Endpoints, and New Testing Strategies”.

Stephan Fischer (Eawag, Switzerland) was honoured with the RifCon Best Publication Award in Ecotoxicology, for his paper entitled “Abcb4 acts as multixenobiotic transporter and active barrier against chemical uptake in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos”, published in the journal BMC Biology.

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SETAC Europe / NOACK-LABORATORIES Environmental Education Award Ronny Blust from the University of Antwerp, Belgium, is the award winner of the prestigious SETAC Europe/NOACK LABORATORIES Environmental Education Award. The award is made available by Dr. Udo Noack Laboratorien für Angewandte Biologie (Noack Laboratories for Applied Biology). Ronny Blust is professor of Environmental Physiology and Toxicology in the department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Belgium. He holds a PhD in Ecophysiology (1988) and a habilitation in Ecotoxicology (1992). He is research director of the Systemic Physiological and Ecotoxicological Research (SPHERE) team in Antwerp which brings together biochemists, physiologists and ecologists to study the impact of natural and anthropogenic stressors on aquatic organisms in an integrative manner. The main research interests are the bioavailability and accumulation kinetics of metals and mixtures of toxicants and the mode of action and molecular dynamics of stress related responses. So far over 350 papers and book chapters have been published in the international literature on these topics. The research is of a fundamental nature but with clear applications for the setting of environmental quality standards and risk assessment. Ronny and his team are involved in various national and international research initiatives and networks and the research team has a very international composition. The research group is also involved in a large number of internationally oriented educational programs bringing together students and young scientists across the globe. Over the years, Ronny has also developed an interest in academic management and he is the current chair of the board of directors of the University of Antwerp. Most recently Ronny also joined the editorial team of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. Life-time Achievement Award in Life Cycle Assessment Mark Goedkoop is selected as the fifth recipient of the Award for Life-time Achievement in Life Cycle Assessment. He started as industrial design engineer in the ‘80s when interest for environmental issues started to grow. Mark understood that designers have great influence on the way a product is made, used and disposed of. In that time, the environmental discussion was dominantly led by emotions. Mark was looking for ways to rationalize the discussion and found out about a methodology called Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). Together with CML he

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was asked by the Dutch Ministry of Environment to organize a workshop on “environmentally sound design” and to create a software tool to explain the principles of LCA. That workshop marked the beginning of the LCA software SimaPro where many of us know him from. Throughout the years, Mark has led many projects on the development of Life Cycle Impact Assessment (LCIA) methods. In the early nineties, the Eco-indicator 95 method was developed as the first single score method, which was both embraced and criticized. The Eco-indicator 99 followed and was using the latest scientific assessment models to create the first single score damage oriented impact assessment method. It also combined 3 different perspectives to acknowledge the fact that there are different views on reality. The ReCiPe method released in 2009 combined the endpoint approach of the Eco-indicator method with the midpoint approach of the CML method. Obviously, the development and implementation of these LCIA methods were not his sole work or achievement, as many others contributed to it. He, however, initiated many of the developments emphasizing his visionary way of thinking. More recently, he collaborated in the development of LCIA documents published in the ILCD Handbook and he contributed in the FP7 European research project LC-IMPACT to the development of LCIA methods for abiotic resource use. With the ambition of harmonising different standards and initiatives, Mark Goedkoop also participated in the Guidance for Product Category Rule Development. He has been contributing to the evaluation and provided recommendations to the development of the final Product and Organisation Environmental Footprint Guides developed by the European Commission. Currently, he is involved in the 3-year pilot phase of the development of Environmental Footprint rules. Mark is internationally well known through his contributions in ISO standards and the UNEP-SETAC Life Cycle Initiative. Throughout his career, Mark Goedkoop has been very active to promote the development, understanding and acceptance of LCA worldwide. With this LTA award, we honour and pay rightful attention to his outstanding and ground breaking achievements in the field of Life Cycle Assessment.

Mark Huijbregts, on behalf of the SETAC Europe LCA Steering Committee

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• Sunday 11 May at 18:00: Martin Scheringer • Monday 12 May from 16:30-17:15: Juliette Legler • Tuesday 13 May from 16:30-17:15: Thomas Princen • Thursday 15 May from 13:55-15:30: Closing Session Keynotes Martin Scheringer | Sunday 11 May at 18:00 | Auditorium San Francisco Persistent Organic Pollutants in Switzerland and globally: problems solved? Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) have been a topic of environmental chemistry and toxicology since the 1960s. This year, we celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Stockholm Convention on POPs. Why should POPs, after so many years, still be a research priority within SETAC? First, POPs still cause serious environmental impacts and will continue to do so. Emission sources of POPs are active in many countries and need to be identified and eliminated. The global distribution and long-term fate of POPs poses many open questions; it is currently not known if and under what conditions the environmental reservoirs of POPs may be relevant as secondary emission sources. Moreover, the total number of POPs that need global action is unknown; there might be (many) more than the 23 POPs currently covered by the Stockholm Convention - but which ones? Finally, how can we determine whether the Stockholm Convention is effective? Does our POPs monitoring have sufficient spatial and temporal coverage? About Martin Scheringer Martin Scheringer works with the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich, Switzerland. His field of research is hazard and risk assessment for chemicals with a focus on environmental exposure assessment. Martin Scheringer has developed a suite of multi-media mass-balance models for analyzing the environmental fate of chemicals on various scales from local to global. Key areas of his work are the persistence and long-range transport of chemicals in the environment and the assessment of chemical property data for hazard assessment under REACH. In addition to his research, Martin Scheringer has worked extensively on the science-policy interface. He has conducted several projects with UNEP and is a co-author of a chapter on Chemicals and Waste in UNEP’s 5th Global Environment Outlook and a chapter on Minimizing Chemical Risks in UNEP’s Year Book 2013. Martin Scheringer is a founding member and currently the chair of the International Panel on Chemical Pollution, IPCP.

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Juliette Legler | Monday 12 May at 16:30 | Auditorium Montreal Epigenetics in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry How is possible that exposure to a chemical during development affects a tissue in a way that its function is changed long after the exposure has stopped? How do chemicals program an organism during development, making it more susceptible to diseases later in life? If we are to understand this we must dig down into the very basics of life and how genes work. The central dogma that genes flow in a linear fashion from DNA sequence to messenger RNA to protein is clearly too simplistic. One area of molecular biology where new discoveries are made at an astonishing rate is the field of epigenetics. Epigenetics describes the array of chemical markers and switches that lie along DNA providing instructions to genes for what to do, and where and when to do it. Newfound insights in this field will help us understand how chemicals may alter basic processes in development at levels that may not produce overt toxicity. It is an exciting time in molecular and evolutionary biology, and understanding the role of epigenetics in toxicity is the challenge that now lies with us as environmental toxicologists and chemists. About Juliette Legler Juliette Legler is a Professor of Toxicology and Environmental Health at the Institute for Environmental Studies of the VU University Amsterdam. With a background in environmental toxicology and molecular biology, she has developed test methods to identify the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals. Her research with zebrafish and in vitro models has expanded to understanding the effects and underlying mechanisms of chemical exposure during development in both fish and in humans. As coordinator of the EU project OBELIX and recipient of a Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research VIDI grant, she is examining the role of chemical exposure in the developmental origins of health and disease. Legler also coordinates the VU’s Master program in Environmental Chemistry and Toxicology and has served on various advisory and review boards, including the Dutch Health Council and OECD.

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Thomas Princen | Tuesday 13 May at 16:30 | Auditorium Montreal Sufficiency: Enough but Not Too Much Growth. Efficiency. Consumer sovereignty. These principles served the 20th century well. Resources were abundant, waste sinks vast, demand unyielding. But this is the 21st century. We need to figure how to live within the regenerative capacities of biophysical and social systems. We need to put a brake on endless expansion and consumption. For that, new principles are needed to guide human organization onto a sustainable path. Among them are sufficiency: living well now and into the future by living on less than the most possible now. Thomas Princen will develop the notion of sufficiency grounding it at three levels of behavior—the individual, the organizational, and the societal. He will argue that sufficiency is but one element in a broader “politics of urgent transition”. About Thomas Princen Thomas Princen explores issues of social and ecological sustainability at the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the University of Michigan. He works on principles for sustainability (e.g., sufficiency), overconsumption, the language and ethics of resource use, and the transition out of fossil fuels. Princen is the author of Treading Softly: Paths to Ecological Order (2010/2013), author of The Logic of Sufficiency (2005), and lead editor of Confronting Consumption (2002), all three published by MIT Press. The last two were awarded the International Studies Association’s Harold and Margaret Sprout Award for the “best book in the study of international environmental problems.” He is co-editor of The Localization Reader: Adapting to the Coming Downshift (MIT Press, 2012), co-author of Environmental NGOs in World Politics: Linking the Local and the Global (Routledge, 1994) and author of Intermediaries in International Conflict (Princeton University Press, 1992/1995). Princen is currently working on three book-length projects: *Ending the Fossil Fuel: Keep Them in the Ground (contract, MIT Press), *Distant Horizons: An Ethic of the Long Term *The Politics of Urgent Transition He was recently awarded a writing fellowship at the Rachel Carson Center in Munich. Before that he was named an Aldo Leopold Leadership Fellow, sponsored by the Packard Foundation, and before that was a Pew Faculty Fellow for International Affairs. Princen received his Ph.D. in Political Economy and Government from Harvard

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University in 1988 and a Bachelor of Arts in biology from Pomona College in 1975. He was a MacArthur Foundation Post-Doctoral Visiting Research Fellow in International Peace and Security at Princeton University from 1988 to 1989. He serves as Faculty Associate, Program in the Environment; Faculty Affiliate, Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise; Co-Director, Workshop on Urgent Transitions; and Associate Professor of Natural Resource and Environmental Policy; all at the University of Michigan. Closing session | Thursday 15 May at 13:55 | Auditorium Montreal The scientific programme of the Annual Meeting concludes with a round table discussion of reputed scientists discussing the main themes of the meeting. Each of them will present the state of the science and will highlight the most important findings with regard to the theme presented at the SETAC Europe 24th Annual Meeting in Basel. Life Cycle Analysis & Sustainability

Diederik Schowanek, P&G, BE

Environmental Chemistry

Pim Leonards, VU Amsterdam, NL

Ecotoxicology

Virginie Ducrot, INRA, FR

Fate and effects of nanomaterials

Richard Handy, Plymouth University, UK

Risk assessment, regulation and public perception

Sabine Duquesne, UBA, DE

Diederik Schowanek Diederik Schowanek holds a PhD in Environmental Engineering (1991) from Ghent University, Belgium. He is currently Principal Scientist in the Environmental Stewardship & Sustainability (ESS) organisation of Procter & Gamble’s Brussels Innovation Centre. He is involved in the strategic planning, design and management of environmental safety and sustainability activities of P&G and the European chemical industry. His work spans the domains of environmental risk assessment and LCA. Pim Leonards Pim Leonards has a broad interest in the field of environmental chemistry and (eco)toxicology but also health sciences, and in bridging these fields. He is also involved in a number of chemical alternative assessments, which requires different

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fields of expertise. He coordinates the EU project “Developmental Neurotoxicity Assessment of Mixtures In Children (DENAMIC). He works as a senior scientist at the Institute for Environmental Studies at VU University in Amsterdam. Pim is in the editor board of the journal Toxics.

Basel Meeting Highlights Digital Game for Ethics Education

Virginie Ducrot

The cross-cultural and multidisciplinary challenge of sustainability requires a different approach to understanding and teaching ethics than currently dominate classroom and corporate training. While the ethics of the industrial revolution focused on self-examination at the scale of the individual, sustainability emphasizes interdependence, empathy, and collective responsibility at the larger scale of society. The unique, game-based approach adopted in this workshop will allow participants to experience several of the salient ethical questions germane to sustainability, including: moral luck vs moral hazard, interand intra-generational equity, and weak vs strong sustainability perspectives. These questions are examined through the lens of the classic environmental dilemma called the Tragedy of the Commons, where individuals acting independently and rationally deplete a common resource, despite their understanding that it is not in the group’s long term best interest to do so. This problem describes the overexploitation of ‘common pool resources’ such as fisheries, national parks, and global warming. Attendees will have the opportunity to personally experience a virtual Tragedy of the Commons by taking part in The Sustainability Games Workshop and playing the Pisces Game.

Virginie Ducrot has a background in ecotoxicology, which concepts and methods she applies to develop a systemic biological approach for the study of non-intended effects of chemicals on individuals and populations of aquatic invertebrates. Her research is directly connected to environmental risk assessment of chemicals, for which she develops toxicity test methods and data analysis tools (e.g. mechanistic effect models). In this respect, she acts as an external expert for OECD and EFSA for both test methods development and model use. She is a member of the Steering Committee of the SETAC Europe advisory group “Memorisk” on mechanistic modelling applied to environmental risk assessment. Sabine Duquesne Sabine Duquesne is risk assessor for Plant Protection Products at the Federal Environment Agency, Germany (UBA). After her PhD (University of Lille), she worked as a research scientist in the field of ecotoxicology for aquatic systems at the University of Queensland (Brisbane) and at the UFZ-Centre for Environmental Research (Leipzig). She was appointed as a regulator in UBA in 2009. Richard Handy Richard Handy is a Professor of Environmental Toxicology at The University of Plymouth, and Director of the Ecotoxicology Research and Innovation Centre. His research is mainly focused on the ecotoxicology of nanomaterials, but he also serves as an expert on the technical details of hazard assessment and on risk assessment for the environment. He has served on many international working groups and scientific committees; most recently on nanomaterials for the OECD, US NNI, and is founder member of the UK Nanotechnology task force working on aspects of ecotoxicology. He also advises on animal welfare and alternative techniques, and is expert on whole animal biology.

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SuSTAiNAbiliTy GAme

Monday 12 May: 16:30-19:30, Wednesday 14 May: 16:30-18:00 Meeting room: Boston 1

The Pisces Game will organise participants into ‘fishing villages’ that share a common lake for survival. Players fish from the shared lake and make decisions related to fish conservation, consumption, capital investment, trading, or other transfers. The Pisces Game encourages communication between players, both in person and via Twitter. By tweeting short messages, players will obtain critically important information, bargain and trade, enter commands, and otherwise coordinate actions to avoid collapse of the supporting ‘ecosystem’. The group that performs the best at the end of the game will win a prize! The game begins Monday 12 May (16:30 – 19:30 in Boston 1) when the game instructors, Thomas P Seager and Susan Spierre Clark, will introduce participants to Twitter, the game interface, and the basic game problem. Players will participate on a continuous basis for the next two days of the conference. On Wednesday 14 May (16:30 – 18:00 in Boston 1) players will reconvene for a reflective discussion, prize distribution, and closing remarks. If experience is any guide, the discussion after the game promises to be fascinating, educational, challenging and probably just as much fun as the game itself.

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Platform / Poster Spotlight presentation upload Only digital presentations will be accepted during the congress and all presentations should be uploaded at the “Presentation upload and preview desk” in the registration area. SETAC staff will be available to assist with the upload if necessary. Be sure to upload your presentation before 16:00 the day prior to your platform/poster spotlight presentation. Presenters may also opt to make use of the Internet corner. Platform presentations We advise you to • locate your session room in time; • have your presentation uploaded in advance—failure to do so could result in presentations not being available for projection when required; • bring your presentation on a memory stick to the session room, as a backup; • be in your session room no later than 15 minutes prior to the start of the session, introduce yourself to the Chairperson and provide appropriate, concise biographical information to him/her for your introduction; and • stay on schedule—remember that time allotted to speakers in oral sessions is 20 minutes (including discussion). Plan for max 15 minutes for the presentation and at least 5 minutes for discussion.

Thursday: 07:45–08:10 10:15–10:45 12:50–13:55 15:30–16:00

Poster setup Morning coffee break: attend poster Lunch & poster session: attend poster Poster take-down

All posters will be located in the poster and exhibition area. Your poster must remain displayed for the entire day. Provide an envelope where people can leave their business cards for requests for more information. If possible, also provide hand-outs of your poster and your own business card. Be at your poster during the breaks and during the poster session / social. Leave a note listing other times you will be at your poster. Poster spotlight presentations The poster spotlight will consist of a range of 4 min platform presentations for posters that highlight one specific topic with some innovative input or a challenging point. This will take place at the end of platform sessions to which a significant number of abstracts has been submitted. If you have a poster spotlight presentation, have your presentation uploaded in advance. As a backup, bring your presentation on a memory stick to the session room. Stay on schedule; you have been allotted 4 minutes.

Poster presentations

Poster corner presentations (PC)

The 2 letters in your poster code represent the day your poster should be displayed (MO = Monday, TU = Tuesday, WE = Wednesday, TH = Thursday), the number is the number of the poster board. For example, TU 134 should be displayed Tuesday on poster board 134. You are responsible for setup and take-down of your poster during the prescribed times.

Your poster must remain on this location for the entire day. Posters displayed in a PC will be subject of a discussion led by the session chair. At the time your PC is scheduled, you MUST be present at your poster. The session chair will start with a short introduction to the shared topic of the posters displayed in the PC. Following, posters will be viewed by “Speed geeking”, meaning that all poster viewers will stand in small groups among the posters and you will have 3-5 minutes to present your poster. After this time, a sign will be given (like the ring of a bell) and all poster viewers will move to the next poster. Thus, you will present your poster several times to small audiences so that everyone can see your poster and hear you well. After the speed geeking, poster viewers will have time to go back to the poster(s) of particular interest to them to discuss with you in more detail. The session chair will facilitate the poster viewing process and the discussion between the poster presenters and the audience.

Poster display and attendance: Monday–Wednesday: 07:45–08:10 Poster setup 10:15–10:45 Morning coffee break: attend poster 12:50–13:55 Lunch & poster session: attend poster 16:00–16:30 Afternoon coffee break: attend poster 17:15–18:30 Poster session & social: attend poster 18:30–19:00 Poster take-down

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Agilent

Blue Frog Scientific

As the world’s premier measurement company, Agilent offers the broadest range of innovative measurement solutions in the industry. The company’s businesses - Chemical Analysis, Life Sciences, Diagnostics & Genomics — provide customers with products and services that make a real difference in the lives of people everywhere. W | www.agilent.com

Blue Frog Scientific is an independent regulatory consultancy, providing scientific and regulatory affairs solutions to companies in all sectors of the chemical industry. Our philosophy is achieving regulatory compliance through the application of good science, innovation and clarity; ensuring that all submissions are prepared efficiently and to a high standard. We offer scientific and regulatory affairs services with particular expertise in chemicals (REACH), human pharmaceuticals, veterinary medicines, agrochemicals and feed additives. E | info@bluefrogscientific.com W | www.bluefrogscientific.com

Arche Our main experience is situated in the field of environmental/human toxicology, exposure modeling and preparing risk assessment dossiers. Key areas of expertise include the preparation of REACH-related risk assessments and full dossiers, registration of Plant Protection Products and Biocides, classification of substances and complex mixtures (GHS/CLP), derivation of Environmental Quality Standards. E | marnix.vangheluwe@arche-consulting.be W | www.arche-consulting.be BCPC BCPC promotes the use of good science and technology in the understanding and application of effective and sustainable crop production. It publishes definitive information in the form of reference works, manuals and handbooks as well as providing informed independent analysis and views on issues in the crop protection and production arena. BCPC is a Registered Charity. E | publications@bcpc.org W | www.bcpc.org BioChem agrar GmbH We are a German based CRO providing a wide range of services for the registration of agro-chemicals (GLP compliant). It is our aim to support the registration of your products with studies in the field of Ecotoxicology (lab & field), Field Testing (Residue & Processing-, Efficacy-,Variety-testing), Environmental Fate (lab & field) and Residue Analysis. E | Joachim.winkler@biochemagrar.de W | www.biochemagrar.de

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Bruker Daltonics Bruker Daltonics provides a broad range of high performance, easy- to-use mass spectrometry and analytical separation systems. With a product portfolio of MALDI-TOF, ESI-QTOF, Ion Trap, FTMS, ICP/MS, GC/MS, HP LC and GC, Bruker provides the best solutions for any analytical questions in research and routine applications. E | sales@bdal.de W | www.bruker.com Cefic LRI Globally co-ordinated by the International Council of Chemical Associations (ICCA), Cefic’s Long-range Research Initiative has sponsored over its 15 years about 200 research projects throughout Europe & North America in an effort to increase understanding of the potential impact of chemicals on human health and the environment. The aim of LRI is to reduce the uncertainty raised by innovation and to strengthen science-base decision-making. E | bhu@cefic.be W | www.cefic-lri.org Cehtra CEHTRA offers scientific and innovative solutions ensuring regulatory compliance of chemicals to international obligations: from portfolio strategy to notification of chemicals, from human exposure to site audits. Our consultants

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provide high quality regulatory services to companies committed to the safety of their products, at optimized costs. E | contact@cehtra.fr W | www.cehtra.com

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liability challenges, as well as understand and meet their environmental responsibilities. W | www.environ.com Euro Chlor

CRC Press – Taylor & Francis Group CRC Press – Taylor & Francis Group is a premier publisher of books, journals, and electronic databases in the field of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. Visit our booth and view our latest publications and take advantage of special show offers and raffles. W | www.crcpress.com ECHA - European Chemicals Agency

Euro Chlor, the Brussels based association representing the European chlor-alkali producers, values and shares factual information to promote sound and science-based decision-making. W | www.eurochlor.org | www.chlorinethings.eu Eurofins

The European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) is the driving force in implementing the EU’s ground breaking chemicals legislation (REACH, CLP, Biocidal Products Regulation) for the benefit of human health and the environment. We are a modern, science-driven organisation, set up in 2007 and working for the safe use of chemicals. W | http://echa.europa.eu/contact

Eurofins Agroscience Services offers a complete service for the registration and testing of agrochemicals, fine chemicals, biocides and veterinary products worldwide. Our services include ecotoxicology; environmental and product chemistry; residue and efficacy trials; laboratory and field studies on non-target organisms. Ecotoxicological field testing can now be performed not only in Europe but also the US and Brazil. E | silvioknaebe@eurofins.com W | www.eurofins.com/agroscienceservices

ECT Oekotoxikologie

Exponent

ECT Oekotoxikologie is a small-medium enterprise (SME) providing services to industry and governmental authorities. In addition to consultancy, we perform standardised ecotoxicological tests in compliance with GLP. Through constant involvement in international research projects and cooperation with universities, ECT keeps up with the state-of-the-art in the field of ecotoxicology. E | j-roembke@ect.de E | a.coors@ect.de W | www.ect.de

A science and engineering consultancy dedicated to providing solutions to the complex problems industry and business face. Exponent’s consultants have worked as regulators, for CROs and industry. Our scientific approach and commercial understanding means we can offer a complete service to help you comply with government requirements and industry regulations. E | info@uk.exponent.com W | www.exponent.com Harlan Contract Research Services (CRS)

Environ An international consultancy, ENVIRON provides world-class environmental, health, safety and sustainability services to businesses and the regulatory community worldwide. Offered from 88 offices in 19 countries, our respected, award-winning services help clients strategically manage their asset and

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For more than 25 years, Harlan CRS has been the partner of choice for world-leading agrochemical, chemical and biocide product developers. Whether you need support for a single study or a full-on programme development and submission management partner for complex substances, our capabilities and intelligence make research effortless.

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E W

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AQuere@harlan.com www.harlan.com/crs.

Huntingdon Huntingdon Life Sciences is one of the world’s largest and most successful Contract Research Organisations. We offer a full capability, from regulatory support to GLP-compliant testing services to satisfy worldwide regulatory requirements. Our fate and effects experts have vast experience of performing environmental risk assessments to cover all scenarios. W | www.huntingdon.com IBACON & tier3 solutions The strong cooperation of IBACON and tier3 solutions is your twin turbo of competence for environmental risk assessments. Together we are able to offer the full spectrum of laboratory and field studies: • Aquatic and Terrestrial Ecotoxicology • Analytical and Environmental Chemistry • Wildlife • Biodiversity • Paperwork W | www.tier3.ibacon.com E | ralf.petto@ibacon.com E | christian.wolf@tier3.de IES IES LTD is an independent and privately owned GLP-certified contract research organization, which performs environmental fate, metabolism, ecotoxicological and analytical chemistry testing to support the development, registration and stewardship of agro-chemical, biocidal and chemical products. E | d.reinhard@ies-ltd.ch W | www.ies-ltd.ch

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fied Institute, it performs a wide variety of toxicological and ecotoxicological studies of plant protection products, pharmaceutical and veterinary products, food and feed additives, industrial chemicals and biocides. E | ipo@ipo-pszczyna.pl W | www.ipo-pszczyna.pl Knoell Knoell had been an independent service provider for the chemical and pharmaceutical industries since 1996, with currently over 400 employees at sites within the EU, Asia and the USA. The outstanding technical qualification of our experts and their international language competence serves as a guarantee for our deep understanding of your products. In addition to German and English, they speak many other European languages, as well as Arabic, Chinese, Japanese and Thai. E | mcleuvers@knoell.com W | www.knoell.com LGC and Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Inc LGC Standards is a leading global producer and distributor of reference materials and proficiency testing schemes. We have a portfolio of over 100,000 products, and over 40 proficiency testing schemes which support the environmental, food, clinical, industrial, pharmaceutical, life science, forensic and petrochemical sectors. Visit us at booth #44. CIL offers high-quality analytical standards for Pesticides, Persistent Organic Pollutants, PPCPs, Flame Retardants, Dioxins/Furans, PCBs and other organic pollutants. Using isotopically labeled standards in GCMS and LCMS applications is the best way to ensure quantitative accuracy in environmental analysis. Visit us at Booth #44. E | askus@lgcstandards.com W | www.lgcstandards.com W | www.isotope.com Loligo Systems

Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry Branch - IPO Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry (IPO) Branch Pszczyna is a contract research organization with more than 65 years of tradition. As a GLP-certi-

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Since 2002 Loligo® Systems developed research equipment and software for measuring respiration rate and behavior in aquatic organisms like Zebrafish, Crustaceans or Daphnia. We offer turnkey systems for automated oxygen

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consumption measurements, micro respirometry, preference systems, swim tunnels, behavior analysis software, fiber optic sensors (O2, CO2, pH) and water quality controllers. W | www.loligosystems.com E | mail@loligosystems.com Modern Water Modern Water plc owns, installs and operates world-leading desalination technology and develops and supplies advanced systems for water monitoring. With headquarters in the UK, it also has operations in the USA, Oman, Gibraltar, Japan and China. E | info@modernwater.co.uk W | www.modernwater.com Noack Since 1986, DR.U.NOACK-LABORATORIEN, an independent and privately-owned GLP-certified contract research institute, has been providing services in ecotoxicology, environmental fate, physico-chemical properties and residue analysis for agrochemicals, biocides, chemicals and pharmaceuticals. Our team of 65 highly qualified scientific staff is well experienced in methodology development, bioaccumulation and transformation studies, especially for radio-labelled substances, and can provide sound data for the evaluation of new and existing products. Rovaltain Research Rovaltain Research is a global expert services and research organisation for ecotoxicology and environmental toxicology. We are a new company that specialises in providing a distinctive blend of innovative and classical approaches to evaluating the potential risks of chemical and biological contaminants for researchers and industrial clients. E | skent@pole-ecotox.fr W | www.pole-ecotox.com Shimadzu

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company’s systems are essential tools for consumer and product safety in nearly all industrial segments including healthcare, environmental protection and sciences. Chromatography, mass spectrometry, spectroscopy, environmental analysis, biotechnology, balances and material testing make up a homogeneous yet versatile offering. E | vf@shimadzu.ch W | www.shimadzu.ch Supelco - Sigma-Aldrich Corporation Supelco is a part of the Sigma-Aldrich Corporation. We research, manufacture, and supply chromatography columns and related tools, such as sample preparation products, chemical standards and reagents, for a range of markets. Many custom product programs expand that selection to include almost anything a chromatographer could require. W | www.sigma-aldrich.com Simulations Plus Simulations Plus is the industry leader in simulation and modeling software and consulting services for pharmaceutical research. Our ADMET Design Suite™ ADMET Predictor™, MedChem Studio™, and MedChem Designer™ - provides an unprecedented capability to data mine compound libraries, quickly design new molecules, and see how changes in structures affect over 140 ADME-Tox properties. E | info@simulations-plus.com W | http://www.simulations-plus.com Springer Looking to publish your research? Learn about our print and electronic publication services, including Open Access! Get high-quality review, maximum readership and rapid distribution. You can also browse key titles in your field and buy (e)books at discount prices. Editorial Director Paul Roos will be one of the publishing editors at the Springer booth, and looks forward to discussing your publishing projects with you. E | paul.roos@springer.com W | www.springer.com/setac

Shimadzu is one of the world leaders in analytical instrumentation. The

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SynTech Research

Toxi-Coop

SynTech Research conducts a complete range of studies in ecotoxicology, bio-efficacy and environmental chemistry, working to GLP/GEP standards. With field stations in 29 countries worldwide and new laboratories in the US and Europe for ecotoxicology and environmental biotechnology, we generate studies and submissions to EPA, EU, PMRA, South America and national regulatory authorities. E | eythier@syntechresearch.com W | www.syntechresearch.com

Toxi-Coop performs GLP-compliant pre-clinical/regulatory in vivo and in vitro testing of chemicals (REACH) , agrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, biocides, medical devices, food ingredients/additives. Services include toxicology (acute to carcinogenicity), genetic toxicology, ecotoxicology, reproductive toxicology, physico-chemical measurements meeting high quality at competitive prices. We meet the criterias of expertise, flexibility and timeliness. E | info@toxicoop.ch W | www.toxicoop.ch

TECOmedical ToxRat Solutions GmbH The Swiss-based TECOmedical Group with subsidiaries in Germany, France and Benelux, is a leading provider of in-vitro speciality test systems in the areas of medical and veterinary diagnostic, biosafety and environmental testing. In addition we develop and evaluate new test systems in collaboration with opinion leaders or to organisations require based on customer specification. E | info@tecomedical.com W | www.tecomedical.com

ToxRat Solutions provides software, service and support for statistical evaluation of biotests in ecotoxicology. ToxRat comes as a validated, GLP compliant software for the practitioner who wants to perform statistical analysis of biotests according to international guidelines (OECD, ISO, IOBC, OCSPP). ToxRat acts as an interface between ecotoxicology and statistics. E | toxrat@toxrat.com W | www.toxrat.com

Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. TSG Europe Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. is the world leader in serving science. Our mission is to enable our customers to make the world healthier, cleaner and safer. With revenues of $13 billion, we have approximately 39,000 employees and serve customers within pharmaceutical and biotech companies, hospitals and clinical diagnostic labs, universities, research institutions and government agencies, as well as in environmental and process control industries. We create value for our key stakeholders through three premier brands, Thermo Scientific, Fisher Scientific and Unity Lab Services, which offer a unique combination of innovative technologies, convenient purchasing options and a single solution for laboratory operations management.

TSGE Consulting provides scientific, regulatory and registration services to the chemical industries. Our experienced scientists have expertise in chemistry, human health, microbiology and the environmental sciences. We are part of the TSGE group, which has offices across Europe providing local knowledge and expertise based on strong relationships with regulatory authorities. E | tsge@tsgeurope.com W | www.tsgeurope.com UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle Initiative

Our products and services help our customers solve complex analytical challenges, improve patient diagnostics and increase laboratory productivity. W | www.thermofisher.com

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UNEP and SETAC launched the Life Cycle Initiative to enable broader and more effective practice of life cycle thinking and approaches around the world. The Initiative’s current activities include ground-breaking projects with global relevance and application. Find us at booth #35. More information on booth

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events and schedule at www.lifecycleinitiative.org/basel. W | www.lifecycleinitiative.org/basel WCA wca is an independent research and consultancy company established in 2005 by highly experienced chemical risk assessors. We provide assistance to industry and governmental agencies in the field of environmental toxicology and risk assessment. We are experts in preparing chemical risk assessments under REACH; the derivation of Environmental Quality Standards and Limit Values for substances in waters, soils, sediments and wastes; and in producing hazard and exposure assessments for active substances in pesticides, biocides and human and veterinary medicines. E | info@wca-consulting.com W | www.wca-consulting.com WIL Research

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Wiley Wiley is a global provider of content-enabled solutions to improve outcomes in research, education and professional practice with online tools, journals, books, databases, reference works and laboratory protocols. With strengths in every major academic, scientific and professional field, Wiley proudly partners with over 800 prestigious societies representing two million members. E | customer@wiley.com W | www.wiley.com Xenometrix Xenometrix AG, Switzeland, produces a range of Bioassays, such as the Ames mutagenicity assays “Ames MPF” and Ames II” in an liquid microplate format, UmuC Easy (SOS response), XenoScreen YES YAS (endocrine disruptors) and ex vivo human skin or reconstructed skin models for skin permeation w | www.xenometrix.ch

WIL Research is a global Contract Research Organization (CRO) dedicated to listening to customer needs. We custom design product safety toxicological and environmental/ecological toxicology research, bio analytical and formulation services for pharmaceutical, biotechnology, chemical, agrochemical and food companies. With approximately 900 scientific, technical and support personnel located throughout the world, WIL Research offers regulatory support, technological expertise, flexible study design and high quality results. W | www.wilresearch.com Wildlife International, ChemEco Division, EAG, Inc Wildlife International, PTRL-Europe and PTRL-West together from the ChemEco Division of EAG, Inc. We are a leading contract research organization (CRO) specializing in Ecotoxicology, Environmental Fate, Metabolism and Chemistry. Since over 37 years, we serve and provide support to a global clientele with GLP studies to meet global regulatory requirements for Pesticides, Pharmaceutical and Animal Health Products and Industrial Chemicals. Endocrine testing, bioaccumulation and metabolism are key areas. E | aleopold@wildlifeinternational.com W | ww.wildlifeinternational.com

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Access the most comprehensive crop protection databases in the world

• • •

Environmental Compliance

INFO@ARCHE-CONSULTING.BE

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The Pesticide Manual The Manual of Biocontrol Agents The GM Crop Manual

Available online and in print. For more information on BCPC visit: bcpc.org T

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sa

B-9000 Ghent, Belgium

WWW.ARCHE-CONSULTING.BE

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Learn more about Online SPE: www.agilent.com/chem/onlinespe

Have you considered our MECLAS tool? The smartest way to fulfil your classification obligations for complex inorganic mixtures.

A

Visit us on booth Number 21 to learn more about Agilent’s Aqueous Solutions

CLP/GHS

Have you already designed your game plan to keep your biocides and plant protection products compliant with the changing legislations?

Stapelplein 70, box 104

© 2014 AB SCIEX. For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures. The trademarks mentioned herein are the property of AB SCIEX Pte. Ltd. or their respective owners.

Aqueous Solutions

BIOCIDES-PPP

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Explore visionary sensitivity at www.absciex.com/setac14

REACH Registration

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QTRAP® technology provides improved data quality and quantity for highly accurate and sensitive results in every analysis – revolutionary tools for innovators to advance and shape the future of environmental testing and analysis.

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See what couldn’t be seen. Until now. The AB SCIEX 6500 LC/MS/MS series represents innovation at its best, enabling environmental scientists to discover and deeply analyze the chemistry that is shaping our environment and our world.

Promoting the science and practice of sustainable crop production

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The EVOQ HPLC-triple quad is designed to reliably quantify thousands of real samples in the fastest sample-to-report time. Innovations in software and ion source technology make it a game changer for quantitative analysis with exceptional sensitivity, precision, accuracy, linearity, and dynamic range: n n n n n

Highly efficient VIP heated ESI and APCI Orifice interface for high sensitivity and robustness Tune-free IQ dual ion funnel Lens-free mass analyzer Performance-driven PACER software

Innovation in Chemical Regulation

Looking for expert scientists and chemical regulatory affairs specialists?

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From portfolio strategy to notification, from human exposure to site audits.

Chemicals • HMPs • VMPs • Agrochemicals • Feed Additives

www.bluefrogscientific.com info@bluefrogscientific.com

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www.cehtra.com

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Visit the CRC Press Booth to Save on the Latest Books in Your Field • Find out about the show specials • Talk to acquiring editor Joe Clements • Sign up for email alerts and special offers

See How We Can Help You Create Environmental Quality through Science

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Sound science is key for good quality REACH registration dossiers Knowing more, getting safer see the annual evaluation report echa.europa.eu/evaluation

serving as a hub for excellence in regulatory science

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Testing

Consultancy

Ecotoxicological tests in compliance with GLP

Risk assessment for plant protection products, biocides, pharmaceuticals, waste, and REACH chemicals  Data gap analysis  Literature search and reviews  Dossier preparation  Study monitoring & project management

 According to standard guidelines & adapted to special requirements

 Laboratory tests, semi-field and field studies  Aquatic, benthic, terrestrial, and dung organisms

Standardisation

Discover your Chlorine Science Source at:

Research

ECT contributes to development and validation of standard guidelines  Method development (e.g. tests with dung organisms)  Organisation of international ring testing (e.g. transformation of pharmaceuticals in manure)  Chair in ISO group TC190 (“soil”)

ECT coordinates and cooperates in (inter)national research projects  Biodiversity of soil organisms  Environmental impacts of waste, wastewater and biosolids  Interactions of environmental and chemical stressors  Risk assessment of mixtures

ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH Boettgerstr. 2-14 D-65439 Flörsheim/Main Germany +49 6145 9564-0

info@ect.de www.ect.de

www.eurochlor.org and www.chlorinethings.eu

Visit Euro Chlor at booth 46 STRONGER TOGETHER

Providing innovative solutions and world-class expertise in risk assessment and environmental management from 92 offices in 21 countries Contact Joachim Schmidtke jschmidtke@environcorp.com +49 89 1392 8320

Eurofins Agroscience Services Bringing together global, multi-disciplined research capabilities with market-leading product development and technical support services to the crop protection industry. Our ability to deliver a full range of regulatory research services and professionally managed scientific solutions sets Eurofins Agroscience Services aside as the ideal partner for agroscience research. We are experts in: • Analytical Chemistry / Physical Chemistry • Ecotoxicology • Environmental Fate / 14C Studies • Field Studies • Global Project Management • Regulatory Affairs www.eurofins.com/agroscienceservices easinfo@eurofins.com

Come and see us at our stand, call us or visit environcorp.com

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Exponent Welcomes You to the 24th Annual Meeting of SETAC Europe! Exponent is a science and engineering consulting firm dedicated to providing solutions to the complex problems industry and business face today. Exponent’s consultants have worked as government regulators, for Contract Research Organisations and in industry. Our scientific approach is combined with commercial understanding so that we can offer you a complete service to help you comply with government requirements and industry regulations. We invite you to stop by our booth (No. 18), in the exhibition hall, where Exponent consultants will be happy to discuss our expertise in the Agricultural Chemicals Regulation, Biocidal Products Directive, and Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation of Chemicals (REACH).

Huntingdon Life Sciences are proud to be a Sustaining SETAC Europe Partner

International Limited

Our European offices are located in:

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Whether you need support for a single study, or a full-on program development and submission management partner, Harlan Contract Research Services (CRS) can perform general and esoteric testing proficiently to tackle the most complex substances. From initial study design and risk assessment all the way through to global logistics administration, we’re dedicated to making research a concerted effort because we know that two partners work better when they work as one. The complexity of your research doesn’t have to define how difficult it is. When you’ve got hard work to do, make it effortless with Harlan CRS.

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The Long-range Research Initiative (LRI) is a chemical industry fully funded Programme that serves to increase the understanding of the potential impact of chemicals on human health and the environment. It is one of the major voluntary initiatives launched by the European Chemical Industry to support its competitiveness and potential for innovation. LRI’s mission is to identify and fill the gaps in societal understanding on the hazards posed by chemicals and to improve the methods available fro assessing the associated risks. This year marks 15 years of research for LRI which will be celebrated through many interesting activities including:

June 17-18, 2014, Lugano, Switzerland ICCA-LRI Workshop, What Is Safe? Integrating Multi-Disciplinary Approaches for Decision Making about the Human Health and Environmental Impacts of Chemicals.

The International Council of Chemical Association’s Long-Range Research Initiative (ICCA-LRI) and European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) are organizing a workshop focused on the integration of information and knowledge from disciplines such as human toxicology, ecotoxicology, exposure science, and epidemiology to provide a broader basis for determining causation for a reported association between a chemical exposure and an adverse outcome. For more information visit www.americanchemistry.com

June 2, 2014, Brussels, Belgium Cefic-LRI Innovative Science Award The European Chemical Industry Council (Cefic) in conjunction with SETAC, EUROTOX, ISES and Chemical Week is offering a €100,000 award to support promising new research new research in the field of environmental risk assessment and management. Read more about the Cefic-LRI Innovative Science Award at www.cefic-lri.org/awards

November 19-20, 2014, Brussels, Belgium 16th Cefic-LRI Annual Workshop 2014 For more information please visit www.cefic-lri.org or contact us at lri@cefic.be

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Ecotoxicology and environmental fate of chemical and biological substances

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Environmental biomarker identification, profiling and monitoring Environmental toxicology and ecotoxicology study design, modelling and related services Environmentally controlled laboratories up to biosafety level 2 suitable for hazardous substances and materials

Contaminated Land &Water

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Simulations Plus, Inc.

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Predict potential ADME-Tox outcomes and toxic dose levels - before the in vivo experiments - with our best-in-class QSAR and PBPK software programs.

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This is just one of many books and journals on display at the Springer booth. Come and take a closer look – also to discuss your publishing proposal.

Visit us at booth #25 to learn more about our modeling and simulation software and consulting services.

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The heart of what we do... Smithers Viscient performs environmental and consumer safety contract research and regulatory services for crop protection, pharmaceutical, industrial chemical, and the consumer product industries.

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Expert services delivering competitive advantage

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With a presence in 29 countries, SynTech Research is a global leader in contract research for crop protection and production.

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Meet us on booth

#26

Toxi-Coop is a European CRO offering GLP-compliant pre-clinical/regulatory in vivo and in vitro testing of chemicals (REACH), agrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, biocides, medical devices, food ingredients/additives. Our services include general toxicology (acute to carcinogenicity), genetic toxicology, ecotoxicology, reproductive toxicology, physico-chemical measurements meeting high quality standards at competitive price. We meet the criterias of expertise, flexibility and timeliness.

Get detailed information at

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SETAC 2014 Experience More Confidence in Environmental Analysis Lunch seminar: Progress in Environmental Analysis without Frontiers Tuesday May 13th, 12:50 - 13:55 in room San Francisco Join us at our seminar where customers will share how they’ve solved some of today’s most challenging issues using Thermo Scientific products. Stop by at our booth to discover our broad range of analytical technologies to ensure the safety and quality of the environmental testing. To reserve your seat and your lunch box, please visit us at booth #41. For more product and application related information visit www.thermoscientific.com ©2014 Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. All rights reserved.

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SCIENCE REGULATORY REGISTRATION Established in 2000, TSGE Consulting is an independent European company providing scientific, regulatory and registration services to the chemical industries. As part of the TSGE group with offices across Europe, we provide local knowledge and expertise based on strong relationships with regulatory authorities. We believe in the value of proactive project management to control cost, manage deadlines and communicate with our clients in a professional and timely manner. Our Regulatory Affairs Services:

You have OUR FULL ATTENTION. So let’s talk about environmental toxicology and chemistry. With WIL Research on your team, you can take advantage of more than 1,200

Plant protection Biocides Industrial and speciality chemicals Animal health Cosmetics

experts and 64,000 square meters of laboratory space located throughout North America and Europe. No matter what type of study you are seeking, we have the

Visit us at booth 48.

experience, expertise and cooperative approach needed to get the job done right.

Come and meet us on Stand 15 at the SETAC 24th Annual Meeting in Basel. www.tsgeurope.com tsge@tsgeurope.com B1331 V3.indd 1

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What is Anywhere Article? Anywhere Article is focused on making our online journal content on Wiley Online Library more readable and portable, whilst also allowing rich information to be brought to the surface. It achieves these goals in the following ways:

We are expert in: • Preparing environmental and human health risk assessments under REACH. • The derivation of Environmental Quality Standards and Limit Values for substances in waters, soils, sediments, biota and wastes. • Producing hazard and exposure assessments for active substances in pesticides, biocides, and human and veterinary medicines. • The development of regulatory frameworks and ‘fit for purpose’ solutions for metals and organic chemicals. • Derivation of drinking water standards.

3. Mobility

Clean design. Superfluous information and unnecessary distractions have been removed so that readers can focus on the article. Figures can be viewed in context or separately, and easily navigated, browsed or downloaded.

The new layout and sidebar tray allow readers access to important information, ie; references, figures, publication history at any point in the reading experience, without losing their place on the main page.

Whatever device you use desktop, tablet, or mobile - the article will be presented to take best advantage of that device, always readable, always easy to use, wherever you are.

You can view an article in the new ‘Anywhere Article’ format wherever you see this link. You’ll be able to view it easily on the device of your choice, at your convenience.

Visit www.wileyonlinelibrary.com today and look out for the new links underneath each journal article, try it, and see the difference for yourself.

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We work strategically with clients to identify emerging business issues and risks related to the production or use of chemical substances. Come and meet us in the exhibition hall at stand 32

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LGC Standards, in partnership with CIL, offers a comprehensive range of reference materials (RMs), including labelled standards from CIL, unlabelled standards from Dr. Ehrenstorfer, and matrix RMs from LGC. This range of high quality RMs for persistent organic pollutants analysis includes:

• Matrix materials for soils, waters, • PFOS and PFOA foods and plants.

www.lgcstandards.com For more information visit us in booth 44 www.xenometrix.ch

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ABC delivers a broad array of GLP and CGMP-compliant product development and analytical testing services to the pharmaceutical, biotech, animal health, crop protection, consumer products and chemical industries.

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These PT studies are ACLASS (certificate# AP-1469) accredited, producing accredited NELAC Proficiency Tests ests to the relevant sections of ISO 17025 and ISO 17043. RTC also has a registered ISO9001:2008 quality system. RTC have been producing environmental LPTP for moree than 20 years and regularly sends out more than 20,000 PT samples a year to over 2,500 participants throughout the world.

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Monday 12 May

Keynote speaker, auditorium Montreal 16:30-17:15

Juliette Legler Epigenetics in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry

Platform and special sessions 08:10-12:50

Platform sessions + special sessions

13:55-16:00

Platform sessions

Poster display 07:45–08:10 10:15–10:45 12:50–13:55 16:00–16:30 17:15–18:30 18:30–19:00

Poster setup Morning coffee break: attend poster Lunch & poster session: attend poster Afternoon coffee break: attend poster Poster session & social: attend poster Poster take-down

Poster corner discussions 17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

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MOPC01 – MOPC06 Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios. Chaired by: Alessandra Zamagni, Monia Niero, Florent Querini MOPC07 - MOPC12 Delving into the social and monetarised environmental impacts during the evaluation process of the Life Cycle of products in order to be able to take all three pillars of sustainability into account. Chaired by: Graziella Benedetto, Tomas Ekvall, Cassia Maria Lie Ugaya MOPC13 – MOPC18 Landscape ecotoxicology and spatially explicit risk assessment of toxicants. Chaired by: Andreas Focks, Mikhail Beketov MOPC19 – MOPC24 Assessing the risk of environmental pollutants on amphibians and reptiles. Chaired by: Amy Brooks, Manuel Ortiz Santaliestra, Veronique Poulsen, Isabel Lopes

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Special SeSSion

REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges (SS02)

Programme

Monday, 12 May, 08:10 – 12:50, Auditorium Montreal

Chairs: Anu Kapanen (ECHA, Finland), Erwin Annys (CEFIC, Belgium), Henrik Tyle (Danish Environmental Protection Agency, Denmark)

This special session will analyse the REACH experience and explore how to bridge between the scientific assessment and the regulatory decision making. A set of experts from ECHA, Member States, industry and academia will present complementary views on the achievements, current situation and challenges from REACH focusing on the environmental aspects. The main discussion points to be covered will be: • Expectations and achievements. Has REACH delivered its promise? More & better hazard information? Better risk assessment by improved CSRs? Better targeted risk management measures? Significant decrease in the risks? Increased moves towards substitution of SVHCs? What has been the scientific contribution to the different REACH processes (Registration, Evaluation, Restriction, and Authorization)? • Current status and future needs. Analysis of the information compiled and generated by REACH. The value of the disseminated REACH registration database as source of information and tool for scientific development. Discussion on prospects of applying the disseminated REACH registration database as reference information, priority setting in regulatory risk management, opportunity for international sharing of the information and collaboration, the basis for modelling and predicting of environmental risks. • Bridging risk assessment and environmental impacts for decision making. From risk quotients to estimating and understanding the environmental impact, i.e. likelihood and magnitude of adverse effects. Addressing the scientific challenges of assessing and describing variability and uncertainty in risk assessment. • Medium and long-term scientific challenges. Addressing the faced and future scientific challenges on the way from risk assessment to environmental protection. Views on the research needs in developing new tools for priority setting, the prediction of overall risks and eco-epidemiology to improve the effectiveness of decision making processes.

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Special SeSSion

08:10 Introduction (Anu Kapanen, ECHA, Finland) 08:15 REACH related environmental information: status and prospects for its availability and quality (Hannu Braunschweiler, ECHA, Finland) 08:35 How toxic is an industrial chemical? A distribution-based assessment of hazard estimates from the REACH registration data (Thomas Backhaus, University of Gothenburg, Sweden) 08:55 Challenges and Solutions in Environmental Risk Assessment for Petroleum Substances under REACH (Klaas den Haan, CONCAWE, Belgium) 09:15 Strengths and weaknesses of implementation of bioavailability correction tools for metals (Hugo Waeterschoot, Eurometaux, Belgium) 09:35 Experiences from regulatory risk assessors on Environmental Hazard and Risk Assessment (Eric Verbruggen, RIVM, Netherlands) 10:05 Discussion 10:15 break 10:45 Introduction (Anu Kapanen, ECHA, Finland) 10:50 Data availability, data requirements and opportunities for improvements in the hazard assessment under REACH (Martin Scheringer, ETH Zürich, Switzerland) 11:10 Systematic analysis of REACH data and their use in screening and prioritization (Panagiotis Karamertzanis, ECHA, Finland) 11:30 Scientific options for reducing acute and chronic fish toxicity tests in the regulatory assessment (Aude Kienzler, European Commission – Joint Research Centre, Italy) 11:50 Future scientific challenges faced in Environmental Risk Assessment (Jose Tarazona, EFSA, Italy) 12:20 R&D needs and knowledge gaps (Derek Knight, ECHA, Finland) 12:40 Discussion and wrap-up

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103

Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35 Room

10:05 Session

7 | combined effects of two emerging environmental stressors (pFoS and co2) on estrogenic and biotransformation responses of atlantic cod (G. morhua) | augustine arukwe (nTnU, norway) 8 | parental exposure to environmental concentrations of diuron leads to aneuploidy in embryos of the pacific oyster as evidenced by fluorescent in situ hybridization | audrey Barranger (iFReMeR, France) 9 | Single and mixture effects of selected emerging pollutants studied in precision-cut liver slices of atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) | cristina Bizarro (Spain)

10 | Toxic pressure in dutch estuarine and coastal waters by chemical stressors inhibiting photosynthesis of marine microalgae | petra Booij (institute for environmental Studies, netherlands) 11 | impact of pollutants and climate change stressors on embryo-larval development of the pacific oyster crassostrea gigas in the arcachon Bay | perrine Gamain (epoc, France) 12 | Gut passage of microplastics and bioavailability of co-contaminants associated with microplastics in organisms exposed via diet or aqueous phase | Theodore Henry (HeriotWatt University, United Kingdom)

52 | ReacH related environmental information: status and prospects for its availability and quality | Hannu Braunschweiler (ecHa, Finland)

53 | How toxic is an industrial chemical? a distribution-based assessment of hazard estimates from the ReacH registration data | Thomas Backhaus (University of Gothenburg, Sweden) 54 | challenges and Solutions in environmental Risk assessment for petroleum Substances under ReacH | Klaas den Haan (concaWe)

55 | Strengths and weaknesses of implementation of bioavailability correction tools for metals | Hugo Waeterschoot (eurometaux, Belgium)

56 | experiences from regulatory risk assessors on environmental Hazard and Risk assessment | eric Verbruggen (RiVM expertise centre for Substance, netherlands) 57 | discussion | anu Kapanen (european chemicals agency ecHa, Finland)

poster spotlight: posters Mo179 | Mo180 | Mo177 | Mo160

23 | Transformations of silver nanoparticles relevant to product use: exposure to disinfectants and washing solutions | denise Mitrano (eMpa Technology Society lab, Switzerland)

22 | Spatially explicit fate modelling of engineered nanoparticles | Joris Quik (RiVM, netherlands)

poster Spotlight: posters Mo235 | Mo236 | Mo237 | Mo225

39 | Will organic photovoltaic technology render benefits in a 30-year horizon? | nieves espinosa (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark)

38 | assessing the prospective environmental impacts of photovoltaic systems based on a simplified lca model | camille Marini (Mines parisTech, France)

37 | Using time-dynamic lca and probabilistic analysis for prediction of future impacts | Jan paul lindner (Fraunhofer iBp, Germany)

36 | Modeling technique for territorial lca applied to urban water systems: evaluation of prospective scenarios in megacities | philippe loubet (Veolia eau d’ile-de-France, France)

20 | engineered nanoparticles interactions with the environment: towards an understanding of the risk they pose (enpeRa): realism Vs regulation | ailbhe Macken (niVa, norway)

21 | Modelling fate and transport of engineered nanoparticles in the aquatic environment | arjen Markus (University of amsterdam, netherlands)

35 | How to define future lca scenarios addressing the effect of climate change in crop production | Monia niero (Technical University of denmark, denmark)

Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios (I) alessandra Zamagni, Monia niero, Florent Querini

Shanghai 1/2

19 | nanomaterials in the aquatic environment: status and challenges ahead | Henriette Selck (Roskilde University, denmark)

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (I) claus Svendsen, catherine Mouneyrac, Susana loureiro, laure Giamberini

Singapore

Kairo 1/2 Advancing Adverse Outcome Pathways for Integrated Toxicology and Regulatory Applications (I) Knut erik Tollefsen, Ksenia Groh

delhi How can scientific advances support regulatory risk assessment for pesticides? (I) Seamus Taylor, anne alix, Gabe Weyman

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (I) Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

osaka/Samarkand

Plants and pollutants in the environment (I) Silvia Mohr, Gertie arts, claudia cosio, Rocio Millan

Boston 1

MoRe Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See neXT paGe

Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (I) Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie carney almroth

Sydney

REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges (I) anu Kapanen, erwin annys, Henrik Tyle

Montreal

Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)

Human exposure to emerging contaminants: monitoring and modeling (I) Martin Krauss, natalie Von Goetz, christa cornelis

Boston 2

18 | Treatment of micropollutants in municipal wastewater using white-rot fungi | Jonas Margot (epFl, Switzerland)

17 | advanced treatment for removal of micropollutants in municipal effluents by fungal laccases | Federica Spina (University of Torino, italy)

16 | Removal of parabens and Benzophenone-4 from wastewater and environmental impact assessment | Silvia diaz-cruz (idaeacSic, Spain)

15 | Multivariate Workflow for the Screening of nontarget peaks from Biologically-Treated Wastewater | Jennifer Schollee (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland)

14 | Fate of pharmaceuticals in urine treatment | christa Mcardell (eawag)

13 | Taking the chemical pulse of a nation by example of the U.S.a. | Rolf Halden (arizona State University, United States)

Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (I) dean leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Shanghai 3/4


105

Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35 Room

9:55 Session

Advancing Adverse Outcome Pathways for Integrated Toxicology and Regulatory Applications (I) Knut erik Tollefsen, Ksenia Groh 29 | advancing adverse outcome pathways for integrated Toxicology and Regulatory applications | natalia Vinas (Mississippi State University, United States) 30 | oecd activities on adverse outcome pathways | Hirofumi aizawa (oecd, France)

31 | Using adverse outcome pathways for regulatory applications | phillip antczak (University of liverpool, United Kingdom)

32 | Use of weight of evidence for characterizing adverse outcome pathways in risk assessment | Keith Solomon (University of Guelph, canada)

33 | development of an alternative testing strategy for the Fish early lifeStage (FelS) test using the aop framework | dries Knapen (University of antwerp, Belgium)

34 | development of adverse outcome pathways for endocrine disruption in daphnia Magna | you Song (norwegian institute for Water Research niVa, norway)

How can scientific advances support regulatory risk assessment for pesticides? (I) Seamus Taylor, anne alix, Gabe Weyman

40 | Sloped mesocosms: a new design to evaluate macrophyte community effects | Helen Walton (UK)

41 | addressing mesocosm data requirements in the new eFSa aquatic Guidance document | Seamus Taylor (United Kingdom)

42 | a proposal to address the minimum detectable difference (Mdd) for the interpretation of treatment-related effects in micro-/mesocosm experiments | Theo c.M. Brock (alterra Wageningen University and Research centre, netherlands)

43 | assessing the environmental partitioning behaviour of pesticides: polyparameter linear free energy relationship approach | angelika Stenzel (Germany)

44 | Histochemistry as a post-mortem diagnostic tool for organophosphate toxicosis in birds, implemented within a monitoring program in citrus orchards in Spain | Manousos Foudoulakis (dow agrosciences, Greece) 45 | Varying levels of protection in current risk assessment of birds and mammals: How to reach harmonisation | Magnus Wang (WSc Scientific GmbH, Germany)

6 | effects of chlorpyrifos ethyl on cholinesterase activity in climbing perch (anabas testudineus , Bloch, 1792), from ricefields in the Mekong delta, Vietnam | Tam nguyen Thanh (nong lam University, Vietnam)

5 | ecological risks of antibiotics applied in freshwater cage aquaculture - a case study in tropical Thailand | andreu Rico (Wageningen University, netherlands)

4 | integrated ecological Risk assessment (eRa) of aquaculture and anthropogenic pollution in the phu long commune, Hai phong city, Vietnam | peter Bruce (Stockholm University, Sweden)

3 | integrated ecological risk assessment of pesticide run-off using the TRiad weight-of evidence approach: a case study in the Rio Madre de dios River, costa Rica | Jonas Gunnarsson (Stockholm University, Sweden)

2 | TieR i Toxicity assessment of pesticides used in banana and pineapple plantations detected on the Rio Madre de dios watershed, costa Rica | Maria arias (Universidad nacional, costa Rica)

1 | The laguna Madre de dios, a costa Rican tropical coastal lagoon ecosystem at risk | luisa e. castillo (Universidad nacional costa Rica, costa Rica)

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (I) Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

Osaka/Samarkand

51 | Uptake kinetics of inorganic and methyl mercury by two representative aquatic primary producers | Rebecca Flueck (Switzerland)

50 | accumulation of lead, zinc and copper in different organs of Typha domingensis grown in an abandoned mining area | Miguel lominchar izquierdo (cieMaT, Spain)

49 | The use of ceramium tenuicorne growth inhibition test for testing chemicals, products, effluent waters as well as contaminated soil and sediments | Britta eklund (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Sydney Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (I) Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie Carney Almroth

Montreal REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges (I) Anu Kapanen, Erwin Annys, Henrik Tyle

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (I) Claus Svendsen, Catherine Mouneyrac, Susana Loureiro, Laure Giamberini

Singapore

Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios (I) Alessandra Zamagni, Monia Niero, Florent Querini

Shanghai 1/2

Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (I) Dean Leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Shanghai 3/4

poster Spotlight: posters Mo200 | Mo201 | Mo202 | Mo203

28 | integrated external and internal exposure to chemicals: the inTeGRa method | denis Sarigiannis (Greece)

27 | Human exposure to UV filters in personal care products | eva Manova (eTH Zurich, Switzerland)

26 | lead and mercury levels in cord and maternal blood and placental tissue among Korean population | ye lim park (Korea (South))

25 | Sorption of SVocs to fabrics: Towards determining the role of clothing in human exposure | amandeep Saini (University of Toronto, canada)

47 | Myriophyllum spicatum’s polyphenols as a new sensitive and informative parameter for pollutant impact assessment on aquatic ecosystems | andreina nuttens (UMR cnRS, France) 48 | Simplifying the application of a Myriophyllum spicatum TK/Td growth model by estimating chemical specific, toxicokinetic parameters | Simon Heine (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

24 | does foam application reduce aerosol formation? | annette Bitsch (Fraunhofer iTeM, Germany)

Human exposure to emerging contaminants: monitoring and modeling (I) Martin Krauss, natalie Von Goetz, christa cornelis

Boston 2

46 | impact of single and multiple pesticide pollution on various endpoints in Myriophyllum spicatum cultivated in sediment-water or culture medium only | elisabeth Gross (University of lorraine, France)

Plants and pollutants in the environment (I) Silvia Mohr, Gertie arts, claudia cosio, Rocio Millan

Boston 1

MORE MONDAY PLATFORM PRESENTATIONS AM1 (8:15-10:15) SEE PREVIOUS PAGE

Kairo 1/2

Delhi

Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)


107

Room

Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 11:50 12:10

79 | individual and functional impacts of environmentally realistic silver nanoparticle exposures on Gammarus sp (amphipoda) | Jennifer andreï (cnRS UMR, France)

80 | The mesocosm approach to estimate the fate, bioaccumulation and toxicity of silver nanoparticles on two endobenthic species: the bivalve mollusk Scrobicularia plana and the worm nereis diversicolor | aurore Vergnoux (Universite de nantes, France)

65 | Biomarkers of oxidadive stress as indicators of reproductive effects in the benthic amphipod Monoporeia affinis | Sara Furuhagen (Stockholm University)

66 | population growth rate in low- and high density populations | elin lundström Belleza (Stockholm University, Sweden)

111 | Scientific options for reducing acute and chronic fish toxicity tests in the regulatory assessment | aude Kienzler (european commission Joint Research centre)

112 | Future scientific challenges faced in environmental Risk assessment | Jose V. Tarazona (european Food Safety authority, Finland)

12:20 | 113 | R&d needs and 67 | effects of triphenylborane pyridine, tralopyril and knowledge gaps | derek capsaicin to marine inverKnight (ecHa, Finland) tebrates: do novel biocides still pose an environmental risk? | isabel Maria de carvalho Benta Santos oliveira (University of aveiro ceSaM, portugal) 12:40 | 114 | discussion and wrap-up | anu Kapanen (european chemicals agency ecHa, Finland)

77 | Silver nanoparticles flow in a model aquatic trophic chain | Susana loureiro (Universidade de aveiro, portugal)

76 | long term effects of cerium dioxide nanoparticles (nceo2) on a simplified food chain of micro-organisms and zebra mussels | Mael Garaud (laboratory liec cnRS UMR Udl, France)

97 | Towards comparative short-period time-resolved life cycle assessment of differently charged electric vehicles | Benedikt Zimmermann (Karlsruhe institute of Technology, Germany)

96 | influence of initial conditions of agent-based model simulation for consequential lca of bioenergy | Tomas navarrete Gutierrez (cRTe cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg)

95 | The role of dynamic perspectives to model future scenarios for attributional and consequential life cycle assessments: case of old scrap aluminium | Xavier Gabarrell durany (Universitat autonoma de Barcelona, Spain)

94 | consequential lca to assess environmental benefits of smart grids | aurélie Gallice (France)

93 | environmental consequences of stormwater harvesting for flood prevention | anna petit-Boix (Spain)

92 | accounting for resource functionality in resource use impact assessment | cecile Bulle (ciRaiG polytechnique Montreal, canada)

Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios (II) alessandra Zamagni, Monia niero, Florent Querini

Shanghai 1/2

Kairo 1/2 Advancing Adverse Outcome Pathways for Integrated Toxicology and Regulatory Applications (II) Knut erik Tollefsen, Ksenia Groh

delhi How can scientific advances support regulatory risk assessment for pesticides? (II) Seamus Taylor, anne alix, G Weyman

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (II) Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

osaka/Samarkand

Plants and pollutants in the environment (II) Silvia Mohr, Gertie arts, claudia cosio, Rocio Millan

Boston 1

MoRe Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See neXT paGe

68 | Biomarker responses dependant of pollution source: effects of crude oil contamination through nutrition and water - a laboratory experiment with Baltic Sea blue mussel (Mytilus edulis) | anna Soirinsuo (Finnish environment institute SyKe, Finland)

78 | Habitat selection of a leaf shredding amphipod affected by photocatalytic properties of nTio2 | alexander Feckler (Swedish University of agricultural Sciences SlU, Germany)

64 | effects of persistent organic pollutants on marina primary production: a modelling approach | Gert everaert (Ghent University, Belgium)

110 | Systematic analysis of ReacH data and their use in screening and prioritisation | panagiotis Karamertzanis (ecHa, Finland)

75 | Toxicity of silver nanoparticles on natural microbial freshwater communities in an artificial indoor stream | Marianne Matzke (centre for ecology Hydrology neRc, United Kingdom)

63 | The toxicity of chemical warfare agent mixtures on the Baltic mussel Mytilus trossulus | Matthias Brenner (alfred Wegener institute, Germany)

109 | data availability, data requirements and opportunities for improvements in the hazard assessment under ReacH | Martin Scheringer (eTH Zuerich, Switzerland)

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (II) claus Svendsen, catherine Mouneyrac, Susana loureiro, laure Giamberini

Singapore

Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (II) Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie carney almroth

Sydney

REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges (II) anu Kapanen, erwin annys, Henrik Tyle

Montreal

Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)

Room

12:30 Session

Human exposure to emerging contaminants: monitoring and modeling (II) Martin Krauss, natalie Von Goetz, christa cornelis

Boston 2

74 | ecotoxicological consequences of pharmaceutical facility discharges on wild fish: a french case of study. | olivier cardoso (ineRiS, France)

73 | Reduction of micropollutants and pathogens in surface waters by improved wastewater and rainwater treatment: What is the benefit for aquatic organisms and human health? | Rita Triebskorn (University of Tuebingen, Germany)

72 | dioxin-like effect potentials and related effects in fish exposed to regular wastewater effluents and effluents with additional wastewater treatment stages | diana Maier (University of Tubingen, Germany)

71 | aquatic ecotoxicology: To assess the environmental performance of Sanitation System on aquatic environment | Stellio casas (Veolia environnement Recherche et innovation, France)

70 | efficiency evaluation of a membrane bioreactor to remove emerging pollutants from a hospital effluent based on the combined use of in vitro and in vivo bioassays and targeted chemicals analyses | nicolas creusot (ineRiS, France)

69 | Toxicity and estrogenicity of aqueous bisphenol a samples treated by advanced oxidation processes | Tatjana Tišler (national institute of chemistry, Slovenia)

Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (II) dean leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Shanghai 3/4


109

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Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 11:50 12:10 Room

12:30 Session

86 | SeqapaSS: Sequence alignment to predict across-species susceptibility | carlie lalone (US epa, United States)

87 | predicting the sensitivity of endangered sturgeons to dioxin-like compounds: Molecular investigation into the aryl hydrocarbon receptor pathway | Jonathon doering (University of Saskatchewan, canada) 88 | application of genome-wide transcript profiling to elucidate the mechanisms of toxicity of environmental chemicals in model and non-model fish species | eduarda Santos (University of exeter, United Kingdom)

89 | development of an in vitro metabolomic approach for enhanced neurotoxic effects by contaminants, with emphasis on neurotransmitter pathways | pim leonards (VU University institute for environmental Studies, netherlands) 90 | From laboratory to assessing efficiency of Water reprocessing plants | philipp antczak (University of liverpool, United Kingdom)

91 | Hepatic vitellogenin induction in fathead minnows is influenced through both soluble estrogen receptors and membrane receptors | nancy denslow (University of Florida, United States)

98 | Re-evaluation of the assessment factor for the earthworm Tier 1 risk assessment of plant protection products | Gregor ernst (Bayer cropScience, Germany) 99 | a tiered collembola risk assessment approach under the eU Regulation 1107/2009 | paul neumann (Bayer cropScience aG)

100 | Supporting agrochemical Registration Through Bespoke Multi-country data collection | Joseph White (aRcadiS UK)

101 | Fate of rice herbicide propanil and its metabolite 3, 4-dichloroaniline in water-sediment systems from rice paddy with and without flooding simulation | ye yuan (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

102 | environmental quality through science? - Reflecting “the new challenges� for pesticide risk assessment | Tobias Frische (Federal environment agency UBa, Germany) poster Spotlight: posters Mo253 | Mo254 | Mo255 | Mo256

REACH after the second registration deadline: Environmental challenges (II) anu Kapanen, erwin annys, Henrik Tyle

Montreal

Advancing Adverse Outcome Pathways for Integrated Toxicology and Regulatory Applications (II) Knut erik Tollefsen, Ksenia Groh

How can scientific advances support regulatory risk assessment for pesticides? (II) Seamus Taylor, anne alix, Gabe Weyman

poster Spotlight: posters Mo024 | Mo025 | Mo026 | Mo006

62 | organic pollutant effects on the photosynthetic gene expression of natural communities of prochlorococcus sp. | Maria-carmen Fernandez-pinos (idaea, cSic, Spain)

61 | aluminium toxicity in tropical montane forest soils: Response of nutrient uptake to elevated al concentrations | agnes Rehmus (University of Berne, Switzerland)

60 | distribution, mobility, and pollution assessment of cd, cu, ni, pb, and Fe in intertidal surface sediments of Sungai puloh mangrove area, Malaysia. | Bede Udechukwu (Universiti putra Malaysia, Malaysia)

59 | Biota-sediment accumulation factors and trophic magnification factors: evaluation of the applicability for subtropical and tropical aquatic systems and a comparative study between the two regions | Vera Verhaert (University of antwerp, Belgium)

58 | ddT dynamics in a Tropical Floodplain lake | annelle Mendez (eTH Zurich, Switzerland)

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (II) Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

osaka/Samarkand

108 | Genotoxicity of contaminated drinking Water Sources detected by a plant Bioassay | oyime olorunfemi (University of Benin, nigeria)

107 | impact of deposition produced during the static testing of solid rocket motors on corn and alfalfa | William doucette (Utah State University, United States)

106 | phytoxicity of azoles from personal care products and pharmaceuticals in the absence and presence of Biosolids | elisabeth Richter (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany)

105 | Bioaccumulation of ionized and neutral emerging contaminants: exposure of edible crops via solid and liquid effluent streams | Katherine Hyland (colorado School of Mines, United States)

104 | Modelling air-vegetation distribution of Bap in the iberian peninsula using biomonitoring data | nuno Ratola (lepae University of porto, Spain)

103 | Strategies for enhancing plant survival and remediation potential under metal toxicity | Gbotemi adediran (The University of edinburg, United Kingdom)

Plants and pollutants in the environment (II) Silvia Mohr, Gertie arts, claudia cosio, Rocio Millan

Boston 1

Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (II) Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie carney almroth

Sydney

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (II) claus Svendsen, catherine Mouneyrac, Susana loureiro, laure Giamberini

Singapore

Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios (II) alessandra Zamagni, Monia niero, Florent Querini

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See pReVioUS paGe

Kairo 1/2

delhi

Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)

Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (II) dean leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Shanghai 3/4

poster Spotlight: posters Mo204 | Mo205 | Mo206 | Mo207

85 | nontarget analysis of organic pollutants in human urine: developing a generic screening method | Merle plassmann (Germany)

84 | determination of deHp metabolites, pFoS and pFoa in breast milk and cord plasma samples from european birth cohorts | Margaretha lamoree (netherlands)

83 | inverse age-dependent accumulation of decabromodiphenyl ether and other pBdes in serum from a general adult population | Joan Grimalt (Spain)

82 | Traffic-Related Metal emissions and their Bioaccessibility in Urban atmospheric dust of Human Health concern | clare Wiseman (University of Toronto, canada)

81 | accounting for volatilization losses of dermally applied cosmetic ingredients: How important is the inhalation route? | Tatsiana dudzina (eTH Zurich, Switzerland)

Human exposure to emerging contaminants: monitoring and modeling (II) Martin Krauss, natalie Von Goetz, christa cornelis

Boston 2


111

Room

Session 14:00 14:20 14:40 15:00 15:20 Room

15:40 Session

122 | The use of eco-toxicological tests for characterization of contaminated soil from boat activities | Britta eklund (Stockholm University, Sweden) 123 | physiological responses of Mytilus galloprovincialis under multiple stressors: nutritive stress and paHs | carmen Gonzalez-Fernandez (Spanish institute of oceanography, Spain)

124 | Health status of cod (Gadus morhua) at dumpsites for chemical warfare agents in the Baltic Sea | Matthias Brenner (alfred Wegener institute, Germany)

125 | Hazard and risk of herbicide contamination for marine microalgae: a field relevant approach | Sascha Sjollema (University of amsterdam, netherlands)

poster Spotlight: posters Mo071 | Mo072 | Mo073

167 | development of a Toxicokinetic-Model of the Bee Hive. | Kerstin Szonn (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

168 | Weeds in the treated field - a realistic scenario for pollinator risk assessment? | Samuel Maynard (Syngenta, United Kingdom)

169 | Glyphosate: evaluation of exposure and effects on honey bee brood (apis mellifera) development | Georg von Mérey (Monsanto, Belgium)

170 | a four year field program investigating long term effects of repeated exposure of honey bee colonies to flowering crops treated with thiamethoxam | Mike coulson (Syngenta, United Kingdom) 171 | Uptake and translocation of imidacloprid to nectar and pollen in sunflower and raspberry | Trine eggen (Bioforsk, norway)

Novel approaches to incorporate in vitro bioassays in risk assessment Merijn Schriks, Frederic leusch

delhi

121 | Harmfull algal Blooms and associated toxins: Mussel larvae at risk | Maarten de Rijcke (Ghent University, Belgium)

166 | Second tier options in the eFSa Guidance document on Risk assessment of plant protection products on bees (apis mellifera, Bombus spp. and solitary bees) | csaba Szentes (eFSa, italy)

148 | looking beyond standard testing of titanium dioxide nanomaterials consideration of relevant exposure scenarios | anne Wyrwoll (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

147 | assessing the fate and effect of engineered nanomaterials in reference and wastewater derived organic matter | peta neale (The University of Queensland, australia)

146 | environmental fate models for engineered nanoparticles - simulating realistic conditions in a complex natural river system | nicole Sani-Kast (eTH Zurich, Switzerland)

145 | Fate and heteroaggregation of titanium dioxide nanoparticles in natural surface waters | danielle Slomberg (cnRS aix Marseille Université, France)

144 | co-tolerance of microbial litter decomposers to silver nanoparticles and antibiotics | ahmed Tlili (eawag, Switzerland)

143 | Sulphidation kinetics of silver nanoparticles reacted with metal sulphides | Basilius Thalmann (eawag, Switzerland)

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (III) claus Svendsen, catherine Mouneyrac, Susana loureiro, laure Giamberini

Singapore

154 | Using simplified S-lca to identify socially responsible purchasing criteria | Jean-Michel couture (Groupe aGGeco, canada)

153 | anticipating the psychosocial factors effects in social lca | Federica Silveri (France)

152 | assessing effects of life cycle on income distribution and infant mortality at national level | ibrahima Bocoum (iRSTea Montpellier, France)

151 | The external cost of air pollution in the canton of Zurich and the cities Zurich and Winterthur | daniel Montanari (econcept aG, Switzerland)

150 | external costs of air pollution from energy supply: Reviewing methodologies from externe to needS | Jonathan van der Kamp (eiFeR, Germany)

149 | application of monetary valuation in life cycle assessment: literature review and survey among practitioners | Massimo pizzol (aalborg University, denmark)

Delving into the social and monetarised environmental impacts during the evaluation process of the Life Cycle of products in order to be able to take all three pillars of sustainability into account Graziella Benedetto, Tomas ekvall, cassia Maria lie Ugaya

Shanghai 1/2

Personal care products in the environment: strengthening science to support regulation Silvia diaz-cruz, GuangGuo ying

Kairo 1/2

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (III) Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

osaka/Samarkand

Periphyton as bioindicator and community model - critical review, work in progress, future perspectives alexandra Kroll, Marianne Matzke, Thomas Backhaus

Boston 1

MoRe Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:) See neXT paGe

Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (III) Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie carney almroth

Sydney

Pollinator risk assessment: past, present and future Stefan Kimmel, amy Brooks, Veronique poulsen, Marco candolfi

Montreal

Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00)

Current Developments and Challenges on Sediment toxicology in Scientific and Regulatory Contexts Francesca pellizzato, Hugo Waeterschoot

Boston 2

136 | evolution of stormwater quality between 2002 and 2010 for the city of Toulouse, France | Stephanie deffontis (France)

135 | can daphnia behavioral endpoints be used as tool for ecotoxicological assessment of wastewater effluents? | Julie chevalier (edF Rd, France)

134 | effect-assessment of wastewater effluents by molecular biomarkers in brown trout (Salmo trutta) | Stephan Fischer (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland)

133 | characterisation of a sewage treatment plant effluent using biomarkers in brown trout (Salmo trutta fario) as tools in active monitoring | Krisztina Vincze (Germany)

132 | Biomarkers of stress and effect evaluated on caged clams exposed to the Bay of cádiz, SW Spain | Gabriela aguirre-Martinez (Universidad de cadiz, Spain)

131 | coupling in vitro and in vivo neurochemical-based assessments of wastewater effluents from the Maumee River area of concern (aoc) | adeline arini (McGill University, canada)

Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (III) dean leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Shanghai 3/4


113

Room

Session 14:00 14:20 14:40 15:00 15:20 Room

15:40 Session

138 | parabens in water and sediment: occurrence in river and lakes in different rural and urban environments | Fabrizio Botta (ineRiS, France)

139 | Field dissipation and risk assessment of typical personal care products in biosolid-amended soils | Guang-Guo ying (chinese academy of Sciences, china)

140 | determination of toxicity data of ultraviolet filters toward selected aquatic organisms for a preliminary environmental risk assessment | daniel Molins delgado (Spain) 141 | do insect repellents induce drift behaviour in aquatic non-target organisms? | patrick Fink (University of cologne, Germany)

142 | Screening human health risk of environmental and direct exposure to personal care products | olivier Jolliet (University of Michigan, United States)

162 | applicability of in vitro assays for assessment of estrogenicity in case studies - advantages and uncertainties | Barbora Jarosova (Masaryk University, czech Republic)

163 | contribution of dyes on the mutagenicity found in Brazilian surface water: the piracicaba River case | Francine Vacchi (Brazil)

164 | Bioluminescence as a tool for studying mechanisms of toxic effects | nadezhda Kudryasheva (institute of Biophysics SB RaS, Russia) 165 | Flagging health risks of chemicals by combining in vitro bioactivity data with environmental and consumer product exposure modeling | alexi ernstoff (United States) poster Spotlight: posters Mo262 | Mo263 | Mo264 | Mo265

Pollinator risk assessment: past, present and future Stefan Kimmel, amy Brooks, Veronique poulsen, Marco candolfi

Montreal

137 | occurence, distribution and risk assesment of organic UV filters in the aquatic environment in Hong Kong and other countries | Tsui Mei po Mirabelle (city University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

161 | conceptual Framework to derive effect-based Trigger Values for cell-based in-vitro Bioassays | Beate escher (University of Queensland, australia)

120 | Mercury and persistent organic pollutants as endocrine disruptors in polar seabirds | Sabrina Tartu (France)

119 | The endocrine disruption properties of an adipose contaminant mixture extracted from east Greenland polar bears studied in the H295R cell line | Rune Hjorth (denmark)

118 | Temporal trends of persistent organic pollutants in arctic foxes from Svalbard in the light of a changing climate | Martin Solhøi andersen (norway)

117 | persistent organic pollutants and trace elements in blood of the wandering albatross: influence of individual traits and foraging ecology | alice carravieri (France)

116 | Mobilisation of persistent organochlorine Burdens in Migrating Southern Hemisphere Humpback Whales | Susan Bengtson nash (Griffith University, australia)

115 | an antarctic research station as a local source of perfluorinated organic pollutants | Seanan Wild (Griffith University, australia)

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (III) Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

osaka/Samarkand

poster Spotlight: posters Mo082 | Mo083 | Mo084 | Mo085

130 | Metagenomic sequencing of periphyton: Taxonomic and functional insights into marine biofilm communities | Kemal Sanli (Sweden)

129 | Seasonal variability of natural river biofilm tolerance and diversity in an urban contamination gradient | lise Fechner (France, Metropolitan)

128 | combined ionic and toxic stress induces community tolerance in periphyton | Mechthild Schmitt-Jansen (UFZ Helmholz ctre environm Research, Germany)

127 | community diversity and 3d structure of periphyton exposed to silver nanoparticles and silver nitrate | alexandra Kroll (Switzerland)

126 | direct and indirect effects of triclosan on periphyton under grazing pressure | Helena Guasch (Spain)

Periphyton as bioindicator and community model - critical review, work in progress, future perspectives alexandra Kroll, Marianne Matzke, Thomas Backhaus

Boston 1

Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (III) Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie carney almroth

Sydney

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (III) claus Svendsen, catherine Mouneyrac, Susana loureiro, laure Giamberini

Singapore

Delving into the social and monetarised environmental impacts during the evaluation process of the Life Cycle of products in order to be able to take all three pillars of sustainability into account Graziella Benedetto, Tomas ekvall, cassia Maria lie Ugaya

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00) See pReVioUS paGe

Personal care products in the environment: strengthening science to support regulation Silvia diaz-cruz, GuangGuo ying

Kairo 1/2

Novel approaches to incorporate in vitro bioassays in risk assessment Merijn Schriks, Frederic leusch

delhi

Monday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00)

Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (III) dean leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Shanghai 3/4

160 | assessing the environmental quality of estuarine and coastal sediments from the atlantic and Mediterranean regions using different in-vitro bioassays | denise Fernandes (Spain)

159 | considering cohesive sediments for the chemical and ecologi-cal status of aquatic ecosystems - new lines of evidence for a Woe approach based on nematodes | Sebastian HĂśss (ecossa, Germany)

158 | Bioaccumulation assessment by battery testing allows read across among marine benthic invertebrate species | noel diepens (Wageningen University, netherlands)

157 | aVS based bioavailability models are inadequate for predicting risk in oxic sediments | G. allen Burton (University of Michigan, United States)

156 | nickel toxicity in freshwater sediments: developing an integrated effects assessment to comply with challenges posed by ReacH and the Water Framework directive | Marnix van Gheluwe (aRcHe, Belgium)

155 | advances in setting principles for regulatory sediment risk assessment | anne-Mari Karjalainen (ecHaeuropean chemicals agency, Finland)

Current Developments and Challenges on Sediment toxicology in Scientific and Regulatory Contexts Francesca pellizzato, Hugo Waeterschoot

Boston 2


Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

Ecotoxicology in tropical and polar regions (P). Chaired by: Jonas Gunnarsson, luisa e. castillo, Henrik Kylin

southern Gulf of Mexico | Noemi Ramirez (Mexico) | N. Ramirez, L. Aguirre-Macedo, G. Gold-Bouchot

MO001 | Ecological risk assessment of agro-pesticides used in the Nha Trang area, Vietnam using the PRIMET model | Jonas Gunnarsson (Stockholm University, Sweden) | J. Gunnarsson, H. Tran Thi Minh, V. Le, M. Olstedt, H. Le Van Lan, C. Amid, P. van den Brink, M. Tedengren

MO009 | Pesticide contamination of surface water in Guadeloupe and Martinique (French West Indies): co-occurrence of compounds related to past and current agricultural uses | Laurent Lagadic (INRA, France) | F. Caupos, F. Rateau, G. Hielard, S. Kanor, P. Loricourt, C. Verges, L. Lagadic

MO002 | Evaluation of toxic and genotoxic effects in sediments of coastial systems located in the Gulf of Mexico | Alma Sobrino-Figueroa (Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Mexico) | A. Sobrino-Figueroa, A. Vazquez Botello, G. Ponce Velez, S. Villanueva Fragozo

MO010 | Pollutants and Biomarkers in Fish from the Southern Gulf of Mexico | Gerardo Gold-Bouchot (Cinvestav Unidad Merida, Mexico) | G. Gold-Bouchot, L. Aguirre-Macedo, V. Vidal-Martinez, O. Zapata-Perez

MO003 | Evaluation of the effects of detergent in Lemna gibba L. Y Egeria densa Planch. Macrophytes | Alma Sobrino-Figueroa (Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Mexico) | A. Sobrino-Figueroa, J. Morales Torres MO004 | Evaluating the response of microalgae Monoraphidium SP (Chlorophyta) to detergents | Alma Sobrino-Figueroa (Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Mexico) | A. Sobrino-Figueroa, J. Morales Torres

MO012 | Metal pollution in eutrophic environments. Is the toxic effect of cadmium on Danio rerio embryos modified by the presence of cyanotoxins? | Felipe Fernando Martinez-Jeronimo (Escuela Nacional de Ciencias BiologicasIPN, Mexico) | L. Luna-Martinez, F. Martinez-Jeronimo

MO005 | Assessing the ecological impact of banana farms on water quality using aquatic macroinvertebrate community composition | Michael Tedengren (Sweden) | O. Svensson, A. Sanderson Bellamy, P. van den Brink, M. Tedengren, J. Gunnarsson

MO013 | Brain cholinesterase response in the climbing perch fish (Anabas testudineus) after exposed to Vitashield 40EC. | Tam Nguyen Thanh (Nong Lam University, Vietnam) | T. Nguyen Thanh, H. Berg, C. Hguyen, T. Phan Thi Bich

MO006 | The application of the SPEARpesticides bioindicator in South Africa | Wynand Malherbe (North West University, South Africa) | W. Malherbe, V. Wepener, J. van Vuren

MO014 | Pesticide run-off during rain events in Caribbean lowland agricultural area of Costa Rica | Clemens Ruepert (Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica) | S. Vargas Villalobos, A. Saravia Arguedas, L. Castillo Martinez, A. Rico Artero, J. Gunnarsson, C. Ruepert

MO007 | Impact of the pesticide Vertimec® 18 EC on tropical freshwater plankton communities | Juliana Resende (Brazil) | J. Resende, A. Vasconcelos, M. Pereira, E. Espindola MO008 | Macromelanophage Centers (MMCs) and PAHs in Ariopsis felis from the

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MO011 | Comparison of Vertimec® 18 EC effects to Ceridaphnia silvestrii for culture contaminated water and samples of contaminated artificial mesocosms. | Maressa Pomaro Casali Pereira (Sao Paulo University, Brazil) | M. Pomaro Casali Pereira, J. Resende, A. Vasconcelos, E. Espindola, C. Botta

MO015 | Assessing exposure risk of agrochemicals on tropical aquatic species using Species Sensitivity Distributions (SSDs) in Nha Trang, Vietnam | Jonas Gunnarsson (Stockholm University, Sweden) | M. Olstedt,

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTion

M. Tran Thi, C. Amid, H. Le Hoai, H. Le Lan, P. van den Brink, M. Tedengren, J. Gunnarsson MO016 | Effect of pesticides used in banana and pineapple plantations on aquatic ecosystems in Costa Rica | Noel Diepens (Wageningen University, Netherlands) | N. Diepens, S. Pfennig, P. van den Brink, J. Gunnarsson, C. Ruepert, L. Castillo MO017 | Insect diversity on high-input, low-input and organic banana farms | Michael Tedengren (Sweden) | A. Sanderson Bellamy, O. Svensson, M. Tedengren, P. van den Brink, J. Gunnarsson MO018 | Feasibility of different colored clays for the composition of formulated sediments regarding pH, dissolved oxygen and metal availability parameters for cultivation of Hyalella azteca | Ana Arine (Unesp, Brazil) | A. Arine, C. Watanabe, V. Campos, R. Fracacio MO019 | Effects of Triclosan on the transcription expression of CYP1A, CYP3A and their enzymes activity in the Yellow Catfish (Pelteobagrus fulvidraco) | Xiangping Nie (China) | P. Ku, X. Wu, R. Ou, L. Wang, X. Nie MO020 | Erythrocyte oxidative damage and antioxidant defense system of traíra, Hoplias malabaricus, injected with crude extract of cyanobacteria, Radiocystis fernandoi. | Marise Sakuragui (Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil) | M. Sakuragui, T. Peixoto, N. Souza, M. Paulino, D. Tavares, A. Terezan, J. Fernandes, A. Giani, M. Fernandes MO021 | Anatomical alterations in rice leaf during senescence and aluminum toxicity | Muthu Kumaran (Pondicherry University, India) | M. Kumaran, A. Vijaya Bhaskara Rao MO022 | TIER II. In situ toxicity and ecological assessment of pesticide run-off in the Madre de Dios River and Lagoon, Costa Rica. | Maria Arias (Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica) | F. Mena, S. Echeverria Saenz, M. Arias, P. van den Brink, C. Ruepert, L. Castillo, J. Gunnarsson MO023 | Predicted toxicity risks of pesti-

cides used in paddy rice fields in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam and comparison between different agro-management regimes | Jonas Gunnarsson (Stockholm University, Sweden) | N. Stadlinger, H. Berg, T. Nguyen Thanh, J. Gunnarsson, P. van den Brink MO024 | Assessment of ecological risks of pesticide use in banana and pineapple cultivation on aquatic ecosystems in Costa Rica using the PERPEST model. | Jonas Gunnarsson (Stockholm University, Sweden) | P. van den Brink, J. Gunnarsson, L. Castillo, C. Ruepert MO025 | Additive effects of herbicide and elevated temperature in the branched coral Acropora formosa - Nha Trang, Vietnam. | Michael Tedengren (Sweden) | C. Amid, M. Olstedt, J. Gunnarsson, H. Le Lan, H. Nguyen, H. Tran Thi Minh, H. Doan Nhu, P. van den Brink, M. Hellstrom, M. Tedengren MO026 | Oceanic transport of Perfluorinated compounds into Antarctic waters, and the influence of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current | Seanan Wild (Griffith University, Australia) | S. Wild, R. Bossi, D. Hawker, R. Cropp, S. Bengtson Nash Marine and coastal ecotoxicology and risk assessment (P). Chaired by: Ketil Hylland, Joachim Sturve, Bethanie carney almroth MO027 | Trace element bioaccumulation in rope-grown Mytilus galloprovincialis: knowledge update | Jonathan Richir (University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom) | J. Richir, S. Gobert MO028 | Accumulation of organotins and perfluorooctane sulfonate in wharf roach (Ligia exotica Roux) and its ability to serve as a biomonitoring species for coastal pollution | Yuji Oshima (Faculty of Agriculture Kyushu University, Japan) | Y. Oshima, M. Honda, S. Matsunaga, S. Undap, T. Sekiguchi, N. Suzuki, Y. Shimasaki MO029 | Metal interaction between the mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus and the polychaete Branchipolynoe seepensis from the hydrothermal vents: endosymbiosis or parasitism? | Cátia Cardoso (University of Azores,

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Portugal) | C. Cardoso, T. Gomes, A. Colaco, R. Santos, M. Bebianno

United Kingdom) | M. Vannoni, T. McGowan, D. Sheahan, J. Aldridge, M. Kirby

Rotini, F. Oteri, G. Martuccio, M. Mannozzi, A. Cicero

MO030 | Acute and subacute responses of Crangon crangon (Crustacea) to ocean acidification due to CO2 injection | Almut Gerhardt (LimCo International GmbH, Germany) | A. Gerhardt

MO039 | Integrated assessment of the chemical environmental state of Cartagena Bay (NW Mediterranean) in relation to marine chemical contamination | Concepcion Martinez-Gomez (Instituto Espanol de Oceanografia, Spain) | C. Martinez-Gomez, B. Fernandez, J. Valdes, C. Navarro, M. Albentosa, J. Campillo, V. Leon, J. Benedicto, T. Burgeot, D. Vethaak

MO046 | Evaluation of the detoxification mechanisms of metals in aquatic organisms by characterization of hepatic metallothionein (MT) | Juliana Azevedo (Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil) | J. Azevedo, J. Sarkis, S. Rogero, J. Rogero

MO031 | Long term toxicity studies with marine species | Loredana Manfra (ISPRA, Italy) | L. Manfra, A. Tornambè, F. Savorelli, S. Canepa, F. Oteri, A Rottini, M, Mannozzi, A. Cicero MO032 | Combined effects of microplastics and adsorbed contaminants on marine microalgal photosynthesis and growth | Sascha Sjollema (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) | S. Sjollema, P. Redondo-Hasselerharm, M. van der Meulen, M. Kraak, D. Vethaak MO034 | Metals and other elements in tissues of wild fish from fish farms and comparison with farmed species in sites with oxic and anoxic sediments | Ioanna Kalantzi (Hellenic Centre for Marine Science, Greece) | I. Kalantzi, K. Black, S. Pergantis, T. Shimmield, N. Papageorgiou, K. Sevastou, M. Tsapakis, I. Karakassis MO035 | Metals in benthic macrofauna and biogeochemical factors affecting their trophic transfer to wild fish around fish farm cages | Ioanna Kalantzi (Hellenic Centre for Marine Science, Greece) | I. Kalantzi, N. Papageorgiou, K. Sevastou, K. Black, S. Pergantis, M. Tsapakis, I. Karakassis MO036 | Contaminants from boatyards - a risk to the coastal ecosystem | Britta Eklund (Stockholm University, Sweden) | B. Eklund, D. Eklund MO037 | Impact of boat maintenance on biofouling | Maria Bighiu (Sweden) | M. Bighiu, A. Eriksson Wiklund, B. Eklund MO038 | Lethal and sub-lethal effects of aniline to the copepod Tisbe battagliai: simulation of Hazardous and Noxious Substances (HNS) spill profiles | Marta Vannoni (Cefas,

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MO040 | Hepatic histopathological findings in Ariidae Cathorops spixii submitted to anthropogenic metal exposure in two Brazilian estuaries | Juliana Azevedo (Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil) | J. Azevedo, H. Silbiger, J. Sarkis, J. Dias MO041 | Influence anthropogenic pollution on starfish’s Asterias rubens at different level of biological organisation | Artem Poromov (Moscow State University Of Mechanical Engineering, Russia) | A. Poromov MO042 | Early maternal exposure to estrogens cause malformations in eelpout fry | Poul Bjerregaard (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark) | J. Morthorst, N. Brande-Lavridsen, B. Korsgaard, P. Bjerregaard MO043 | Effects of 107Ag and 63Cu stable isotope sublethal exposure in oysters Crassostrea gigas using cell and tissue level biomarkers | Manuel Soto (University of Basque Country, Spain) | A. Rementeria, M. Mikolaczyk, L. Lanceleur, G. Blanc, M. Soto, B. Zaldibar, J. Schafer MO044 | Intertidal biota and the rock shell populations after accidents of Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plants | Toshihiro Horiguchi (National Institute for Environ Studies, Japan) | T. Horiguchi, H. Yoshii, S. Mizuno, T. Ohara, H. Shiraishi MO045 | Application of European C14 method (OECD 215) on early life stage fish growth response to marine speacies Dicentrarchus labrax | Andrea Tornambè (ISPRA, Italy) | A. Tornambè, L. Manfra, S. Canepa, A.

MO047 | Assessment of the environmental impact of the dumped chemical warfare agents at the Baltic Sea using caged blue mussels (Mytilus trossulus) | Raisa Turja (Finnish Environment Institute SYKE, Finland) | R. Turja, M. Brenner, J. Barsiene, K. Lehtonen MO048 | Tracking Munitions in Two Coastal Marine Ecosystems Using Stable Nitrogen Isotopes | Mark Ballentine (University of Connecticut, United States) | M. Ballentine, R. Smith, T. Ariyarathna, P. Vlahos, C. Tobias MO049 | Using stable nitrogen isotope tracer to investigate ecosystem distribution and fate of munitions compounds in marine environments | Craig Tobias (University of Connecticut, United States) | c. tobias, R. Smith, M. Ballentine, T. Ariyarathna, P. Vlahos MO050 | Tracing the cycling and fate of the explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene in a simulated sandy coastal habitat with a stable isotopic tracer, 15N - [TNT] | Richard Smith (University of Connecticut, United States) | R. Smith, T. Ariyarathna, M. Ballentine, C. Cooper, c. tobias, P. Vlahos MO051 | Toxicity of PAHs in Mytilus galloprovincialis at different stages of gametogenesis measured by physiological biomarkers | Carmen Gonzalez-Fernandez (Spanish Institute of Oceanography, Spain) | C. Gonzalez-Fernandez, M. Albentosa, J. Campillo, L. Vinas, A. Franco, J. Bellas MO052 | Comparative study on PAH metabolites in cod (Gadus morhua) from the Baltic Sea to Greenland | Ulrike Kammann (Thunen Institute, Germany) | U. Kammann MO053 | Alterations on metals incorporation and oxidative stress endpoints in caged

Carcinus maenas reflecting intermittent releases of sedimentary metals - a day-night cycle in a eutrophic system | Sofia Guilherme (Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal) | P. Pereira, S. Guilherme, H. de Pablo, M. Santos, M. Pacheco, C. Vale MO054 | Baseline of oxidative stress biomarkers in natural populations of sea anemones in three ecoclimatic marine environments | Juliana Gadelha (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | J. Gadelha, A. Arana, P. Gomes, J. Von Osten, F. Morgado, A. Soares MO055 | Effect of nutritive condition on antioxidant biomarkers: Consequences for large-scale monitoring programs | Carmen Gonzalez-Fernandez (Spanish Institute of Oceanography, Spain) | J. Campillo, C. Gonzalez-Fernandez, J. Bellas, M. Albentosa MO056 | The effect of pharmaceutical compounds on the larval development of the estuarine shrimp Palaemon longirostris | Julian Blasco (Inst Ciencias Marinas de Andalucia, Spain) | E. Gonzales-Ortegon, L. Gimenez, L. LeVay, E. Nieto, M. Hampel, J. Blasco MO057 | Effects of tralopyril, triphenylborane pyridine and capsaicin on zebrafish embryos (Danio rerio) | Isabel Maria de Carvalho Benta Santos Oliveira (University of Aveiro CESAM, Portugal) | I. de Carvalho Benta Santos Oliveira, K. Groh, C. Barroso, K. Thomas, M. Suter MO058 | Pharmaceutical residues and occurrence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in Hong Kong surface waters and sediments | Margaret Murphy (University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong) | M. Murphy, K. Wan, M. Tsui, J. Lam, M. Boost MO059 | Population level effects of embryo development disorders in the benthic key species Monoporeia affinis | Reutgard Martin (Stockholm University, Sweden) | R. Martin, M. Breitholtz MO060 | Sediment associated-toxicity in the Mar Menor lagoon (SE Spain) under calm and stormy conditions: applicability of the sea-urchin embryotoxicity test | Con-

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cepcion Martinez-Gomez (Instituto Espanol de Oceanografia, Spain) | C. Martinez-Gomez, C. Navarro, E. Arques, V. Leon MO061 | Baltic Sea sediments in a comprehensive ecotoxicological investigation using chemical analysis and a bioassay battery | Nora Niehus (Hamburg University of Applied Sciences HAW, Germany) | N. Niehus, J. Loerks, S. Lang, T. Seiler, H. Hollert, G. Witt MO062 | Comparison of trace elements bioavailability and their bioaccumulation in Manila clam Venerupis philippinarum from Atlantic and Mediterranean estuarine environments. | Stefania Chiesa (University of Aveiro CESAM, Portugal) | A. Sfriso, F. Minello, L. Gobbo, S. Chiesa, R. Freitas, E. Figueira, S. Breda, C. Bettiol, E. Argese MO063 | Monitoring toxicity of PAHs in intertidal sediments for five years after the Hebei Spirit oil spill in Taean, Korea | Lee Chang-Hoon (NeoEnBiz Co, Korea, South) | L. Chang-Hoon, J. Lee, C. Sung, S. Moon, S. Kang, J. Lee, U. Yim, W. Shim, S. Ha MO064 | Organic priority substances and microbial processes in marine coastal sediments (Adriatic Sea, Italy) | Nicoletta Ademollo (IRSACNR, Italy) | N. Ademollo, L. Patrolecco, S. Amalfitano, W. Dellisanti, P. Mancino, L. Langone, S. Miserocchi, A. Zoppini MO065 | Toxicity tests to assess the possibility to use clam harvesting waste as gabions filler material in the Venice lagoon | Alessandra Zuin (Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy) | G. Cipolato, A. Zuin, D. Minetto, G. Libralato, S. Manente, A. Volpi Ghirardini, G. Ravagnan MO066 | Toxicity test method based on the inhibition of reproduction in Ulva: revision | Taejun Han (Incheon National University, Korea (South)) | M. Kim, H. Choi, A. Park, J. Park, S. Jo, E. Park, Y. Kim, T. Han MO067 | Parhyale hawaiensis as an alternative organism in marine toxicity tests | Gisela Umbuzeiro (Faculty of Technology UNICAMP, Brazil) | A. Santos, M. Artal, G. Umbuzeiro

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MO068 | Optical detection of low concentrations of toxic nano particles in saline solutions; approximating a pseudo-estuary environment | Nasih Hma Salah (University of Plymouth, UK) | N. Salah, D. Jenkins, L. Panina, R. Handy MO069 | Physical stressor (temperature tolerance) test exposition with temperate sea anemone Actinia equina, a climatic and environmental changes simulation | Juliana Gadelha (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | J. Gadelha, P. Gomes, F. Morgado, J. Von Osten, A. Soares MO070 | Characterization of an ecdysone receptor and a vitellogenin-like cDNA in the estuarine copepod eurytemora affinis | Elena Legrand (France, Metropolitan) | c. Boulange-Lecomte, B. Xuereb, E. Legrand, A. Duflot, J. Forget-Leray MO071 | Development of a humpback whale cell line as a versatile tool for in-vitro toxicity assessment | Michael Burkard (Griffith University) | M. Burkard, K. Schirmer, D. Whitworth, S. Bengtson Nash MO072 | Biochemical responses induced by sucralose in Daphnia magna | Ann-Kristin Wiklund (Stocholm University, Sweden) | A. Wiklund, B. Liewenborg, M. Adolfsson-Erici, E. Gorokhova MO073 | Filling the gaps in our knowledge of the effects of priority Hazardous and Noxious Substances on marine biota. | Thomas McGowan (Cefas Lowestoft Laboratory, United Kingdom) | T. McGowan, D. Sheahan, M. Kirby Periphyton as bioindicator and community model - critical review, work in progress, future perspectives (P). Chaired by: alexandra Kroll, Marianne Matzke, Thomas Backhaus MO074 | Development of a tiered approach for the characterization of periphyton on the genetic and functional level | Linn Sgier (Switzerland) | L. Sgier, A. Kroll, R. Behra MO075 | Approaching real complexity: toxic impact of a mixture of diuron and propranolol on periphyton. | ChloĂŠ Bonnineau

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

(UCLouvain, Belgium) | C. Bonnineau, M. Ricart, L. Proia, A. Romani, S. Sabater, H. Guasch MO076 | Experimental study of arsenic detoxification by periphyton | Laura Barral (University of Girona, Spain) | L. Barral, M. Rovira, G. Urrea, K. Magellan, E. Garcia-Berthou, H. Guasch MO077 | Influence of epipsammic biofilms on the retention and speciation of arsenic in freshwater environments | Diego Prieto (University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain) | D. Prieto, D. Rubinos, R. Devesa-Rey, V. Pineiro, F. Diaz-Fierros, M. Barral MO078 | Kinetics of arsenite removal and (bio)transformation by a natural multi-species biofilm growth on riverbed sediments | Diego Prieto (University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain) | D. Rubinos, D. Prieto, V. Pineiro, M. Barral MO079 | Extracellular enzymatic activity of intact heterotrophic biofilms is decreased upon exposure to TiO2 nanoparticles and environmentally realistic UV radiation | Hannah Schug (Eawag Swiss federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland) | H. Schug, C. Isaacson, A. Amman, L. Sigg, K. Schirmer MO080 | Ecotoxicology of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) at the eukaryote-prokaryote boundary: eukaryotic zoospores and PAH-degrading bacteria | Jose-Julio Ortega-Calvo (Instituto de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiologia, Spain) | R. Sungthong, J. Ortega-Calvo MO081 | Development and validation of advanced monitoring systems for waterborne organic priority pollutants using microalgae biosensors | Susana Gonzalez (Spain) | S. Gonzalez, D. Baquero, R. Lopez-Roldan, L. San Juan, J. Llorca, D. Solier, J. Dolera, C. De la Hera, D. Haigh, G. Orellana MO082 | Effect of temperature on the toxicity of mercury in different periphyton communities | M. Rosa Pino (Universidad San Jorge, Spain) | J. Val, S. Muniz, M. Pino, E. Navarro

MO083 | Responses of diatoms exposed to a fungicide and a petroleum distillate in stream mesocosms: sensitivity of traitbased metrics and community indices | Yannick Bayona (INRA Agrocampus Ouest, France) | Y. Bayona, M. Roucaute, K. Cailleaud, A. Basseres, L. Lagadic, T. Caquet MO084 | Long-term effects of triclosan on marine periphyton communities in flowthrough microcosms | Martin Eriksson (Chalmers Technical University, Sweden) | M. Eriksson, H. Johansson, V. Fihlman, A. Grehn, K. Sanli, H. Blanck, T. Sircar, A. Arrhenius, T. Backhaus MO085 | Is the composition of fungal populations in surface waters an appropriate parameter for the risk assessment of multiple pesticide loads from fruit cultivation? | Anne Talk (Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen Deutsches Forschungszentrum) | A. Talk, S. Kublik, R. Berghahn, S. Mohr, M. Engel, M. Uksa, G. Welzl, M. Schloter Waste and Wastewater effluents: chemical and ecotoxicological characterisation (p). chaired by: dean leverett, Mirco Bundschuh MO086 | In situ GamTox test to assess toxic pulses and monitor water quality | Almut Gerhardt (LimCo International GmbH, Germany) | A. Gerhardt MO087 | Monitoring and diagnosis of pollution peaks in waste water treatment plants: concept and case study | Almut Gerhardt (LimCo International GmbH, Germany) | A. Gerhardt, N. Rastetter, M. Hofer, B. Kuch, C. BĂźhler MO088 | Ecotoxicological evaluation of inorganic fraction present in effluent delignification of linter produced by an explosive industry | Flavio Silva (Sao Paulo University, Brazil) | F. Silva, E. Almeida, T. Paiva MO089 | The effects of cadmium and zinc in a Flemish stream on the development and physiology of the zebrafish embryo. | Ellen Michiels (University of Antwerp, Belgium) | E. Michiels, A. Hagenaars, L. Bervoets, D. Knapen MO090 | The use of aquatic bioassays in the

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risk assessment to surface and groundwater from the application of organic wastes as soil improvers | Paula Alvarenga (Polytechnic Institute of Beja, Portugal) | P. Alvarenga, C. Mourinha, M. Farto, P. Palma

plant effluent on Gammarus fossarum´s feeding rate and vitellogenin levels | Barbara Ganser (Germany) | B. Ganser, C. Kienle, I. Werner, N. Homazava, E. Vermeirssen, C. Moschet, M. Bundschuh

MO107 | Detection and fate of synthetic musks in wastewater treatment plants - a review | Nuno Ratola (LEPAE University of Porto, Spain) | V. Homem, J. Silva, N. Ratola, L. Santos, A. Alves

MO091 | Effect-directed investigations of selected effluents and receiving waterbodies in the Meuse and Scheldt basins: overall toxicity and endocrine disruption assessment. | Yves Marneffe (Inst Scientific de Service Public, Belgium) | Y. Marneffe, C. Chalon

MO099 | Toxicity of solid wastes formed and released after wastewater treatment with nanomaterials | Isabel Lopes (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | V. Nogueira, I. Lopes, T. Rocha-Santos, F. Goncalves, A. Soares, A. Duarte, R. Pereira

MO108 | Record sediment concentration of retene, a highly potent fish teratogen, is buried into a lake site near closed pulp factory in Fennoscandia | Aimo Oikari (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) | A. Oikari, H. Ramaenen, T. Sahoo, M. Lahti

MO092 | Making wood energy sustainable - Ecotoxicological study of wood ash from untreated fuel | Lucas Jagodzinski (University College Cork, Ireland) | L. Jagodzinski, M. Jansen, F. van Pelt, J. O’Halloran ,

MO100 | Which chemicals drive biological effects in wastewater and recycled water? | Beate Escher (University of Queensland, Australia) | J. Tang, F. Busetti, J. Charrois, B. Escher

MO109 | Automated detection of suspected and non-targeted metabolites in sewage water after biological and chemical treatment | Olaf Scheibner (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Germany) | O. Scheibner, S. Westrup, C. Portner, J. Tuerk

MO093 | Toxicity assessment in photocatalytic degradation of BPA using nano-sized and mesoporous TiO2 | Jinho Jung (Korea University, Korea (South)) | J. Jung, A. Jo, Y. Park

MO101 | Establishment of an elution method of three beta-blockers for aquatic ecotoxicity testing with pills | Jana Bressling (Institut für Siedlungswasserwirtschaft RWTH Aachen, Germany) | J. Bressling, D. Athanasiadou, W. Gebhardt, J. Pinnekamp

MO110 | UKWIR Chemicals Investigation Programme - Phase 2 - from generic assessment to specific characterisation of effluent quality | Mike Gardner (United Kingdom) | M. Gardner, A. Thornton, L. Wilson

MO102 | Is the zebrafish embryo test a suitable tool to evaluate the efficiency of wastewater treatment plants? | Paul Thellmann (Tübingen University, Germany) | P. Thellmann, H. Köhler, R. Triebskorn

MO111 | Persistence of wastewater-related xenobiotics during transport along an urban river segment | Gaelle Guillet (Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, France) | M. Schwientek, G. Guillet, H. Ruegner, B. Kuch, P. Grathwohl

MO103 | Evaluation of DEET cytotoxicity on Perna perna mussels | Juliana Azevedo (Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil) | G. Martini, S. Rogero, J. Azevedo, J. Rogero

MO112 | Source Apportionment of Trace Contaminants in Urban Sewer Catchments | Sean Comber (Plymouth University, United Kingdom) | S. Comber, M. Gardner, V. Jones, B. Ellor

MO094 | Molecular biomarkers in oysters Crassostrea gigas exposed in situ to sanitary sewage discharges - Five years of studies | Afonso Celso Dias Bainy (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil) | A. Bainy, J. Mattos, R. Gomes, T. Pessatti, T. Miguelao, F. Zacchi, S. Taniguchi, S. Sasaki, M. Bicego, F. Nunes MO095 | The toxicity of leachates from industrial waste containing antimony | Dayanthi Nugegoda (RMIT University, Australia) | C. Grandison, S. Reichman, D. Nugegoda MO096 | Determination of toxicity of wastewater in slaughterhouse originated in the beneficiation process of beef | Teresa Paiva (University of Sao Paulo USP, Brazil) | T. Paiva, E. Pereira, F. Silva MO097 | Implementation of the test-battery approach into routine effluent control in Lithuania | Levonas Manusadzianas (Institute of Botany NatureResearch Centre, Lithuania) | L. Manusadzianas, R. Karitonas, R. Vitkus, K. Sadauskas, R. Juknys, J. Zaltauskaite MO098 | Impact of wastewater treatment

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MO104 | Phytotoxicity assessment of discharge waters: Focus on germination and root elongation tests | Anne Priac (Université de FrancheComté, France) | A. Priac, P. Badot, S. Gavoille, C. Lagarrigue, G. Crini MO105 | Toxic potential of different types of sewage sludge as fertilizer in agriculture: ecotoxicological effects on aquatic and soil indicator species | Nadja Rastetter (Germany) | N. Rastetter, A. Gerhardt MO106 | LogNormality of trace contaminant concentrations in sewage effluents | Mike Gardner (United Kingdom) | M. Gardner

MO113 | Long-term monitoring of volatile methylsiloxanes (VMS) in aquatic environments impacted by wastewater effluent: experimental design and results from the first three years of collection. | David Powell (Dow Corning Corporation, United States) | D. Powell, J. Durham, R. Seston, R. Gerhards, T. Boehmer, N. Suganuma, K. Kobayashi MO114 | Occurrence and distribution of 12 phenolic compounds in wastewater treatment plant and rivers surrounding a chemical industrial park in China | Qiming Xian (Nanjing University, China) | Q. Xian, C. Chen

MO115 | Ozonation or powdered activated carbon: Comparing the ecotoxicity of wastewater after two advanced treatment steps | Cornelia Kienle (Switzerland) | C. Kienle, D. Baumberger, A. Schifferli, S. Santiago, M. Weil, M. Kopf, W. Locher, C. Fux, A. Joss, A. Wittmer, R. Frei, I. Werner MO116 | Optimization of biosorption of copper (II) ions from wastewater on the cone biomass of black pine (Pinus nigra L.) | Milorad Andjelkovic (Petnica Science Center, Serbia) | M. Andjelkovic, D. Trajkovic, M. Kuntic, L. Peric MO117 | Eco-engineered systems for removal of micro-pollutants from WWTP effluents: technical and scientific recommendations for optimal design of intermediate areas discharges downstream WWTP | Jeanne Serre (VERI, France) | J. Serre, S. Casas, K. Seriki, S. Sourisseau, C. Pagotto MO118 | Degradation of recalcitrant micro-pollutants in designed soil biofilters | Kai Bester (Aarhus University, Denmark) | M. Casas, K. Bester MO119 | Removal of compounds with estrogen-, androgen- and dioxin-like activities by various waste water treatment technologies studied by in vitro bioassays | Rita Triebskorn (University of Tuebingen, Germany) | M. Benisek, R. Osterauer, R. Triebskorn, L. Blaha MO120 | Effects of differently treated wastewater effluents observed with selected in vivo test systems | Lisa Vorberg (ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | L. Vorberg, A. Abbas, I. Schneider, G. Knopp, P. Cornel, T. Ternes, A. Coors MO121 | Human pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals in wastewater effluents - first steps toward a combined risk assessment | Anja Coors (ECT Oekotoxicologie GmbH, Germany) | A. Coors, F. Sacher, T. Juffernholz, W. Drost, D. Gildemeister, U. Kuehnen MO122 | Environmental Risk Assessment of Effluent from wastewater treatment plants along Henares-Jarama-Tajo river basin (Madrid, Spain) | Eulalia Beltran (INIA National

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Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain) | E. Beltran, M. Porcel, J. Pro, M. Torrijos, C. Fernandez

ear Volatile Methylsiloxanes in Soil | Shihe Xu (Dow Corning Corporation, United States) | S. Xu, P. Bauer, C. Bryant

MO123 | Fish cell-based biosensor for evaluating water quality | Lu Tan (Eawag Swiss federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland) | L. Tan

MO130 | Organic carbon/water partition ratios (Koc) of cyclic volatile methylsiloxanes | Dimitri Panagopoulos (Stockholm University, Sweden) | D. Panagopoulos, A. Kierkegaard, M. MacLeod, A. Jahnke

Landscape ecotoxicology and spatially explicit risk assessment of toxicants (P). Chaired by: andreas Focks, Mikhail Beketov MO124 | The chemical behavoir of Cu, Zn, Cd and Pb in a eutrophic reservoir: speciation and complexation capacity | Maria da Graca Melao (Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil) | A. Tonietto, A. Lombardi, R. Choueri, A. Vieira, M. Melao MO125 | Pesticides reduce regional biodiversity of stream invertebrates | Mikhail Beketov (UFZ Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany) | M. Beketov, B. Kefford, R. Schaefer, M. Liess MO126 | Ecological community sensitivity tame the unpredictable or an evidence from a cross-Eurasia experiment | Mikhail Beketov (UFZ Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany) | M. Beketov, N. Stampfli, Y. Yurchenko, O. Belevich, S. Knillmann, Y. Noskov, M. Liess Personal care products in the environment: strengthening science to support regulation (p). chaired by: Silvia diaz-cruz, Guang-Guo ying

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MO131 | Understanding the fate and bioaccumulation of cyclic volatile methyl siloxanes in Arctic lakes | Ingjerd Sunde Krogseth (Norwegian Institute for Air Research, Norway) | I. Krogseth, N. Warner, K. Breivik, M. Whelan, A. Evenset, G. Christensen, I. Wassbotten MO132 | Analysis of UV stabilisers in liquid and solid treatment plants products and their fate in environmental samples from Gran Canaria Island (Spain) | Rayco Guedes-Alonso (Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain) | S. Montesdeoca, R. Guedes-Alonso, Z. Sosa-Ferrera, J. Santana-Rodriguez MO133 | Occurrence of synthetic musks in mainland Portugal - a biosampling approach using pine needles | Nuno Ratola (LEPAE University of Porto, Spain) | J. Silva, S. Ramos, V. Homem, N. Ratola, L. Santos, A. Alves MO135 | Polycyclic musks whistle-blowing in the environment: appraisal of anthropogenic impact on fresh water systems | Rolf-Alexander Duering (Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany) | R. Duering, L. Boehm, C. Pereira

MO127 | Comparison of lipid normalized concentrations of cyclic volatile methylsiloxanes in differing lipid matrices of fish collected from marine and freshwater systems | Jeremy Durham (Dow Corning Corp, United States) | J. Durham, D. Powell, R. Seston

MO136 | An evaluation of the ecotoxicological effects and risks of the biocide benzalkonium chloride on freshwater ecosystems | Rhaul Oliveira (University of Brasilia, Portugal) | R. Oliveira, A. Rico, S. Pereira, A. Soares, A. Nogueira, I. Domingues

MO128 | Gas phase reaction rates of cyclic volatile methyl siloxanes with the hydroxyl radical as a function of temperature | Andreas Safron (Sweden) | A. Safron, M. Strandell, A. Kierkegaard, M. MacLeod

MO137 | Chronic toxicity of azo and anthracenedione dyes to embryo-larval fathead minnow | Joanne Parrott (Environment Canada, Canada) | J. Parrott, A. Bartlett, J. Hill, V. Balakrishnan

MO129 | Hydrolysis and Volatilization of Lin-

MO138 | Gene expression analysis of Mysid

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

Crustacea exposed to Triclosan and Triclocarban using DNA microarray | Koji Arizono (Prefectural University of Kumamoto, Japan) | K. Arizono MO139 | Upregulation of hormonal signaling genes in insect embryos and larvae after exposure to UV filters | Irene Ozaez (UNED, Spain) | I. Ozaez, J. Martinez-Guitarte, G. Morcillo MO140 | Effect of mosquito repellents on aquatic non-target organism: Vertical distribution and predator avoidance in Daphnia | Eric von Elert (University of Cologne, Germany) | E. von Elert, C. Effertz, P. Fink MO141 | Analysis of Personal Care Products in Human Placental Tissue | Daniel Molins-Delgado (Spain) | J. Valle-Sistac, D. Molins-Delgado, S. Diaz-Cruz, D. Barcelo MO142 | IFRA Environmental standards: Risk and hazard assessment update for 2014 | Aurelia Lapczynski (RIFM, United States) | A. Lapczynski, D. Salvito, M. Vey MO143 | Analysis and ecotoxicological investigations of Poorly Soluble Cosmetic Compounds - an approach for a reliable environmental risk assessment (ECOSM) | Felix Stibany (RWTH Aachen, Germany) | F. Stibany, A. Coors, H. Hollert, K. Rettinger, C. Schulte, J. Steber, A. Schaeffer MO144 | How to focus experimental tests only on priority Personal Care Products | Stefano Cassani (University of Insubria, Italy) | S. Cassani, P. Gramatica MO145 | QSAR study of Fragrance Biodegradability for safer alternatives | Lidia Ceriani (ICPS International Centre for Pesticides Health Risk, Italy) | L. Ceriani, E. Papa, s. kovarich, R. Boethling, P. Gramatica

Bozich (UWMSFS, United States) | J. Bozich, S. Lohse, M. Torelli, C. Murphy, R. Hamers, R. Klaper MO147 | Toxicity effects of silver nanoparticles synthetized using Arbutus unedo leaf extracts to the cladoceran Daphnia magna | Sandra Goncalves (Department of Biology CESAM University of Aveiro, Portugal) | S. Goncalves, R. Lopes, P. Pinheiro, T. Trindade, P. Kouvaris, N. Michailidis, S. Loureiro MO148 | Toxicity of silver and gold nanoparticles, produced in the gas phase, to the aquatic plant Lemna minor | Olga-Ioanna Kalantzi (Greece) | P. Minogiannis, M. Valenti, V. Kati, O. Kalantzi, G. Biskos MO149 | Fate and effects of 107Ag nanoparticles in Daphnia magna under realistic environmental test conditions | Ailbhe Macken (NIVA, Norway) | A. Macken, I. Nerland, A. Laycock, K. Ndungu, K. Thomas MO150 | Engineered nanoparticle fate model - simulating realistic conditions in a complex natural river system | Nicole Sani-Kast (ETH Zurich, Switzerland) | N. Sani-Kast, A. Praetorius, J. Labille, P. Ollivier, M. Scheringer, K. Hungerbuehler MO151 | SimpleBox4nano predicts environmental behavior of nanomaterials | Dik van de Meent (RIVM, Netherlands) | J. Meesters, J. Quik, A. Koelmans, T. Traas, D. Sijm, D. van de Meent MO152 | Toxicity of fresh and aged suspensions of silver nanoparticles to Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata (Korshikov) | Giovanni Libralato (Veneto Nanotech SCpA, Italy) | G. Libralato, D. Mitrano, M. Zanella, A. Pigozzo, L. Manodori, D. Vignati

Fate and effects of nanoparticles under environmentally realistic conditions (P). Chaired by: claus Svendsen, catherine Mouneyrac, Susana loureiro, laure Giamberini

MO154 | Aqua-Nano project: Fate of engineered nanoparticles and effects on marine pelagic ecosystem | Manolis Tsapakis (Greece) | M. Tsapakis, S. Pergantis, E. Sarropoulou, P. Pitta, I. Kalanzi, K. Kordatos, C. Zeri, E. Kaberi

MO146 | Impacts of differing nanomaterial surface chemistry on Daphnia magna | Jared

MO155 | A biodynamic description of the uptake and depuration of different sized CuO

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nanoparticles in the freshwater gastropod Potamopyrgus antipodarum | Stine Rosendal Tangaa (Roskilde University, Denmark) | S. Tangaa, F. Khan, K. Schaumburg, H. Selck MO156 | Bioaccumulation of Cu2O NPs in Potamopyrgus antipodarum exposed to spiked biofilm | Ronja Windfeld (Denmark) | R. Windfeld, C. Svendsen, M. Matzke, K. Schaumburg, H. Selck MO157 | Nanoparticle post-exposure characterization in animal tissues: Enzymes lead the way | Sunday Makama (Netherlands) | S. Makama, I. Rietjens, N. van den Brink MO158 | Impact of cerium dioxide nanoparticles on a reconstructed aquatic ecosystem: a mesocosm study | Agathe Bour (ECOLAB UMR CNRS UPS INPT, France) | A. Bour, F. Mouchet, L. Verneuil, A. Perrault, J. Silvestre, L. Gauthier, E. Pinelli MO159 | Effect of silver nanomaterials on microbial diversity in sewage sludge | Cecilia Diaz (Fraunhofer IME, Germany) | C. Diaz, K. Schlich, K. Hund-Rinke MO160 | Short-term effects of silver nanoparticles on periphytic communities | Carmen AlluĂŠ (Eawag, Switzerland) | C. AlluĂŠ, K. Schirmer, A. Tlili, M. Gessner, R. Behra MO161 | Ecotoxicity of a novel anti-corrosion engineered nanomaterial in two invasive bivalve species | Roberto Martins (Department of Biology University of Aveiro, Portugal) | R. Martins, C. Santos, R. Freitas, J. Tedim, A. Soares, S. Loureiro MO162 | Cytotoxicity and immune response of mussel mytilus galloprovincialis after exposure to CdTe QDs and Cd2+ | Thiago Rocha (University of Algarve, Portugal) | T. Rocha, T. Gomes, C. Cardoso, J. Letendre, V. Sousa, M. Teixeira, M. Bebianno MO163 | Multibiomarker assessment of the long term effects of dissolved and nanoparticulate silver (nAg) on zebra mussels: influence of feeding | Mael Garaud (Laboratory LIEC CNRS UMR UdL, France, Metropolitan) | M. Garaud, C. Bertrand, N. Brule, S. Devin, V.

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Felten, B. Sohm, L. Giamberini

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

and Technology, Korea (South)) | K. Kim, R. Tanguay

MO164 | Remote effects in charophyte cell of Nitellopsis obtusa after short term exposure to CuO nanosuspensions | Levonas Manusadzianas (Institute of Botany NatureResearch Centre, Lithuania) | L. Manusadzianas, B. Gylyte, S. Jurkoniene, K. Sadauskas, R. Vitkus

MO172 | Particle characteristic dependent effects of titanium dioxide nanoparticles on Daphnia magna and Gammarus fossarum | Frank Seitz (Inst for Environmental Sciences, Germany) | F. Seitz, R. Rosenfeldt, S. Schneider, R. Schulz, M. Bundschuh

MO165 | A droplet based microfluidic device for single paramecia cell toxicity testing - a case study with silver nanoparticles | Corinna Burkart (Technische Universitat Dresden, Germany) | C. Burkart, D. Pfitzner, R. Illing, L. Baraban, G. Cuniberti, D. Jungmann

MO173 | Assessing the toxicity of silver nanoparticles in lentic (static) and lotic (flowing) freshwater environments | Corin Liddle (Heriot Watt University, United Kingdom) | C. Liddle, A. Cuthberson, T. Henry, H. Haynes, H. Johnston, T. Fernandes

MO166 | Transformation and distribution processes governing the fate and behaviour of nanomaterials in the environment: an overview | Nanna Hartmann (Technical University of Denmark DTU, Denmark) | N. Hartmann, L. Skjolding, S. Hansen, F. Gottschalk, J. Kjolholt, A. Baun

MO174 | Response of Chironomus riparius to silver ions and silver nanoparticles | Rafael Lopes (Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal) | R. Lopes, S. Loureiro

MO167 | Number concentration and size distribution of nanoparticle from suspension by transmission electron microscopy | Ashwini Prasad (United Kingdom) | A. Prasad MO168 | Transformation and retention of silver nanoparticles through engineered inorganic wastewater treatment media | Emma Clarke (University of Exeter, United Kingdom) | E. Clarke, D. Gomez, C. Tyler MO169 | Dispersion stability of CeO2 nanoparticles in different aqueous media and implications for freshwater algae ecotoxicity testing | Andy Booth (SINTEF Materials and Chemistry, Norway) | A. Booth, L. Sorensen, T. Storseth, A. Ahniyaz, A. Fornara

MO175 | Influence of nanoparticle shape on Cu bioaccumulation in the deposit feeder, Capitella teleta | Lina Dai (Denmark) | L. Dai, G. Banta, H. Selck, V. Forbes MO176 | Influence of particle shape and size on bioaccumulation and effects of Copper oxide nanoparticles in two sediment-dwelling worms | Amalie Thit Jensen (Roskilde University, Denmark) | A. Thit Jensen, T. Ramskov, H. Selck MO177 | Factors triggering the combined toxicity of nanosized titanium dioxide and heavy metals | Ricki Rosenfeldt (University of KoblenzLandau Institute for Environmental Sciences, Germany) | R. Rosenfeldt, F. Seitz, J. Hoeger, A. Haigis, R. Schulz, M. Bundschuh

ton, J. Unrine, H. Haring , MO180 | The effects of abiotic factors on the toxicity of nanoparticles to zebrafish (Danio rerio) larvae | Ben Shaw (United Kingdom) | B. Shaw, K. Tatsi, J. Fox, R. Handy Human exposure to emerging contaminants: monitoring and modeling (p). chaired by: Martin Krauss, natalie Von Goetz, christa cornelis MO181 | Evaluation of Lead Contamination in a Shooting Range in Qatar | Ipek Goktepe (Qatar University) | I. Goktepe, H. Khalaf Al Mohammed, M. Amr MO182 | Mass concentration and elemental composition of traffic-related particulate matters in Doha, Qatar | Ipek Goktepe (Qatar University) | I. Goktepe, H. AlMazrooey, M. Amr MO183 | The Nutritional-Toxicological Conflict Associated with Antarctic Krill Oil Dietary Supplements vs. Fish Oil Alternatives | Susan Bengtson Nash (Griffith University, Australia) | S. Bengtson Nash, P. Nichols, M. Schlabach MO184 | Effects of cooking on the subcellular partitioning of Cd in cooked rice | BoChing Chen (MingDao University, Taiwan) | B. Chen, H. Lai, C. Liu MO185 | Screening chemicals in commerce in the Nordic countries using multimedia fate and bioaccumulation models | Ingjerd Sunde Krogseth (Norwegian Institute for Air Research, Norway) | I. Krogseth, K. Breivik, J. Arnot, F. Wania

MO170 | UV-mediated transformation of C60 fullerene in top soil | John Parsons (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) | A. Carboni, V. Blanco Montoya, K. Kalbitz, P. de Voogt, J. Parsons

MO178 | A comparison of the acute and chronic toxicity of three silver nanoparticles and AgNO3 to Daphnia magna: implications for regulation and wide-level screening | Kai Paul (HeriotWatt University, United Kingdom) | K. Paul, F. Khan, L. Ellis, V. Stone, T. Fernandes

MO186 | Tox-Box: Developing a Test Battery for Toxicological Assessment of Anthropogenic Micropollutants in Drinking-water - A first Evaluation | Alex Eckhardt (Federal Environment Agency, Germany) | A. Eckhardt, T. Grummt, R. Heinze, R. Junek

MO171 | Importance of particle dispersion and ionic environmenton on silver nanoparticle toxicity in the embryonic zebrafish | Kitae Kim (Seoul National University of Science

MO179 | Characterizing nanoparticle exposure and effects in the epibenthic crustacean, Hyalella azteca | James Lazorchak (US EPA, United States) | J. Lazorchak, H. Poyn-

MO187 | How to produce drinking water from surface water of the Three Gorges Reservoir in China according to the German drinking water directive? | Anja Wolf (IWW

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Water Centre, Germany) | A. Wolf, A. Bergmann, H. lutze, I. Schreiter, F. Zaun, X. Gao, L. Landwehrkamp, R. Hobby, Y. Bi, H. Chen, R. Wilken, T. Schmidt, C. Schueth

MO195 | PFAS concentrations in cat serum and association to thyroxin levels | Margaretha Lamoree (Netherlands) | J. Weiss, M. Bohlen, J. Norrgran, B. Jones, M. Lamoree

Canadensis) Muscle: Estimation of risk to human consumers | Katherine Horak (United States) | K. Horak, R. Chipman, L. Murphy, J. Johnston

MO188 | Challenges for building a safety net for biocidal products: a Korean case | JungHwan Kwon (Korea University, Korea, South) | J. Kwon, J. Lee, H. Oh, S. Lee

MO196 | Total intake estimates of PBDEs derived from PBDE biomonitoring data sets from the Australian population | Tenzing Gyalpo (Switzerland) | T. Gyalpo, L. Toms, J. Mueller, M. Scheringer, K. Hungerbuehler

MO204 | Occupational exposure of cashiers to Bisphenol A via thermal printing paper | Nathalie Schraepen (Belgium) | N. Schraepen, F. Van Broekhuizen, M. Koers, N. Deleebeeck

MO189 | The HEALS approach to and environment-wide associations Sarigiannis (Greece) | D. Sarigiannis, esi-Maesano, J. Cherrie, J. Bartzis, M. macher

health | Denis I. AnnSchuh-

MO190 | The German Environmental Specimen Bank - Long-term Monitoring of Human Exposure and Exposure Factors | Dominik Lermen (Fraunhofer IBMT Institute for Biomedical Egineering, Germany) | D. Lermen, A. Conrad, M. Bartel-Steinbach, H. von Briesen, C. Schroeter-Kermani, T. Goeen, M. Kolossa-Gehring MO191 | Detection of Aflatoxin M1 concentrations in human milk samples in Novi Sad, Serbia | Maja Turk Sekulic (Serbia) | M. Vojinovic MIloradov, I. Mihajlovic, S. Kocic Tanackov, J. Radonic, M. Turk Sekulic, Z. Grujic, M. Skrinjar MO192 | Body burden of POPs of Serbia residents, based on human milk and umbilical cord blood | Maja Turk Sekulic (Serbia) | m. turk sekulic, Z. Grujic, S. Jankovic, M. Vojinovic MIloradov, M. Prica, I. Mihajlovic, J. Radonic MO193 | Concentrations of phthalates metabolites in breast milk of Korea, 2011-2012: Current contamination, exposure amount, and risk assessment | Sunmi Kim (Seoul National University, Korea (South)) | S. Kim, S. Kim, J. Park, G. Choi, J. Lee, H. Kim, S. Kim, S. Choi, S. Kim, H. Moon, K. Choi MO194 | Non-targeted screening of mercapturic acids in human urine - comparison of different LC-MS approaches | Robert Bloch (Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH, Germany) | R. Bloch, M. Plassmann, W. Brack, M. Krauss

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MO197 | Measuring Persistent Organic Pollutants in Newborn Blood Spots: Performance and Stability of Brominated Flame Retardants, PCBs, and Halogenated Pesticides | Sergei Chernyak (University of Michigan Ann Arbor, United States) | S. Chernyak, S. Batterman MO198 | Risk analysis methodology principles and criteria | Anahit Aleksandryan (Hazardous Substances Waste Policy Division) | A. Aleksandryan, A. Khachatryan MO199 | Investigation and monitoring of micropollutants in India and UK rivers by long term survey | Wojciech Mrozik (Newcastle University, United Kingdom) | W. Mrozik, Z. Shaikh, P. Meynet, T. Sreekrishnan, R. Davenport MO200 | PBDEs in handwipe samples of mother and infant pair, and the associations with house dust | Sunmi Kim (Seoul National University) | S. Kim, K. Kim, Y. Jeong, N. Ha, S. Kim, J. Jung, H. Moon, J. Park, S. Kim, K. Choi MO201 | Harmful organic chemicals in children’s toys due to use of recycled materials | Alin Ionas (University of Antwerp, Belgium) | A. Ionas, A. Dirtu, T. Anthonissen, H. Neels, A. Covaci MO202 | Examination of Diffusion of Plasticizers and Flame Retardants from Plastic Surface of Home Appliances and Constructions Directly into House Dust | Kiyotaka Tsunemi (National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan) | K. Tsunemi, H. Tanaka MO203 | Environmental Contaminant Concentrations in Canada Goose (Branta

MO205 | Skin bioavailability modelling for risk assessment: Key challenges related to skin sensitizing ingredients | Todd Gouin (Unilever, United Kingdom) | T. Gouin, C. Mackay, O. Saib, S. Glavin, J. de Castro MO206 | Persistent Organic Pollutants in males in the Tromso¸ Study 1979-2007 | Therese Noest (Norway) | T. Noest, V. Berg, R. Vestergren, E. Nieboer, J. Odland, T. Sandanger MO207 | Application of metallic profiling of teeth for Environmental and Forensic Science | Stephen Hendry (University of the West of Scotland, United Kingdom) | S. Hendry, C. Morrison, A. Hursthouse Advancing Adverse Outcome Pathways for Integrated Toxicology and Regulatory Applications (P). Chaired by: Knut erik Tollefsen, Ksenia Groh MO208 | Identification of research priorities for development of adverse outcome pathways in ecotoxicology | Ksenia Groh (Eawag, Switzerland) | K. Groh, R. N. Carvalho, K. Chipman, N. Denslow, M. Halder, C. Murphy, D. Roelofs, A. Rolaki, K. Schirmer, K. Watanabe MO209 | Strategic approaches to adverse outcome pathway development | Teresa Lettieri (European Commission Joint Research Centre, Italy) | t. lettieri, D. Villeneuve MO210 | Applying AOPs to support Informed Approaches to Testing and Assessment | Knut Erik Tollefsen (NIVA, Norway) | K. Tollefsen, G. Patlewicz MO211 | New toxicity outcome using a non-model fish species Largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) | Danilo Basili (Uni-

versity of Liverpool, United Kingdom) | D. Basili, F. Falciani, N. Denslow, C. Martyniuk, P. Antczak MO212 | Elucidating potential adverse outcome pathways related to exposure to ionic silver and silver nanoparticles on the fathead minnow | Natalia Vinas (Mississippi State University, United States) | N. Vinas, A. Kennedy, L. Escalon, T. Habib, J. Goss Laird, J. Steevens, E. Perkins MO213 | Effects of BDE-209 contaminated sediments on zebrafish development and potential implications to human health | Natalia Vinas (Mississippi State University, United States) | N. Vinas, L. Escalon, E. Prats, J. Stanley, B. Thienpont, N. Melby, E. Barón, E. Eljarrat, D. Barcelo, J. Mestres, P. Babin, E. Perkins, D. Raldua MO214 | Transcriptional responses of white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) following exposure to a model dioxin-like compound | Jonathon Doering (University of Saskatchewan, Canada) | J. Doering, S. Wiseman, S. Beitel, S. Patterson, J. Giesy, M. Hecker MO215 | An updated version of H295R steroidogenesis system to assess chemical induced effects--- Integration of genes knockdown cell model, RNA-amplicon sequencing and LC-MS/MS quantification | Pu Xia (Nanjing University, China) | P. Xia, X. Zhang Delving into the social and monetarised environmental impacts during the evaluation process of the Life Cycle of products in order to be able to take all three pillars of sustainability into account (P). Chaired by: Graziella Benedetto, Tomas ekvall, cassia Maria lie Ugaya MO216 | Site- and operation-dependent external costs: an argument for less strict regulatory emission limit values for industrial installations? | Till Bachmann (EIFER, Germany) | T. Bachmann, J. van der Kamp MO217 | Development of country specific weighting factors and estimation of external cost for G20 countries in LIME3 | Norihiro Itsubo (Tokyo City University, Japan) | K.

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Murakami, N. Itsubo, K. Kuriyama, K. Yoshida, K. Tokimatsu MO218 | Comparing IMPACT World+ with other LCIA methodologies at end-point level using the Stepwise weighting factors | Cecile Bulle (CIRAIG Polytechnique Montreal, Canada) | C. Bulle, B. Weidema, M. Margni, S. Humbert, R. Rosenbaum, O. Jolliet MO219 | Economic valuation of the hydrotreated vegetable oil in Spain using environmental externalities | Daniel Garrain (CIEMAT, Spain) | M. Santamaria, D. Garrain, Y. Lechon MO220 | Economic valuation of nutrients removal from wastewater | Maria Molinos-Senante (Spain) | M. Molinos-Senante, F. Hernandez Sancho, M. Termes Rife, T. Kersting, R. Sala-Garrido MO221 | Environmental Life Cycle Costing Applied to the Urban Water Cycle | Desiree Marin (CETaqua Water Technology Centre, Spain) | T. Kersting, M. Amores Barrero, S. McEnnis, M. Termes Rife, M. Molinos Senante, D. Marin, F. Hernandez Sancho MO222 | Social indicators implemented in the sustainability evaluation for decision-making processes | Peter Saling (BASF SE, Germany) | P. Saling, A. Grosse-Sommer, J. Schoeneboom Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios (P). Chaired by: alessandra Zamagni, Monia niero, Florent Querini MO224 | Environmental assessment of dynamic processes - considering time dependency in Life Cycle Assessment | Enrico Benetto (CRP Henri Tudor, Luxembourg) | E. Benetto, L. Tiruta-Barna, Y. Pigne, N. Schiopu, A. Marvuglia MO225 | Scenario analysis in Life Cycle Assessment of future hydrogen production through High Temperature Electrolysis based on Solid Oxide Electrolyser Cells | Till Bachmann (EIFER, Germany) | T. Bachmann, A. Patyk, A. Brisse

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MO226 | Avoided life cycle impacts as a consequence to wind generation: Evidence that zonal congestion matters from Ontario (Canada) temporal data. | Ben Amor (Universite de Sherbrooke) | B. Amor, M. Pellat, P. Pineau MO227 | A life cycle based environmental analysis of the resource wood: Toward future sustainable use patterns | Florian Suter (Switzerland) | F. Suter, B. Steubing, C. Mutel, S. Hellweg, MO228 | Allocation problem during the life cycle assessment of the process of coal gasification | Anna Sliwinska (Central Mining Institute, Poland) | A. Sliwinska, K. Czaplicka MO229 | Modeling of a glass mineral wool process in view of Life Cycle Analysis | Sacha Gerbinet (Université de Liège, Belgium) | S. Gerbinet, V. Briard, A. Leonard MO230 | Explorative LCA of the application of the CO2 capture to the cement production in Spain in 2030 | Daniel Garrain (CIEMAT, Spain) | D. Garcia-Gusano, D. Garrain, I. Herrera, H. Cabal, Y. Lechon MO231 | Future-oriented LCA of high performance Flame Retardants | Othman Mrani (TU Darmstadt IWAR, Germany) | O. Mrani, L. Schebek MO232 | The use of Life Cycle Assessment in the development of nanofunctionalized membranes for virus and micropollutants removal | Stefano Zuin (Venice Research Consortium, Italy) | S. Zuin, M. Beggio, P. Scanferla, G. Da Ponte, S. Paulussen MO233 | MFA + LCA applied to industrial parks | Xavier Gabarrell Durany (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain) | X. Gabarrell Durany, Y. Saavedra, D. Silva, A. Dias, J. Rieradevall, A. Ometto, G. Villalba MO234 | Life cycle assessment linked with process models for the development of water reclamation processes | Lena Dahlgren (Sweden) | L. Dahlgren, M. Almemark, M. Rahmberg, S. Andersson, C. Baresel, A. Lazic

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

MO235 | Modular - LCA - Approach - Find the best combination using the example of components of small hydro power plant | Beatrix Becker (TU Darmstadt, Germany) | B. Becker, L. Schebek MO236 | Nanofibers and Pyrolysis - From the laboratory scale towards a theoretical industrial scale: error propagation and uncertainty analysis in scale-up process for prospective environmental assessments | Bálint Simon (Helmholtz Institute Ulm, Germany) | B. Simon, G. Rodriguez-Garcia, K. Bachtin, H. Dura, M. Weil MO237 | Life Cycle Assessment of flat plate and evacuated tubes solar water heaters in Lebanon | Rima Manneh (Lebanon) | R. Dahdal, R. Manneh, T. Dandres, H. Harajli, H. El Zakhem Assessing the risk of environmental pollutants on amphibians and reptiles (P). Chaired by: amy Brooks, Manuel ortiz Santaliestra, Veronique poulsen, isabel lopes MO238 | Influence of temperature on the lethal and sublethal toxicity of hydrophobically modified polyacrylic acid on tadpoles of Pelophylax perezi and Epidalea calamita | Isabel Lopes (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | N. Costa, F. Antunes, C. Duarte, A. Soares, I. Lopes MO239 | Copper-driven avoidance and mortality by temperate and tropical tadpoles | Isabel Lopes (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | C. Araújo, C. Shinn, M. Moreira-Santos, I. Lopes, E. Espindola, R. Ribeiro MO240 | A database to assess the sensitivity of terrestrial amphibians and reptiles to chemicals compared to other taxonomic groups | Lennart Weltje (BASF SE, Germany) | L. Weltje, P. Simpson, M. Gross, M. Crane, J. Wheeler Current Developments and Challenges on Sediment toxicology in Scientific and Regulatory Contexts (P). Chaired by: Francesca pellizzato, Hugo Waeterschoot MO241 | Relevance of a risk based approach in the management of contaminated sed-

iment: perspective and experiences from Europe | Elisa Bizzotto (Italy) | E. Bizzotto, S. Deacon, F. Colombo, R. Wenning MO242 | Evaluation of sediment toxicity and risk assessment for benthic organisms: a case study | Elisa Bizzotto (Italy) | E. Bizzotto, P. Fuchsman, F. Colombo MO243 | Comparison of first tier risk assessments for plant protection products with sediment-spiked and water-spiked studies | Karin Lautenschlager (Agroscope Changins Wadenswil, Switzerland) | K. Lautenschlager, A. Aldrich, T. Poiger, O. Daniel MO244 | Ecotoxicological effects of contaminated sediments on fish: Are current risk assessment protocols sufficient? | Henner Hollert (RWTH Aachen University, Germany) | M. Schulze-Sylvester, W. Heimann, S. Maletz, T. Seiler, M. Brinkmann, R. Schulz, H. Hollert MO245 | Toxicity of sediment-bound triclosan, triclocarban, irgarol and cypermethrin to the freshwater ostracod Heterocypris incongruens (ISO 14371). | M. Carmen Casado-Martinez (Centre Ecotox) | M. Casado-Martinez, R. Bebon, C. Gachet-Aquillon, N. Homazava, E. Vermeirssen, I. Werner MO246 | Zoning and spatiotemporal evolution of PAHs, described combining sediment concentration, baseline toxicity, bioaccumulation in fish and TEC for fish | Elisa Rojo-Nieto (CactymarUniversity of Cadiz, Spain) | E. Rojo-Nieto, J. Perales MO247 | Heavy metals, trace elements and sediment geochemistry at four Mediterranean fish farms | Ioanna Kalantzi (Hellenic Centre for Marine Science, Greece) | I. Kalantzi, K. Black, S. Pergantis, N. Papageorgiou, T. Shimmield, M. Tsapakis, I. Karakassis How can scientific advances support regulatory risk assessment for pesticides? (P). Chaired by: Seamus Taylor, anne alix, Gabe Weyman MO248 | Pesticide usage data for the application of the research to be utilized for IPM actions? | Kati Räsänen (MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Finland) | K. Räsänen, A.

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Ratilainen, S. Kurppa MO249 | The use of sediment, soil or soil extracts in the Daphnia magna reproduction test following the OECD TG 211 | Stefan Hoeger (Innovative Environmental Services IES Ltd, Switzerland) | S. Hoeger, S. Streil, A. Peither MO250 | Statistics matter: data aggregation improves identification of community-level effects compared to a commonly used multivariate method | Mikhail Beketov (UFZ Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany) | M. Beketov, M. Kattwinkel, M. Liess MO251 | Laboratory aquatic invertebrate single-species screening studies | Helen Walton (UK) | R. Zivtins, H. Walton, F. Joyce MO252 | Dynamics and risk assessment of pesticides detected in surface water of the Alqueva reservoir (Guadiana basin; south of Portugal) | Paula Alvarenga (Instituto Politécnico de Beja, Portugal) | P. Palma, M. Kock Schulmeyer, P. Alvarenga, L. Ledo, I. Barbosa, M. Lopez de Alda, D. Barceló MO253 | Breeding success in birds exposed to treated seed: methods & results | Alan Lawrence (Cambridge Environmental Assessments, United Kingdom) | A. Lawrence, J. Crocker MO254 | Dissipation of plant protection products from foliage - revisited | Markus Ebeling (Bayer CropScience AG EnSaETXTV, Germany) | M. Ebeling, M. Foudoulakis, T. Fredricks, I. Herrmann, R. Murfitt, M. Wang MO255 | Realism in freshwater field microcosms | Carole Jenkins (HLS, United Kingdom) | C. Jenkins, R. Jenkins, E. Hopkins, E. Quinton, P. Xirogiannopoulou MO256 | Don’t mix the grape and the grain: are ERA official procedures suitable for inorganic plant protection products? | Flavio Marchetto (ICPS) | A. Ippolito, F. Marchetto, L. Ceriani, G. Azimonti Novel approaches to incorporate in vitro bi-

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oassays in risk assessment (P). Chaired by: Merijn Schriks, Frederic leusch MO257 | Toxicity assay using lysosomal responses and lysosomal proteomic approach iin saccharomyces cerevisiae | Ngoc Tu Nguyen (Korea (South)) | N. Nguyen, Y. Kim, J. Min MO258 | Autonomous on-site monitor and laboratory determination of estrogenic activity in waste water using the Arxula adeninivorans yeast estrogen screen. | Linda Gehrmann (Germany) | L. Gehrmann, P. Minh Ha, C. Portner, M. Giersberg, G. Kunze, J. Tuerk MO259 | Size-segregated characterization and toxicity of atmospheric particles near a cement plant in Catalonia, Spain | Joaquim Rovira (Spain) | J. Rovira, J. Sierra, E. Marti, N. Roig, M. Mari, M. Nadal, M. Schuhmacher, J. Domingo MO260 | A rapid bio-assay to monitor humoral immunotoxicity | Edmund Pool (University of The Western Cape, South Africa) | E. Pool, K. Lategan MO261 | Hydrolytic enzyme activity of Daphnia magna and implications for rapid toxicity testing | Peter Roslev (Aalborg University, Denmark) | P. Roslev, M. Orsted MO262 | Potential of serum-free cell based test systems - A case study on AhR-based bioassays | Beat Thalmann (RWTH Aachen University Institute for Environmental Research, Germany) | B. Thalmann, A. Schiwy, L. Nuesser, H. Hollert MO263 | Detection of endocrine effects by anthropogenic micropollutants in drinking water | Jochen Kuckelkorn (RWTH Aachen University, Germany) | J. Kuckelkorn, R. Redelstein, S. Hotz, T. Grummt, A. Eckhardt, H. Hollert, T. Seiler MO264 | Employing probabilistic hazard assessment approaches to examine high throughput in vitro toxicology datasets | David Dreier (Baylor University, United States) | D. Dreier, K. Connors, B. Brooks

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

MO265 | Effect-based tools for monitoring (xeno)estrogens in surface waters: Variability and reproducibility of sample preparation and five different in vitro assays | Petra Kunz (Switzerland) | P. Kunz, S. Ait-Aissa, N. Creusot, N. Homazava, S. Jayasinghe, C. Kienle, S. Maletz, A. Schifferli, C. Schoenlau, N. Denslow, H. Hollert, I. Werner Plants and pollutants in the environment (P). Chaired by: Silvia Mohr, Gertie arts, claudia cosio, Rocio Millan MO266 | Efforts to balance representativeness and feasibility: tests on two Myriophyllum species | Tanja Tunic (Faculty of Sciences, Serbia) | T. Tunic, V. Knezevic, M. Rodic, S. Sipos, M. Klaric, D. Brkic, I. Teodorovic MO267 | Myriophyllum biotests | Guido Gonsior (Germany) | G. Gonsior MO268 | Glyceria biotest | Guido Gonsior (Germany) | G. Gonsior MO269 | Effects of water- and sediment-exposure of linuron on Glyceria maxima | Gertie Arts (Alterra Wageningen University and Research Centre, Netherlands) | G. Arts, C. van Mameren, S. Crum, J. Belgers, N. Diepens MO270 | A proposed ring-test protocol for an emergent macrophyte, Glyceria maxima, in a water-sediment system | Joanna Davies (Syngenta, United Kingdom) | J. Davies, M. Dollinger MO271 | Development and validation of a stock culture independent duckweed microbiotest with Spirodela polyrhiza | Guido Persoone (MicroBioTests Inc, Belgium) | G. Persoone, M. Foudoulakis, G. Arapis, R. Baudo MO272 | A novel bioassay using root regrowth in Lemna | Jihae Park (Incheon National University, Korea (South)) | J. Park, A. Park, H. Choi, M. Kim, S. Jo, E. Park, Y. Kim, E. Choi, T. Han MO273 | A novel bioassay using the lettuce root elongation | Areum Park (Incheon National University, Korea (South)) | A. Park, J.

Park, S. Jo, M. Kim, H. Choi, Y. Kim, E. Park, T. Han MO274 | Chlorophyll Specrtofluorescence Measurements of Healthy Maple Leaves and With Fungal Infection during Growing Season | Anastasiia Kharcheva (MV Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russian Federation) | A. Kharcheva, A. Meshchankin MO275 | PCB concentrations in soil and leaves along four transects from a contaminated site in Northern Italy | Elisa Terzaghi (University of Insubria Como, Italy) | E. Terzaghi, S. Ullucci, G. Raspa, A. Vianelli, B. Cerabolini, A. Di Guardo MO276 | Removal of Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products in Mesocosm Constructed Wetlands | Yujue Wang (National University of Singapore, Singapore) | Y. Wang, B. Kelly MO277 | Toxicity of veterinary medicinal products: comparison between terrestrial and aquatic macrophytes | Onofrio Schifanella (ChemService Srl) | O. Schifanella, M. Neri, V. Croce, c. casalegno, A. Zonca, L. Marvasi MO278 | Toxicity of Molybdenum to the aquatic floating macrophyte Lemna minor | Paul Sibley (University of Guelph, Canada) | D. Bowes, P. Sibley MO279 | Effect of Bilge Water on Mitosis and Antioxidant Enzyme Activities in Allium cepa L. | Daniel Olorunfemi (University of Benin, Nigeria) | D. Olorunfemi, L. Duru MO280 | Risk assessment of the use of dewatered and composted sewage sludge as soil amendments: behavior of metals in soils and their uptake by plants | Paula Alvarenga (Polytechnic Institute of Beja, Portugal) | P. Alvarenga, C. Mourinha, M. Farto, E. Pereira, P. Palma MO281 | Effects of lead and salt-induced stress on germination, proline accumulation and soluble proteins concentration in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) | Milica Aleksic (Petnica Science Center, Serbia) | M. Aleksic, V.

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Jovanovic, T. Misljenovic

M. Jochum, L. Garcia, B. Gottesbueren

MO282 | Accumulation of nickel and zink by Thlaspi kovatsii and T. praecox populations from the ultramafics of Serbia | Tomica Misljenovic (Serbia) | T. Misljenovic, N. Mihailovic, V. Jovanovic, S. Jovanovic, M. Niketic, G. Tomovic

MO290 | Bioremediation of polluted sediments by rooted aquatic macrophyte Typha domingensis. | Walter Di Marzio (Universidad Nacional de LujanCONICET, Argentina) | M. Saenz, W. Di Marzio, S. Martinez, J. Benholtz, J. Alberdi

MO283 | Uptake of dioxins and polycyclic aromatic compounds from field-contaminated soil by zucchini (Cucurbita pepo) | Sarah Josefsson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden) | S. Josefsson, S. Lundstedt, L. Ahrens, M. Tysklind, Y. Volchko, K. Wiberg

MO291 | Genotoxicity of pesticides on green algae: linking cellular biomarkers to dynamic populations. | Walter Di Marzio (Universidad Nacional de LujanCONICET, Argentina) | M. Saenz, W. Di Marzio, S. Martinez

MO284 | Water hyacinth infestation, an ecosystem service and not a pest? A periurban agricultural zone case study. | Claudia Ponce de Leon (Mexico) | C. Ponce de Leon, B. Mercado, M. Hernandez MO285 | How to assess the risk of multiple applications from single application studies | Klaus Swarowsky (German Federal Environment Agency UBA, Germany) | K. Swarowsky, C. Schweikert, P. Craig, A. Hoellrigl-Rosta MO286 | Mixture effects of herbicides to aquatic macrophytes: sensitivity and recovery potential under environmentally realistic conditions | Varja Knezevic (Faculty of science, Serbia) | V. Knezevic, T. Tunic, J. Molnar, D. Kerkez, A. Tubic, R. Buncic, I. Teodorovic MO287 | Multiple pulse exposure studies with Algae, Lemna sp., and Myriophyllum sp. - technical considerations | Anja Liedtke (Harlan Laboratories Ltd, Switzerland) | A. Liedtke, H. Eckenstein, R. Wetzlinger, N. Tobler, S. Hoeger MO288 | Pesticide Half-Lives in Plants for Risk and Impact Assessment | Peter Fantke (Technical University of Denmark, Denmark) | P. Fantke, B. Gillespie, R. Juraske, O. Jolliet MO289 | Towards a better understanding of foliar wash-off: Use of molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate surface interactions at the nanoscale | Mara Jochum (Germany) |

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MO292 | Detection of toxic substances using biosensor | Martina Buckova (Transport Research Centre, Czech Republic) | M. Buckova, R. Licbinsky, B. Sebestova, J. Krejci MO293 | Effects of ultraviolet radiation on chemical toxicity in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: the role of the chemical mode of action | Muris Korkaric (Eawag Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology) | M. Korkaric, R. Behra, M. Junghans, B. Fischer, R. Eggen MO294 | Estimation of toxicity and genotoxicity of bottom sediments of the Yenisei River: Elodea canadensis vs. Allium-test | Tatiana Zotina (Institute of Biophysics SB RAS, Russian Federation) | T. Zotina, M. Medvedeva, E. Trofimova, A. Bolsunovsky Pollinator risk assessment: past, present and future (p). chaired by: Stefan Kimmel, amy Brooks, Veronique poulsen, Marco candolfi MO295 | Impact of legislation about pesticides in the conservation of stingless bees in Brazil | Andrigo Monroe Pereira (Eurofins Agroscience Services Brazil, Brazil) | R. Nocelli, C. Lourenco, C. Jacob, H. Soares, T. Roat, E. Silva-Zacarin, A. Monroe Pereira, O. Malaspina MO296 | New methodology for proboscis extension reflex test for stingless bees | Andrigo Monroe Pereira (Eurofins Agroscience Services Brazil, Brazil) | A. Monroe Pereira, O. Malaspina, C. Tavares Lourenco, R. Cornelio Ferreira Nocelli, S. Knaebe

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

MO297 | Make a BeeCision - Is insecticidal activity of a PPP a criterion to trigger laboratory studies with non-Apis bees? | Sonja Haaf (Germany) | S. Haaf, F. Schroeder, S. Hecht-Rost, J. Lueckmann, O. Koerner MO298 | The challenge of assessing the risk of pesticides to non-Apis bees and the outcome of the EFSA approach | Stefan Kroder (DrKnoell Group, Switzerland) | S. Kroder, L. Jeker MO299 | Landscape-level exposure assessment for bees: spatially-explicit modelling approach to assess the influence of foraging behaviour on in-hive exposition | Hans Baveco (the Netherlands) | H. Baveco, A. Focks, I. Roessink, D. Belgers, J. Van der Steen, J. Boesten MO300 | Evaluating EFSA honeybee protection goals using the BEEHAVE model | Pernille Thorbek (Syngenta, United Kingdom) | P. Thorbek, H. Thompson, P. Campbell MO301 | Nest for cavity-nesting solitary bees, particularly Osmia species, in ecotoxicology studies. | Matt Allan (Pacific Pollination LLC, United States) | M. Allan, R. Dean, E. Ythier MO302 | There’s no space like home: Reduction in control mortality by mimicking bee space in the test vessel design for acute Honeybee Apis mellifera toxicity testing | Kirsty-Jo Muddiman (Smithers Viscient, United Kingdom) | E. Grzebisz, K. Muddiman MO303 | A short survey of pollinators on cover crops in southern Germany 2013 | Silvio Knaebe (EAS EcoChem GmbH, Germany) | S. Knaebe, P. Mack MO304 | Evaluation of Honeybee Acute Toxicity of plant extracts, Neem, Sophora and Derris | Jina Oh (NIAS, Korea, South) | J. Oh, K. Park, M. Paik REACH after the second registration deadline: environmental challenges (p). chaired by: anu Kapanen, erwin annys, Henrik Tyle MO305 | A discussion of the sufficiency of

aquatic hazard information for environmental risk assessment | Mark Lampi (ExxonMobil Petroleum Chemical, Belgium) | C. Boegi, M. Claessens, D. Huggett, C. Hughes, M. Lampi, A. Mandrillon, E. Garman, H. Waeterschoot, M. Galay Burgos MO306 | Characterising the toxicology and ecotoxicology of industrial chemicals in Europe | Mikael Gustavsson (Sweden) | M. Gustavsson, T. Backhaus MO307 | Shortcomings in ecotoxicity data to provide a testset for an ECETOC project | Paul Thomas (CEHTRA SAS, France) | P. Thomas, M. Galay Burgos MO308 | Dialog between environmental monitoring data and REACH | Stefan Kools (KWR Watercycle Research Institute, Netherlands) | A. Kolkman, T. ter Laak, T. Traas, S. Kools, E. Rorije

Poster Corners Modelling techniques for future-oriented LCA and forecasting scenarios (PC). Chaired by: alessandra Zamagni, Monia niero, Florent Querini MOPC01 | Methodologies accounting for indirect Land Use Change (iLUC) effect: review, assessment and future development | Michele De Rosa (Arhus University, Denmark) | M. De Rosa MOPC02 | iLUC scenarios of biofuel consumption in Spain from a consequential approach | Daniel Garrain (CIEMAT, Spain) | D. Garrain, C. De la rua, Y. Lechon MOPC03 | Additional production of ethanol in Brazil in a consequential perspective | RogĂŠrio Sallaberry (TU Darmstadt, Germany) | R. Sallaberry, L. Schebek MOPC04 | LCA of future biorefinery systems using the Virtual Sugarcane Biorefinery framework | Otavio Cavalett (Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology Labora, Brazil) | O. Cavalett, T. Junqueira, M. Ferreira Chagas, E. Morais, A. Bonomi

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Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

MOPC05 | Combining Life Cycle Assessment and economic models for ex-ante evaluation of dairy production systems | Thibault Salou (INRA UMR SAS, France) | T. Salou, C. Le Mouel, H. van der Werf MOPC06 | Parameterisation of LCI/LCIA models of agricultural systems emissions under future pressures | Nuno Cosme (Technical University of Denmark DTU, Denmark) | N. Cosme, T. Dijkman, M. Birkved Delving into the social and monetarised environmental impacts during the evaluation process of the Life Cycle of products in order to be able to take all three pillars of sustainability into account (PC). Chaired by: Graziella Benedetto, Tomas ekvall, cassia Maria lie Ugaya MOPC07 | Can products be compared in S-LCA as in (environmental) LCA? A pilot of Natura’s soap | Cassia Maria Lie Ugaya (Universidade Tecnologica Federal do Paraná, Brazil) | C. Lie Ugaya, N. Haberland, F. Brones MOPC08 | Stakeholder Analysis and S-LCA: there are elements of overlapping and complementarities? | Graziella Benedetto (University of Sassari, Italy) | G. Benedetto MOPC09 | Social Life Cycle Assessment applied to housing retrofit: case studies in Brussels-Capital Region | Maria Touceda (ULB, Belgium) | M. Touceda, A. Richard, M. Degrez MOPC10 | Social Life Cycle Assessment: case studies from the textile to the nanotechnology sector | Clara Valente (Ostfold Research, Norway) | c. valente, I. Saur-Modahl, S. Rubach MOPC11 | S-LCA in agri-food sector: the case study of a sardinian wine | Graziella Benedetto (University of Sassari, Italy) | G. Benedetto, L. Petti, C. Ugaya MOPC12 | Social Life Cycle Assessment in managerial perspective: an integrative approach for business strategy | Gabriella Arcese (Universita La Sapienza, Italy) | G. Arcese, M. Lucchetti

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Landscape ecotoxicology and spatially explicit risk assessment of toxicants (PC). Chaired by: andreas Focks, Mikhail Beketov MOPC13 | GIS-based Integrated Risk Assessment applied to Taizi river, China | Elena Semenzin (Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy) | J. Fan, E. Semenzin, W. Meng, Y. Zhang, E. Giubilato, A. Zabeo, A. Critto, A. Marcomini MOPC14 | Xplicit-IBC-grass - A model for risk characterisation of plant communities | Jette Reeg (Germany) | J. Reeg, K. Koerner, A. Solga, F. Jeltsch, T. Schad MOPC15 | Spatially differentiated comparative toxicity potentials of metals in global coastal seawater | Yan Dong (Denmark) | Y. Dong, M. Hauschild, R. Rosenbaum MOPC16 | Seasonal variability in physiological biomarkers in Mytilus galloprovincialis from the Spanish N-NW coast. | Carmen Gonzalez-Fernandez (Spanish Institute of Oceanography, Spain) | M. Albentosa, C. Gonzalez-Fernandez, J. Campillo, J. Bellas

Monday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

MOPC21 | Characterisation of the cutaneous bacterial community in the Perez’ frog, Pelophylax perezi: diversity and environmental influence | Isabel Lopes (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | S. Costa, I. Lopes, G. Paiva, R. Ribeiro, P. Morais MOPC22 | Optimizing the Culturing Conditions of the Amphibian Symbiotic Alga Oophila amblystomatis for Toxicity Testing | Jose Luis Rodriguez Gil (University of Guelph, Canada) | J. Rodriguez Gil, R. Brain, L. Baxter, K. Solomon, M. Hanson MOPC23 | How do the uncertainties in the acute aquatic risk assessment differ between fish and amphibians? | Karin Lautenschlager (Agroscope Changins Wadenswil, Switzerland) | A. Aldrich, K. Lautenschlager, M. Gandolfi-Wetter, R. Gauch MOPC24 | Identification of endpoints useful to characterize the impact of pesticides on aquatic amphibian stages | Manuel Ortiz Santaliestra (Institute for Environmental Sciences University of Koblenz Landau, Germany) | M. Ortiz Santaliestra, C. Bruehl

MOPC17 | Use of screening biotest to assess the toxicity of persistent pollutants | Bozena Sosak-Swiderska (University of Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, Poland) | B. Sosak-Swiderska MOPC18 | Evaluation of detoxication ability of humic products on polluted urban soils using TRIAD approach | Vera Terekhova (Institute of Ecology and Evolution RAS, Russian Federation) | O. Yakimenko, M. Pukalchik, V. Terekhova Assessing the risk of environmental pollutants on amphibians and reptiles (PC). Chaired by: amy Brooks, Manuel ortiz Santaliestra, Veronique poulsen, isabel lopes MOPC19 | Amphibians and agriculture chemical fragmentation of breeding pond populations | Patrick Lenhardt (Germany) | P. Lenhardt, C. Bruehl, K. Theissinger, G. Berger MOPC20 | Testing terrestrial life stages of amphibians - potential test strategies | Gunnar Schmidt (BASF SE Agrarzentrum Limburgerhof, Germany) | G. Schmidt, P. Dohmen

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TUeSday 13 May

Keynote speaker, Auditorium Montreal 16:30-17:15

Thomas Princen Sufficiency: Enough but Not Too Much

Platform and special sessions 08:10-12:50 13:55-16:00

Platform sessions + special session Platform sessions

Poster display 07:45–08:10 10:15–10:45 12:50–13:55 16:00–16:30 17:15–18:30 18:30–19:00

Poster setup Morning coffee break: attend poster Lunch & poster session: attend poster Afternoon coffee break: attend poster Poster session & social: attend poster Poster take-down

Poster corner discussions 17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

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TUPC01 – TUPC06 Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development. Chaired by: Tomas Rydberg TUPC07 - TUPC12 Effects of Mining on the Local Environment. Chaired by: Benjamin Davies TUPC13 – TUPC18 Fracking, seismics and spills: Environmental risk assessment of oil and gas exploration and production. Chaired by: Mathijs Smit, Pim Leonards TUPC19 – TUPC24 Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field. Chaired by: James Lazorchak, Dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, Daniel Caldwell

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TUeSday 13 May

Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems – challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective (SS01) Tuesday, 13 May, 08:10 – 12:50, Shanghai 3/4 Since important European rivers, such as the river Rhine, spring from the Swiss Alps, which constitute the continental water divide, Switzerland is known as Europe’s Water Tower. Europe’s largest water fall, the Rhine fall, and largest freshwater reservoir, Lake Geneva, along with more than thousand rivers and lakes and numerous glaciers, testify the abundance of water in this country. Despite the notion of the Water Tower suggesting almost unlimited abundance of clean water, Switzerland is typical for many industrialized countries regarding conflicting interests in the management of aquatic ecosystems, water resources and water infrastructure in response to societal needs and values. These needs will most probably increase in the future and interact with effects due to the ongoing climate change. This special session intends to present a state-of-the-art summary regarding the knowledge about these future challenges, what role the issue of chemical pollution plays in the overall context of sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems and how the Swiss authorities intend to put the current knowledge into practice. Finally, the session will address the question to what degree experiences gained in Switzerland are relevant for other countries. The timing for this session is well chosen. In 2014, the Swiss National Research Programme 61 on Sustainable Water Management will conclude. Sixteen research projects covering a wide range of water-related topics and four thematic syntheses packages provide new insight into the challenges of the Swiss water sector and how to tackle them. At the same time, the federal authorities are very active in implementing new programmes on up-grading of wastewater treatment plants, on river restoration and on fostering renewable energy. Research is actively involved in considering these changes as research opportunities and has launched projects to benefit from these real-world experiments. An essential question related to all of these projects is how multiple stressors influence structure and functioning of aquatic ecosystems and how one can sort out the impact of a specific stressor group to support measures towards an improved ecological status.

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TUeSday 13 May

Programme Chairs: Christian Stamm (Eawag, Switzerland), Nele Schuwirth (Eawag, Switzerland), Mario Schirmer (Eawag, Switzerland) 08:10 Introduction (Christian Stamm, Eawag, Switzerland) 08:15 Future challenges for the Swiss water sector: outlook based on the National Research Program Sustainable Water Management (Christian Stamm, Eawag, Switzerland) 08:40 The chemical status of Swiss surface waters and the role of diffuse pollution with focus on pesticides (Nicole Munz, Eawag, Switzerland) 09:10 Effects of micropollutants on fishes and macroinvertebrates (Rita Triebskorn, University of Tübingen, Switzerland) 09:40 EcoImpact – assessing the ecological impact of micropollutants in Swiss streams (Frank Burdon, Eawag, Switzerland) 10:15 break 10:45 Introduction (Christian Stamm, Eawag, Switzerland) 10:50 The Swiss water policy for tackling chemical pollution (Michael Schärer, Federal Office for the Environment, Switzerland) 11:20 Bank infiltration, river restoration and effects on drinking water: the relevance for Switzerland (Dirk Radny, Eawag, Switzerland) 11:50 Artificial groundwater recharge: conflicts between river water quality and drinking water needs? (Traugott Scheytt, TU Berlin, Germany) 12:20 The Swiss strategy abating micropollutants: What can be learned for outside Switzerland? (Rik Eggen, Eawag, Switzerland)

139


141

Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35 Room

9:55 Session

Fish model species in environmental toxicology (I) Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler

172 | comparison of experimental versus predicted acute toxicity data of four polar narcotic analogues in the zebrafish embryo | an Hagenaars (Belgium)

173 | effect of an herbicide, ethofumesate, on aerobic metabolism in roach (Rutilus rutilus) at two temperatures | Virginie Maes (Université de Reims champagne ardenne, France) 174 | a novel method for measuring disruption of energy metabolism in vivo in the zebrafish | Jessica legradi (VU University amsterdam, netherlands)

175 | Genomic and gene expression responses to genotoxic stress in zebrafish (danio rerio) | Maja Srut (University of Zagreb Faculty of Science, croatia) 176 | Mode-of-action’ of human pharmaceuticals in fish: The effects of ibuprofen on Fathead minnow (pimephales promelas) | alpa patel (Brunel University, United Kingdom) 177 | physiological effects of exposure to ibuprofen in Menidia beryllina. | Richard connon (University of california davis, United States)

Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field (I) James lazorchak, dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell 190 | pharmaceuticals in the environment - the global perspective | Silke Hickmann (Germany)

191 | Risk Based prioritisation of pharmaceuticals in the UK | Jiahua Guo (The University of york, UK)

192 | Human pharmaceuticals and the Read-across hypothesis: mammals and fish together at last? | luigi Margiotta-casaluci (Brunel University, UK)

193 | prioritisation of pharmaceutical Substances for Monitoring purposes | arne Hein (Federal environment agency UBa, Germany)

194 | defining safe discharge ranges of pharmaceutical compounds in receiving water bodies | Raphael Tarpani (The University of Manchester, United Kingdom) 195 | How Feasible is Greener drug design? | Jason Snape (astrazeneca UK ltd, United Kingdom)

201 | diversity, activity and abundance of microbial functional groups as descriptors of soil disturbance: example of contamination with Tio2 nanoparticles | agnès Richaume-Jolion (France)

200 | combining physicochemistry and microbial ecotoxicology to assess the impact of Tio2 nanoparticles in 6 agricultural soils | Marie Simonin (laboratoire d’ecologie microbienne, France)

199 | influence of physico-chemical soil properties on the effect of silver nanoparticles in soils | Karsten Schlich (Fraunhofer iMe institute for Molecular Biology and applied ecology, Germany)

198 | preparing soils amended with nano-sized copper oxide, micron-sized copper oxide, and with a copper salt for a nanotoxicity test and results of a 14-day barley growth test | Heather McShane (McGill University, canada)

197 | The influence of soil properties on the bioavailability and toxicity of ag nanoparticles to the earthworm eisenia fetida | elma lahive (centre for ecology Hydrology neRc, United Kingdom)

196 | Uptake and elimination kinetics of ag nps and ionic ag in the isopod porcellionides pruinosus exposed to contaminated soil and food | paula Tourinho (University of aveiro, portugal)

Fate and effects of nanomaterials in soil c.a.M. van Gestel, david Spurgeon

Singapore

poster Spotlight: posters TU263 | TU264 | TU265 | TU266

218 | The eU organisation environmental Footprint Sector Rules (oeFSR) Retailers pilot testing | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland)

217 | connecting damage-oriented and resource-oriented environmental footprints | Zoran Steinmann (Radboud University nijmegen, netherlands)

216 | Spatial differentiation of lci datasets: implication of new characterisation methods and necessity of a finer data collection to reduce lcia results uncertainties - The example of eee products | etienne lees-perasso (codde, France)

215 | proposal for a new normalization reference in lca based on “safe operating space”: presentation of framework and global factors at midpoint level | anders Bjorn (Technical University of denmark, denmark)

214 | impact pathway characterisation to evaluate sustainability performance of products by addressing six Safeguard Subjects | Julia Martínez Blanco (Technische Universität Berlin)

Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (I) Tomas Rydberg

Shanghai 1/2

Kairo 1/2 Innovations in environmental analytical chemistry: the quest for pollutants at trace levels (I) Margaretha lamoree, Stephen lock

delhi Risk assessment of chemical mixtures: strategies, bottlenecks, and the steps ahead (I) Thomas Backhaus, lennart Weltje, Romanas cesnaitis

Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (I) Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner

osaka/Samarkand

Wildlife ecotoxicology: from acute toxicity to low level, chronic exposure related effects (I) nico van den Brink, John elliott

Boston 1

MoRe TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See neXT paGe

Sydney

Montreal

TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)

Bioavailablity and effects of metals and metal mixtures (I) Koen oorts, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2

9:40 | 228 | ecoimpact assessing the ecological impact of micropollutants in Swiss streams | Frank Burdon (eawag, Switzerland)

9:10 | 227 | effects of micropollutants on fishes and macroinvertebrates | Rita Triebskorn (University of Tuebingen, Germany)

8:40 | 226 | The chemical status of Swiss surface waters and the role of diffuse pollution with focus on pesticides | nicole Munz (eawag, Switzerland)

225 | Future challenges for the Swiss water sector: outlook based on the national Research program Sustainable Water Management | christian Stamm (eawag, Switzerland)

Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective (I) christian Stamm, nele Schuwirth, Mario Schirmer

Shanghai 3/4


143

Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35 Room

9:55 Session

208 | Simulation of pharmaceuticals in the environment | Stefan Trapp (danmark Tekniske Universitet, denmark)

209 | persistent organic pollutants - analysis of sources, spatial distribution, and reservoirs in Switzerland | Juliane Glüge (eTH Zurich, Switzerland)

184 | a novel approach to study human habits through mass spectrometric analysis of urban wastewater | Sara castiglioni (Mario negri inst, italy)

185 | occurrence of 940 organic micro-pollutants in environment waters in Hanoi, Vietnam | Thi Hanh duong (The University of Kitakyushu, Japan)

186 | chiral pharmaceuticals and illicit drugs stereoselective degradation in activated sludge: methodology and results of quantification in microcosm study | Sian evans (University of Bath, UK)

187 | lc-MS/MS Screening for antibiotics in U.S. Seafood for consumption | Hansa done (center for environmental Security, United States) 188 | investigation of the in vivo uranium-binding protein targets in hepatopancreas and gills of crayfish (procambarus clarkii) under various aquatic uranium exposure levels | Sandrine Frelon (iRSn, France) 189 | pesticides in bees, beebread and beeswax: levels and distribution | claire Jabot (France)

219 | Towards a common conceptual framework for chemical footprint bridging Risk assessment and life cycle assessment: Short review and way forward | Tomas Rydberg (iVl Swedish environmental Research institute, Sweden) 220 | initial risk assessment of mixtures of plant protection products | Karina petersen (norwegian institute for Water Research, norway)

221 | Mixtures in the environment - development of assessment strategies for the regulation of chemicals under ReacH | dirk Bunke (Ökoinstitut eV, Germany)

222 | Single and mixture toxicity of pharmaceuticals on atyaephyra desmarestii in global change scenarios | Julian Blasco (inst ciencias Marinas de andalucia, Spain) 223 | influence of environmental factors on the joint toxicity of chlorpyrifos and mancozeb to the terrestrial isopod porcellionides pruinosus | Rui Morgado (University of aveiro, portugal) 224 | integrated chemical and biological assessment of sub-lethal toxicity of binary mixtures of Zn, HTo and doc to Mytilus galoprovincialis | Holly pearson (plymouth University, United Kingdom)

183 | increased temperatures and pesticide exposure: a double threat to population of amphibians? a microcosms experiment on embryos development | Vera Silva (Universidade de aveiro, portugal)

182 | levels and Risk assessment of ddTs in biota samples from the ethiopian Rift Valley Region | yared Beyene (Hokkaido Univesity, Japan)

181 | does pollution increase pathogen infection in terrestrial wildlife? | Renaud Scheifler (University of Franchecomte, France)

180 | exposure of bearded vultures to external antiparasitics used to treat livestock | Rafael Mateo (UclMcSic, Spain)

179 | chlorophacinone toxicity and threshold for coagulopathy in american kestrels (Falco sparverius) | Barnett Rattner (USGSpatuxent Wildlife Research ctr, United States)

178 | an innovative large scale field study to investigate unintentional effects of plan protection product on the grey partridge perdix perdix reproduction in cereal ecosystems | elisabeth Bro (oncFS, France)

Wildlife ecotoxicology: from acute toxicity to low level, chronic exposure related effects (I) nico van den Brink, John elliott

Boston 1

Sydney Fish model species in environmental toxicology (I) Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler

Montreal Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field (I) James lazorchak, dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell

Fate and effects of nanomaterials in soil c.a.M. van Gestel, david Spurgeon

Singapore

Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (I) Tomas Rydberg

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See pReVioUS paGe

213 | Multi-dimensional modelling of leaching for ridge-furrow systems | Klaus Hammel (Bayer cropScience aG, Germany)

212 | The dirt on predicting Veterinary drug concentrations in a canadian context From a Regulatory prespective | Graham Rattray (Health canada, canada)

211 | influence of climate change on the arctic contamination potential | Kaj Hansen (national environmental Research institute, denmark)

210 | Unravelling the relationship between body mass index and persistent organic pollutant concentrations in humans | Frank Wania (University of Toronto at Scarborough, canada)

Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (I) Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner

Innovations in environmental analytical chemistry: the quest for pollutants at trace levels (I) Margaretha lamoree, Stephen lock

Risk assessment of chemical mixtures: strategies, bottlenecks, and the steps ahead (I) Thomas Backhaus, lennart Weltje, Romanas cesnaitis

osaka/Samarkand

Kairo 1/2

delhi

TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)

Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective (I) christian Stamm, nele Schuwirth, Mario Schirmer

Shanghai 3/4

207 | a dynamic Biotic ligand Model predicting ni toxicity to enchytraeus crypticus | erkai He (VU University amsterdam, netherlands)

206 | Trivalent chromium chemistry: when considered, makes it more toxic than the hexavalent chromium in algal toxicity test | imad aharchaou (liec, France)

205 | deriving waterborne safe tresholds for pb in european freshwaters | patrick Van Sprang (aRcHe, Belgium)

204 | protectiveness of copper aquatic life criteria/ guidelines against olfactory impairment in fish: an international comparison | Joseph Meyer (aRcadiS, United States)

203 | copper toxicity in mussels: do salinity, organic matter and population history matter? | david deruytter (University Ghent, Belgium)

202 | interactions between copper and salinity in the teleost fish sheepshead minnow: a multi-stressor approach | anna de polo (Brunel University, United Kingdom)

Bioavailablity and effects of metals and metal mixtures (I) Koen oorts, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2


145

Room

Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 11:50 12:10

Fish model species in environmental toxicology (II) Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler

229 | Benefits and limitations of using fish embryos in applied ecotoxicology | Martina Fenske (Fraunhofer Gesellschaft iMe, Germany)

230 | impact of an agricultural contaminant on reproductive behaviour and morphology in a freshwater fish | Minna Saaristo (Monash University, australia)

231 | Use of an estuarine model teleost to evaluate pollutant impacts at multiple biological scales | Susanne Brander (University of north carolina Wilmington, United States)

232 | Sentinel medaka detect multiple mechanisms of steroid signalling disruption | andrew Tindall (Watchfrog Sa, France)

233 | assessment of the estrogenic potency of chemicals, alone or in combination, and complex environmental mixtures using a novel transgenic cy19a1b-GFp in vivo zebrafish assay (eaSZy assay) | Francois Brion (ineRiS, France) 234 | application of Molecular Methods for Understanding the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals in Fish Models | charles Tyler (United Kingdom)

Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field (II) James lazorchak, dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell 247 | ecotoxicological assessment of antibiotics: state-of-the-art and needs for improvement | Kristian Brandt (University of copenhagen, denmark)

248 | a multi-species approach to evaluate the acute and chronic toxicity of carbamazepine, ibuprofen and propranolol spiked in sediment samples. | luciane Maranho (Universidad de cadiz, Spain)

249 | investigating various modes of action and potential adverse outcomes of pharmaceuticals in marine mussels | elena Fabbri (University of Bologna, italy)

250 | Fate and effects of pharmaceutical antibiotics differ among single substances and mixtures | Sören Thiele-Bruhn (University of Trier, Germany)

251 | dilute concentrations of an anxiolytic drug alters behaviour and species interactions of wild fish | Tomas Brodin (Umea University, Sweden)

252 | The striking sensitivity of invertebrates to antidepressants | alex Ford (University of portsmouth, United Kingdom)

258 | detection and quantification of nanoparticles in aqueous matrices by means of field flow fractionation and mass spectrometry | patrick Bauerlein (KWR, netherlands)

257 | Visualisation of silver nanoparticle uptake by laser ablation - inductively coupled plasma Mass Spectrometry | Steffi Böhme (Germany)

256 | evaluating Bioaccumulation of Silver and Gold nanoparticles Using spicpMS-enabled Tissue extraction and analysis | evan Gray (colorado School of Mines, United States)

255 | Microsecond spicpMS and its application to environmental samples | Manuel Montano (colorado School of Mines, United States)

254 | Fate dynamics of silver nanoparticles in sewage treatment studied with FaST single-particle icp-MS | Geert cornelis (University of Gothenburg, Sweden)

253 | Behaviour and fate of silver and manufactured silver nanoparticles along the wastewater-biosolid exposure pathway | erica donner (University of South australia, australia)

Detection and characterisation of nanomaterials in complex aqueous matrices patrick Bauerlein, Ralf Kaegi

Singapore

poster Spotlight: posters TU267 | TU268 | TU269

275 | From methodological developments to actual action plans in the industry: example of water availability footprinting applied to electricity production | anne prieur Vernat (GdF SUeZ, France)

274 | estimation of effect Factors for application to marine eutrophication in lcia | nuno cosme (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark)

273 | alternatives to GWp in lca: temperature metrics and explicit time profiles | Francesco cherubini (nTnU, norway)

272 | The water accounting and vulnerability evaluation model (WaVe): considering atmospheric evaporation recycling and the risk of freshwater depletion in lca and water footprinting | Markus Berger (Technische Universitaet Berlin, Germany)

271 | combining spatially distributed land and water use impacts to an endpoint of global species extinction and application to a Kenyan case study | Francesca Verones (Radboud University nijmegen, netherlands)

Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (II) Tomas Rydberg

Shanghai 1/2

Kairo 1/2 Innovations in environmental analytical chemistry: the quest for pollutants at trace levels (II) Margaretha lamoree, Stephen lock

delhi Risk assessment of chemical mixtures: strategies, bottlenecks, and the steps ahead (II) Thomas Backhaus, lennart Weltje, Romanas cesnaitis

Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (II) Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner

osaka/Samarkand

Wildlife ecotoxicology: from acute toxicity to low level, chronic exposure related effects (II) nico van den Brink, John elliott

Boston 1

MoRe TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See neXT paGe

Sydney

Montreal

TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)

Room

12:30 10:50

Bioavailablity and effects of metals and metal mixtures (II) Koen oorts, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2

12:20 | 284 | The Swiss strategy abating micropollutants: What can be learned for outside Switzerland? | Rik eggen (eawag, Switzerland)

283 | artificial groundwater recharge: conflicts between river water quality and drinking water needs? | Traugott Scheytt (TU Berlin, Germany)

11:20 | 282 | Bank infiltration, river restoration and effects on drinking water: the relevance for Switzerland | dirk Radny (eawag, Switzerland)

281 | The Swiss water policy for tackling chemical pollution | Michael Schärer (Federal office for the environment Foen, Switzerland)

Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective (II) christian Stamm, nele Schuwirth, Mario Schirmer

Shanghai 3/4


147

Room

Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 11:50 12:10

Innovations in environmental analytical chemistry: the quest for pollutants at trace levels (II) Margaretha lamoree, Stephen lock 241 | The use of scripting filters for the identification of potential novel persistent organic pollutants following GcxGc-ToF MS analysis | Miren pena (University of Toronto, canada)

242 | Rapid post-screening of a sediment sample with complex matrices by Gc x Gc-HRToFMS with R-based peak sentinel tool (T-Sen) | yasuyuki Zushi (Japan) 243 | diagnostic derivatization: a novel approach to identify (aromatic) amines in environmental matrices | melis muz (UFZ Helmholtz centre for environmental Research, Germany)

244 | integrated accessible computational Strategies to identify emerging environmental pollutants using HR-MS/MS | emma Schymanski (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science, Switzerland)

245 | carbamazepine and its metabolites in wastewater, surface water and drinking water: occurrences, potential risks and analytical pitfalls | arnold Bahlmann (HelmholtzZentrum fur Umweltforschung UFZ, Germany) 246 | investigation of micropollutants and transformation products from a waste water treatment plant with full scale ozonation using lcHRMS | christoph portner (institute of energy and environmental Technology iUTa eV, Germany)

Risk assessment of chemical mixtures: strategies, bottlenecks, and the steps ahead (II) Thomas Backhaus, lennart Weltje, Romanas cesnaitis 276 | nutritional modulation of environmental pollutant toxicity: implications for risk assessment | Michael petriello (University of Kentucky, United States)

277 | eU wide campaign exercise on bioassays and chemical mixture effects | teresa lettieri (european commission Joint Research centre, italy)

278 | ecotoxicological assessment of immersion samples from façade render | etienne Vermeirssen (eawag, Switzerland)

279 | Qualitative environmental risk assessment of photolytic transformation products of iodinated X-ray contrast media (icM) diatrizoic acid | Tushar Rastogi (leuphana Universitat luneburg, Germany)

280 | Bioanalytical and chemical evaluation of Swimming pool Water | daniel Stalter (The University of Queensland, australia)

poster spotlight: posters TU282 | TU291 | TU296 | TU299

239 | in ovo exposure to Bde-99 affects the song control system of a model songbird species, the zebra finch | John elliott (environment canada, canada)

240 | The effects on steroidogenesis and cellular structures of adult male Japanese quails (coturnix coturnix japonica) testis following pre-pubertal exposure to di (n-butyl) phthalate (dBp) | Umar Muhammed Bello (University of pretoria, South africa)

270 | Which exposure profile counts? estimating worst case scenarios based on ecotoxicological relevance | Thomas preuss (Bayer cropScience, Germany)

238 | are immunotoxic effects of lead shot ingestion linked to oxidative stress? | nuria Vallverdu-coll (instituto de investigacion en Recursos cinegeticos, Spain)

237 | effects of as, cd and pb on blackbirds: a multi-marker study | clémentine Fritsch (cnRS, France)

236 | can stable isotopes explain contaminant load in birds of prey? | M. pereira (centre for ecology Hydrology, United Kingdom)

235 | energy normalized diet concentrations as measure for secondary poisoning of birds and mammals | eric Verbruggen (RiVM expertise centre for Substance, netherlands)

Wildlife ecotoxicology: from acute toxicity to low level, chronic exposure related effects (II) nico van den Brink, John elliott

Boston 1

269 | importance of exposure dynamics in aquatic ecosystem risk assessment | Melissa Morselli (University of insubria, italy)

268 | Which role plays the scenario selection for pesticide risk assessment of soil organisms? - a case study with the vertical distribution model for collembola FolcaS | Vanessa Roeben (RWTH aachen University institute for environmental Research, Germany)

267 | eFSa guidance for evaluating laboratory and field dissipation studies to obtain degT50 values of active substances of plant protection products and their transformation products in soil | Jos Boesten (alterra, netherlands)

266 | progress in regulatory degradation kinetics | Johannes Ranke (Johannes Ranke wissenschaftlicher Berater)

265 | eFSa Guidance document on clustering and ranking of emissions of plant protection products from protected crops (greenhouses and crops grown under cover) to relevant environmental compartments | Ton van der linden (RiVM, netherlands)

Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (II) Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner

osaka/Samarkand

Sydney Fish model species in environmental toxicology (II) Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler

Montreal Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field (II) James lazorchak, dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell

Detection and characterisation of nanomaterials in complex aqueous matrices patrick Bauerlein, Ralf Kaegi

Singapore

Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (II) Tomas Rydberg

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See pReVioUS paGe

Kairo 1/2

delhi

TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)

Room

12:30 Session

Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems - challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective (II) christian Stamm, nele Schuwirth, Mario Schirmer

Shanghai 3/4

264 | a toxicokinetics approach to assess bioavailability of copper, chromium and arsenic to earthworms in contaminated soils | Johanna Kilpi-Koski (Finland)

263 | Metal accumulations in diffusive gradients in thin films (dGT). Mixture and low ionic strength effects. | Jaume puy (Universitat de lleida, Spain)

262 | Mixture toxicity and interactions of copper and zinc to barley in three different soils | liske Versieren (Belgium)

261 | Toxicity of binary mixtures of nickel, copper, cadmium and zinc to daphnia magna | elizabeth Traudt (colorado School of Mines, United States)

260 | development of a chronic metal mixture bioavailability model for ni-Zn toxicity to daphnia magna based on the independent action model | charlotte nys (University of Ghent, Belgium)

259 | Mixed stress? Growth and bioaccumulation of freshwater algae pseudokirchneriella subcapitata under combined zinc and phosphate supply | chuan Gao (Belgium)

Bioavailablity and effects of metals and metal mixtures (II) Koen oorts, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2


149

Room

Session 14:00 14:20 14:40 15:00 15:20

313 | Strong sorption of pcBs to carbon nanotubes, fullerenes, nanoplastics and micorplastics. effects of salinity and sediment organic matter. | ilona Velzeboer (Wageningen University, netherlands) 314 | Biological Uptake and depuration of Radio-labeled Graphene by daphnia magna | elijah petersen (national institute of Standards Technology, United States)

290 | novel approaches to assess the effects of glucocorticoids in zebrafish embryos | anita Hidasi (eawag Swiss federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland) 291 | Toxicity of the mycotoxin zearalenone in fish | constanze pietsch (programm MGU, Switzerland)

292 | Mechanisms of Selenomethionine and Hypersaline induced embryotoxicity in the euryhaline Fish, Japanese Medaka (oryzias latipes) | allison Kupsco (University of california Riverside, United States)

293 | Fish early life stages assays with sediment contact exposure as a tool for hydrophobic compound toxicity assessment | Florane le Bihanic (epoc, France)

294 | Motoneuron and neuromast damage as new endpoints to explain metal toxicity in the zebrafish embryo toxicity test (zFeT) | laura Sonnack (Fraunhofer iMe institute for Molecular Biology and applied ecology, Germany) poster Spotlight: posters TU034 | TU035

295 | does exposure to environmentally relevant concentrations of an antidepressant affect risk sensitivity of wild birds? | Kathryn arnold (University of york, United Kingdom) 296 | Tissue-Specific concentrations of polar pharmaceuticals and personal care products (ppcps) in Wild Fish from Wastewater discharge area | Rumi Tanoue (ehime University, Japan) 297 | occurrence of endocrine disruptors and pharmaceutical compounds and bioaccumulation in biofilm, macroinvertebrates, and fish in Mediterranean rivers | Belinda Huerta Buitrago (catalan institute for Water Research icRa, Spain)

298 | analyses of pharmaceuticals in fish collected from a subset of urban streams in the U.S. in the U.S. epa’s national Rivers and Streams assessments | Sara Rodriguez-Mozaz (institute for Water Research icRa, Spain) 299 | Bensodiazepines; bioconcentration and bioaccumulation in various biota and presence i european surface waters. | Jerker Fick (Umea University, Sweden)

300 | From theory to reality - evaluation of suitable organisms and test systems for the biomonitoring of pharmaceuticals - literature review | Simon Schwarz (Germany)

poster spotlight: posters TU270 | TU271 | TU272

334 | Using machine learning for human toxicity and freshwater ecotoxicity characterization of chemical emissions | antonino Marvuglia (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg)

333 | confronting Health effects of particulate Matter in lcia | Thomas McKone (University of california, United States)

332 | development of characterization factors for metals in coastal seawater | Michael Hauschild (Technical University of denmark, denmark)

331 | Great ideas - greater difficulties in their modelling: when lcia hits a dead-end. a tale of ecotoxic struggle, with a silver lining. | catherine Raptis (Switzerland)

330 | chemical footprint assessment: presentation of method and application to a case study involving different spatial scales | anders Bjørn (Technical University of denmark, denmark)

Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (III) Tomas Rydberg

Shanghai 1/2

Kairo 1/2 Evolutionary, multigenerational and epigenetic effects of pollutants: providing scientific support to long-term ERA Marie-agnès coutellec, carlos Barata, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere

delhi Macro, micro and nanoplastic pollution in the aquatic and terrestrial environments: Sources, fate, exposure and ecological and toxicological impacts Heather leslie, dick Vethaak

Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (III) Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner

osaka/Samarkand

Sorption and bioavailability of organic chemicals: mechanisms and applications in innovative remediation Jose-Julio ortega-calvo, John parsons

Boston 1

MoRe TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:) See neXT paGe

318 | Sorption behaviour of carbon-based nanomaterials: effects of dispersion and aging | Melanie Kha (University of Vienna, austria)

317 | effects of co-exposure of single walled carbon nanotubes and ethinyl estradiol on estrogen receptor binding, activation, and downstream responses in fish | Joseph Bisesi (University of Florida, United States)

316 | nanotraces in the nanoworld - occurrence of fullerenes in environmental samples | Josep Àngel Sanchís (idaeacSic, Spain)

315 | prediction of sorption of organic compounds by multi-walled carbon nanotubes using poly-parameter linear free-energy relationships | Thorsten Hüffer (University of Vienna, Germany)

Usage, fate and risk of carbon based nanomaterials Marinella Farre, Thilo Hofmann, Melanie Kah

Fish model species in environmental toxicology (III) Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler

Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field (III) James lazorchak, damia Barcelo, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell

Singapore

Sydney

Montreal

TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00)

Room

15:40 Session

Monitoring the efficiency of risk mitigation measure protecting the environment from pesticide exposure and effects Katja Knauer, anne alix

Boston 2

312 | prediction of partition coefficients of per- and polyfluoroalkyl Substances and organosilicons using polyparameter linear Free energy Relationships | Satoshi endo (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany)

311 | Factors impacting Groundwater Fate and Transport of perfluoroalkyl acids at aFFF-impacted Sites | Jennifer Guelfo (Shell projects and Technology, United States)

310 | Temporal Trend of perfluoroalkyl compounds in the atmosphere at dalian, china: evidence of Unknown pFc? | Wei liu (School of environmental Science and Technology dalian University of Technology, china)

309 | ecodynamics of selected pFaSs in the Gironde estuary | Gabriel Munoz (lpTcepoc cnRS, France)

308 | occurrence and removal fluxes of perfluorinated alkyl substances in the tropical and subtropical Global oceans. | Belen Gonzalez-Gaya (institute of environmental assessment and Water Research, Spain)

307 | Global emissions, fate and transport of c6-c10 perfluoroalkane sulfonic acids (pFSas): what we know and what we do not know | Zhanyun Wang (Swiss Federal institute of Technology, Switzerland)

Recent advances and critical future research directions for poly- and perfuorinated alkyl substances (PFASs) (I) carla ng, lutz ahrens, ian cousins, Zhiyong Xie

Shanghai 3/4


151

Room

Session 14:00 14:20 14:40 15:00 15:20

Evolutionary, multigenerational and epigenetic effects of pollutants: providing scientific support to long-term ERA Marie-agnès coutellec, carlos Barata, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere 285 | cd-resistance in field Gammarus populations: genetic adaptation, transgenerational effect, or selection of phylogenetic cryptic lineages? | amandine Vigneron (irstea, France, Metropolitan) 286 | Molecular mechanisms behind snail metal sensitivity: cadmium metallothionein gene transcription involves activation of metal responsive elements | Michael niederwanger (University of innsbruck, austria) 287 | cu and Zn selection leads to adaptation and heterozygote excess in a natural daphnia magna population without affecting tolerance to novel stressors | Jennifer Hochmuth (Ghent University, Belgium)

288 | does the nutritional status of parental chironomus tepperi midges influence the sensitivity of its offspring? | Vincent pettigrove (The University of Melbourne, australia) 289 | effects of chronic gamma irradiation: a multigenerational study using caenorhabditis elegans | adeline Goussen (iRSn lRe leco, France)

Macro, micro and nanoplastic pollution in the aquatic and terrestrial environments: Sources, fate, exposure and ecological and toxicological impacts Heather leslie, dick Vethaak 301 | Releasing of hexabromocyclododecane (HBcd) from expanded polystyrene (epS) buoy in marine water: a field study | Manviri Rani (Korea institute of ocean Science and Technology, Korea (South)) 302 | enrichment of additive HBcds in mussel attached to expanded polystyrene buoy | Mi Jang (Korea institute of ocean Science and Technology, Korea (South))

303 | Microplastic particles in aquatic sediments: new methods for sampling, extraction and quantification | Hannes imhof (Uni Bayreuth, Germany)

304 | Microplastics in field collected and cultured bivalves | lisbeth Van cauwenberghe (Ghent University, Belgium)

305 | nanoplastic affects growth of S. obliquus and reproduction of d. magna | ellen Besseling (WUR, netherlands)

poster spotlight: posters TU205 | TU219 | TU220 | TU221

323 | proziris - a new tool to support pesticide registration at the national and zonal levels | Mitchell Burns (Footways SaS, France)

322 | Feedback from anSeS on the use of FocUS Surface Water tools for Southern zonal risk assessment | arnaud Boivin (anSeS, France)

321 | losses of glyphosate and aMpa by runoff in a typical residential area: monitoring and a conceptual model | Ting Tang (ViTo nV, Belgium)

320 | GeRda: a new software tool for pesticide exposure assessment for surface waters in Germany | Stefan Reichenberger (Footways SaS, France)

319 | GeRda: a new exposure approach for pesticide inputs into surface waters via surface runoff, erosion and drainage in Germany | Martin Bach (University of Giessen, Germany)

Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (III) Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner

osaka/Samarkand

329 | Tools for the evaluation of remediation process in Microbial electroremediating cell (MeRc). | Karina Boltes (University of alcala, Spain)

328 | investigating biochar and activated carbon effects on microbial community structures in petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated soils | George Mangse (newcastle University, United Kingdom)

327 | changes in organic contaminant availability following biochar/activated carbon amendment for enhanced phytostabilisation of contaminated soils | aoife Brennan (University of Strathclyde, Scotland)

Sydney Fish model species in environmental toxicology (III) Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler

Montreal Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the Laboratory to the Field (III) James lazorchak, damia Barcelo, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell

Usage, fate and risk of carbon based nanomaterials Marinella Farre, Thilo Hofmann, Melanie Kah

Singapore

Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (III) Tomas Rydberg

Shanghai 1/2

Recent advances and critical future research directions for poly- and perfuorinated alkyl substances (PFASs) (I) carla ng, lutz ahrens, ian cousins, Zhiyong Xie

Shanghai 3/4

340 | plant protection products in surface water: how inputs can be reduced on-farm | otto daniel (agroscope acW, Switzerland)

339 | Risk management for pollinators: regulatory context, overview of risk management tools and perspectives | anne alix (dow agrosciences, United Kingdom)

338 | Risk mitigation of pesticides | Martin Streloke (BVl, Germany)

337 | Monitoring longterm trends of pesticides in surface waters | Jenny Kreuger (Swedish University of agricultural Science, Sweden)

336 | Groundwater protection measures for use of plant protection products | alison Sapiets (Syngenta, United Kingdom)

325 | including organic mixture’s influence on dioxins and furans’ bioavailability for toxic impact assessment in a life cycle context | cecile Bulle (ciRaiG polytechnique Montreal, canada) 326 | positioning activated carbon amendment technologies in a novel framework for sediment management | darya Kupryianchyk (norwegian Geotechnical inst, norway)

335 | Feedback from Magpie workshop - environmental risk mitigation measures in risk assessment and management for p | Veronique poulsen (anSeS, France)

Monitoring the efficiency of risk mitigation measure protecting the environment from pesticide exposure and effects Katja Knauer, anne alix

Boston 2

324 | interaction of amines with natural soil studied with nitroxyl spin probes | Michael Matthies (University of osnabrueck, Germany)

Sorption and bioavailability of organic chemicals: mechanisms and applications in innovative remediation Jose-Julio ortega-calvo, John parsons

Boston 1

MoRe TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00) See pReVioUS paGe

306 | Tracing pop-Bde poster spotlight: posters routes through plastic TU008 | TU009 | TU010 | waste streams in the neth- TU011 erlands | Heather leslie (institute for environmental Studies VU amsterdam, netherlands)

Kairo 1/2

delhi

TUeSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00)

Room

15:40 Session


TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

Evolutionary, multigenerational and epigenetic effects of pollutants: providing scientific support to long-term eRa (p). chaired by: Marie-agnès coutellec, carlos Barata, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere TU001 | Chronic toxicity (multi-generational effect) of perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) on the daphnids | norihisa Tatarazako (national institute for environmental Studies, Japan) | H. Watanabe, S. oda, R. abe, i. Tamura, n. Tatarazako TU002 | Transgenerational effects of Cd contamination in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Jorge Henriques (portugal) | J. Henriques, T. andrade, a. Soares, i. domingues TU003 | Multi-generational effects of the feedlot contaminant 17 ą-trenbolone on Daphnia carinata | dayanthi nugegoda (RMiT University, australia) | a. Miranda, V. pettigrove, d. nugegoda TU004 | Reproductive strategy and population dynamics of Hyalella azteca (Crustacea: Amphipoda) in culture conditions. | Guilherme lessa (Brazil) | G. lessa, M. Flynn TU005 | Metal tolerance inheritance may unveils possible patterns of microevolution in amphibians populations | isabel lopes (University of aveiro, portugal) | e. Fasola, i. lopes, R. Ribeiro TU006 | Variability of Cd-sensitivity and phylogenetic diversity of field populations throughout the Gammarus fossarum/pulex species complex. | amandine Vigneron (irstea, France, Metropolitan) | a. Vigneron, o. Geffard, H. pellerin, R. Recoura-Massaquant, a. Francois, H. Queau, T. Rigaud, R. Wattier, a. chaumot TU007 | Adaptive Plasticity of Laguncularia racemosa in Response to Different Environmental Conditions. Integrating Chemical and Biological Data by Chemometrics | lara da costa Souza (Brazil) | i. Souza, M. Bonomo, M. Morozesk, H. arrivabene, l. Rocha, i. duarte, l. Furlan, M. Monferran, S. Matsumoto, c. Milanez, d. Wunderlin, M. Fernandes

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TU008 | Evidence for self-sustaining populations of wild roach in rivers where feminization of males is widespread | patrick Hamilton (University of exeter, United Kingdom) | p. Hamilton, e. nicol, e. de-Bastos, R. Williams, J. Sumpter, S. Jobling, J. Stevens, c. Tyler

TU016 | New transgenic zebrafish models to study the expression of key steroidgenic enzymes and their perturbation by endocrine disrupting chemicals | Francois Brion (ineRiS, France) | n. hinfray, M. caulier, y. Guiguen, o. Kah, B. piccini, e. chadili, J. porcher, F. Brion

TU009 | A multigenerational perspective on perfluorinated compounds toxicity: life-history and genetic effects on Chironomus riparius (Diptera, Chironomidae) | Fabrizio Stefani (national Research councilWater Research institute, italy) | F. Stefani, l. Marziali, a. Fumagalli, F. Rosignoli, M. Rusconi, S. Valsecchi, R. Bettinetti, S. polesello

TU017 | Combined effects of estrogenic ligands on zebrafish specific in vitro and in vivo bioassays | Francois Brion (ineRiS, France) | n. Hinfray, c. Tebby, F. pakdel, S. ait-aissa, B. piccini, F. Zeman, G. Bourgine, J. porcher, a. pery, F. Brion

TU010 | Metallothionein gene expression differs in earthworm populations with different exposure history | Marina Mustonen (Finland) | M. Mustonen, J. Haimi, a. Vaisanen, e. Knott TU011 | Ecological and evolutionary impact of environmental acidification on amphibians | longfei Shu (eTH Züricheawag, Switzerland) | l. Shu, M. Suter, K. Raesaenen Fish model species in environmental toxicology (P). chaired by: Jessica legradi, Juliette legler, charles Tyler TU012 | Pathology Working Group Review of Histopathologic Specimens from Three Laboratory Studies of Diclofenac in Trout | Jeffrey Wolf (experimental pathology labs inc, United States) | J. Wolf, c. Ruehl-Fehlert, H. Segner, K. Weber, J. Hardisty TU013 | A test design to assess recovery in fish full lifecycle studies | James R. Wheeler (dow agrosciences, United Kingdom) | J. Wheeler, S. Schneider, H. Krueger, S. Maynard TU014 | Protein Interactions in the Cascade of the Aryl-Hydrocarbon-Receptor during Embryogenesis of the Zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Henriette alert (RWTH aachen University, Germany) | H. alert, H. Hollert, S. Keiter TU015 | Biomarkers of growth stimulants in Oreochromis mossambicus | Johan van Vuren (University of Johannesburg, South africa) | M. Tresise, J. van Vuren, i. Wagenaar

TU018 | Steroid and thyroid hormone levels in trout plasma determined by LC/MS/MS | Maria luisa Fernandez-cruz (Spain) | M. Fernandez-cruz, c. Gerke, M. Hernando, F. Torrent, J. navas TU019 | Morphological and behavioural effects of teratogenic compounds in the zebrafish embryo show different mechanisms of teratogenicity | evelyn Stinckens (Belgium) | e. Stinckens, n. cop, l. Vergauwen, a. Hagenaars, d. Knapen TU020 | A test battery for the screening of neurotoxicity of anthropogenic trace substances in aquatic ecosystems | daniel Stengel (University of Heidelberg, Germany) | d. Stengel, T. Braunbeck TU021 | Effects of barium carbonate and barium chloride on Daphnia magna, Moina macrocopa and reproduction of zebrafish | Ba-Reum Kwon (dept occupational and environmental Health, Korea (South)) | B. Kwon, S. Jang, K. Ji TU022 | Effects of subchronic exposure to atrazine on selected indices in common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.) | Jana Blahova (czech Republic) | J. Blahova, H. Modra, R. dobsikova, M. Sevcikova, M. Hostovsky, M. Skoric, l. Zelnickova, Z. Svobodova TU023 | Effects of Zinc exposure on the survival of Arabian Gulf Killifish embryos under variable saline conditions | Suhur Saeed (exxonMobil Research Qatar, Qatar) | S. Saeed, n. deb, n. al-naema, e. Febbo

TU024 | Effects of organic compound Phenanthrene and Naphthalene on zebrafish (Danio rerio) early-life stages | Karen Silva (Universidade de aveiroceSaM, portugal) | a. nogueira, K. Silva, a. Val TU025 | Evaluation of toxic effects of detergent in embryos and adult zebrafish Danio rerio | alma Sobrino-Figueroa (Universidad autonoma Metropolitana iztapalapa, Mexico) | a. Sobrino-Figueroa TU026 | Adverse effects of climate change related environmental parameters on zebrafish embryo development and survival | Thayres andrade (Universidade de aveiro, portugal) | T. andrade, J. Henriques, a. Soares, S. Scholz, i. domingues TU027 | Combined effects of Ultraviolet radiation and xenobiotics on zebrafish embryos - changes in bacterial communities | ana almeida (University of aveiro, portugal) | a. almeida, T. pimentel, S. loureiro, n. Gomes, a. Soares, i. domingues TU028 | Low doses of the herbicide ametryn induces oxidative stress in zebrafish embryos | Rhaul oliveira (University of Brasilia, portugal) | R. oliveira, M. Moura, a. nogueira, i. domingues TU030 | Interactions between dietary methyl mercury and selenium affects selenoprotein gene expression. | Staale ellingsen (norway) | S. penglase, K. Hamre, S. ellingsen TU031 | The effect of calcium on accumulation and toxicity of dissolved copper in the early stages of zebrafish embryo development: biochemical effects and gene expression | Sahib Bakir (plymouth University, United Kingdom) | S. Bakir TU032 | Zebrafish embryo as a sensitive model for the assessment of teratogenicity of cyanobacterial exudates containing retinoids | Klara Hilscherova (Masaryk University Faculty of Science ReceToX, czech Republic) | a. Jonas, V. Buranova, S. Scholz, e. Fetter, K. novakova, J. Kohoutek, K. Hilscherova TU033 | Organic anion transporting pol-

153


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ypeptide (Oatp) mediated uptake of cyanobacterial toxins into fish | Susanne Faltermann (Switzerland) | S. Faltermann, R. pretot, V. Grundler, K. Gademann, K. Fent TU034 | Redtail splitfin (Xenotoca eiseni) as a potential new model for studies on maternal transfer of environmental contaminants | Simone Tinguely (University of applied Sciences northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland) | S. Tinguely, c. Tyler TU035 | Medaka (Oryzias latipes) - A good fish model for testing of endocrine active substances | daniel Faber (Bayer cropScience aG, Germany) | d. Faber, e. Bruns, H. Ratte Wildlife ecotoxicology: from acute toxicity to low level, chronic exposure related effects (p). chaired by: nico van den Brink, John elliott TU036 | Linking predator exposure and patterns of treatments with anticoagulant rodenticides by using faeces | Renaud Scheifler (University of Franchecomte, France) | M. Jacquot, M. coeurdassier, M. Sage, i. Fourel, a. dinkel, a. parmentier, a. dervaux, d. Rieffel, y. prat-Mairet, F. Raoul, R. Scheifler, p. Giraudoux TU037 | Anticoagulant Resistance: Using metabolic inhibitors as tools for increasing efficacy | Katherine Horak (United States) | K. Horak, S. Volker, c. campton TU038 | Exposure of nestlings Red Kite to rodenticides, PAHs and metals | clémentine Fritsch (cnRS, France) | M. coeurdassier, n. crini, c. amiot, i. Fourel, p. Berny, R. Scheifler, c. Fritsch, G. Faggio, a. Mionnet, c. Morin, R. Riols TU039 | Differences in residues of anticoagulant rodenticides among species and sub-populations of predators | Jhon Jairo lópez perea (instituto de investigacion en Recursos cinegeticos, Spain) | J. lópez perea, p. camarero, S. Manosa, R. Molina lopez, l. parpal, M. Martinez-Haro, R. Mateo TU040 | Equations for lipid normalization of carbon stable isotope ratios in aquatic bird

154

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eggs | John elliott (environment canada, canada) | K. elliott, M. davis, J. elliott

canada) | H. currier, J. elliott, T. Williams, K. drouillard

TU041 | Is shot and ammunition a significant lead exposure pathway in predatory birds in Britain? | Richard Shore (ceH lancaster, United Kingdom) | R. Shore, a. lawlor, l. Walker, e. potter, M. pereira

TU048 | Levels of organochlorine compounds in eggs of gull-billed terns and assessment of eggshell pigments as potential biomarkers | Rafael Mateo (UclMcSic, Spain) | a. perez de Vargas, p. camarero, M. cuadrado, R. Mateo

TU042 | Mercury in waterfowl from the Ebro delta (NE Spain): trends over time and intra-/interspecific variations | Rafael Mateo (UclMcSic, Spain) | p. Uceta Rojas, M. Jimenez Moreno, n. Vallverdu-coll, M. Martinez-Haro, R. Rodriguez Martin-doimeadios, R. Mateo TU043 | Bioaccumulation of fipronil in Magellanic penguin (Spheniscus magellanicus) | paula Baldassin (instituto oceanografico, Brazil) | p. Baldassin, S. Taniguchi, R. Montone, M. Tavares, V. dang, n. denslow TU044 | Persistent organic pollutants in yearlings of Magellanic penguins (Spheniscus magellanicus) found on the southern and southeastern coast of Brazil. | paula Baldassin (instituto oceanografico, Brazil) | p. Baldassin, S. Taniguchi, c. Kolesnikovas, M. Tavares, h. gallo, a. Maranho, p. Serafini, R. Montone TU045 | Chronic exposures of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and their hydroxylated metabolites in the brain of free-ranging toothed and baleen whales | Mari ochiai (center for Marine environmental Studies, Japan) | M. ochiai, K. nomiyama, T. isobe, T. yamada, y. Tajima, M. Makara, M. amano, S. Tanabe TU046 | Associations between the anogenital distance and environmental concentrations of perfluoroalkyl acids and DDE in wild male mink | Sara persson (Sweden) | S. persson, a. Rotander, a. Karrman, B. van Bavel, U. Magnusson TU047 | Long-term environmental exposure to persistent organic pollutants in a municipal landfill, and their effects on the breeding success in European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) | John elliott (environment canada,

TU049 | Biomarkers of exposure and effects to detect the toxic effects in wood mice along a gradient of pollution | nicolas Tete (University of Franchecomte, France) | n. Tete, a. Sanchez chardi, e. aFonSo, R. Scheifler TU050 | Acute toxicity and genotoxic effects of formaldehyde to tadpoles of Lithobates catesbeianus (american bullfrog) | Juliana Santana (Fisheries institute, Brazil) | J. Santana, a. dos Reis, p. Teixeira, F. Ferreira, J. lombardi, c. Ferreira TU051 | Cytogenetic damage progression in peripheral erythrocytes of fish (Anguilla anguilla) upon cessation of exposure to a deltamethrin-based insecticide | ana Marques (portugal) | a. Marques, M. custodio, M. Santos, i. Gaivao, M. pacheco TU052 | Feral finfish, and their relationships with sediments and seawater, as a tool for risk assessment of PAHs in chronically polluted environments. | elisa Rojo-nieto (cactymarUniversity of cadiz, Spain) | e. Rojo-nieto, M. oliva, J. perales TU053 | Triclosan interferes with the thyroid axis in Sheepshead minnows (Cyprinodon variegatus) | Joseph Schnitzler (Université de liège, Belgium) | J. Schnitzler, F. Sylvestre, K. das TU054 | Are Ionic Liquids Green Solvents? | laura lomba (Spain) | B. Giner, e. Zuriaga, e. Sarasa, e. perales, l. lomba TU055 | Effects of two PBDE congeners on the moulting enzymes of the freshwater amphipod Gammarus pulex. | eric Gismondi (Belgium) | e. Gismondi, J. Thome

TU056 | Toxic effects of 6 metals in freshwater organisms of different thopic levels | alma Sobrino-Figueroa (Universidad autonoma Metropolitana iztapalapa, Mexico) | a. Sobrino-Figueroa, c. alvarez-Silva TU057 | Management of the industrial biofouler Corbicula fluminea - alternative roles for old (Eco)toxicological methods | Joana luisa pereira (University of aveiro, portugal) | J. pereira, R. costa, i. Rosa, R. Gabriel, a. Re, J. Gomes, V. Silva, c. Silva, B. nunes, n. abrantes, F. Goncalves TU058 | Using bioturbation as a response in sublethal toxicological assessments with L. plumulosus, N. arenaceodentata and M. mercenaria | eliza Kaltenberg (case Western Reserve University, United States) | e. Kaltenberg, G. Matisoff, p. Mccall TU059 | Toxic and endocrine disrupting effects of Bisphenol A on freshwater isopod Asellus aquaticus | Maja plahuta (national institute of chemistry, Slovenia) | M. plahuta, T. Tišler, a. pintar, M. Toman TU060 | Metallothionein induction by an essential metal (Zn) in a freshwater decapod crustacean of South America, Palaemonetes argentinus | catherine Mouneyrac (Université catholique de louest, France) | l. Bertrand, M. Monferran, i. Metais, c. Mouneyrac, M. ame TU061 | Improved control of the biofouler Corbicula fluminea: combined action of chemicals and dissolved oxygen reduction | Rita Gabriel (Universidade de coimbra) | R. Gabriel, i. Rosa, J. pereira, F. Goncalves, R. costa TU062 | Nutritional stress as a confounding factor in the evaluation of DNA integrity in the freshwater mussel, Dreissena polymorpha | Marc Bonnard (France) | M. Bonnard, l. delahaut, M. Schneider, i. Bonnard, G. Magniez, a. Geffard TU063 | Development of a Cellular Efflux Pump Inhibition Assay (CEPIA) for Lymnea stagnalis eggs. | Knud l. pedersen (University of Southern denmark, denmark) | K. pedersen, H. Holbech

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TU064 | Genotoxic potential of glyphosate-based herbicides to fish and elucidation of DNA damaging mechanisms - comparison between the active ingredient and the major environmental breakdown product (AMPA) | Sofia Guilherme (Universidade de aveiro, portugal) | S. Guilherme, M. Santos, i. Gaivao, M. pacheco

Bussche, l. Van Meulebroek, M. Vandegehuchte, M. de Rijcke, c. Janssen, l. Vanhaecke

TU065 | Identity and synthesis of the major egg yolk proteins of the fresh water mussel Unio tumidus and its occurence and inducability during a full reproductive cycle. | Knud l. pedersen (University of Southern denmark, denmark) | K. pedersen, J. Morthorst, H. Holbech, K. Kinnberg, S. Madsen, p. Hojrup, p. Bjerregaard

TU072 | Active in situ sampling for bioavailability using solid phase extraction - the IS2B | Rolf Halden (arizona State University, United States) | S. Supowit, V. dang, K. Kroll, n. denslow, R. Halden

TU066 | Effects of chlordecone on endocrine system of Macrobrachium rosenbergii | anne lafontaine (Belgium) | a. lafontaine, J. Forget-leray, J. Thome TU067 | Acute and chronic effects of selected pharmaceuticals on the chlorophyll fluorescence intensity and photosynthetic yield of Raphidocelis subcapitata and Chlorella vulgaris | adeolu aderemi (Glasgow caledonian University, United Kingdom) | a. aderemi, c. Hunter, o. pahl Innovations in environmental analytical chemistry: the quest for pollutants at trace levels (p). chaired by: Margaretha lamoree, Stephen lock TU068 | 3iTOX: A novel approach for monitoring water toxicity | Varvara Kokkali (Vitens, netherlands) | V. Kokkali, B. Bajema, a. Berg, R. Bosch, W. van delft TU069 | Optimisation and validation of an on-line TFC/UHPLC-MS/MS method for the analysis of perfluoroalkyl acids in biota and sediment samples | Sara Valsecchi (Water Research institute italian national Research council iRSacnR, italy) | M. Mazzoni, S. polesello, M. Rusconi, S. Valsecchi TU070 | Validation of a quantitative method for lipophilic marine toxins in shellfish proves power of UHPLC-HR-Orbitrap mass spectrometry. | Maarten de Rijcke (Ghent University, Belgium) | G. orellana, J. Vanden

156

TU071 | A novel analytical method for determining the prevalence of anticoagulant rodenticides in non-target species | Katherine Horak (United States) | K. Horak, S. Volker

TU073 | Analysing highly hydrophilic micropollutants in water by direct injection LCMS/MS | Martin Krauss (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany) | M. Krauss, T. lochen, W. Brack TU074 | Characterisation of Combined Sewer Overflow Discharge upon the River Thames using a Semi-Targeted Liquid Chromatography-High Resolution Mass Spectrometry Screening Method | Kelly Munro (United Kingdom) | K. Munro, a. edge, c. Martins, d. cowan, l. Barron TU075 | Determination of xenobiotic residues in the fresh water invertebrate, Gammarus pulex, using agitated solvent extraction, solid phase extraction and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry | Thomas Miller (Kings college london, United Kingdom) | T. Miller, n. Bury, l. Barron, B. Brown, S. owen TU076 | Determination of Paraben on Mogi River by dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction (DLLME) by HPLC with diodo array detector | carlos alexandre Galinaro (Universidade de Sao paulo, Brazil) | c. Galinaro, e. Vieira TU077 | Implementation of a complementary monitoring strategy to enable an efficient survey of pharmaceuticals in urban water cycle. A case study on the parisian area | Sophie lardy-Fontan (lne, France) | S. lardy-Fontan, V. brieudes, G. lavison, p. candido, G. couturier, B. lalere, H. Budzinski

TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

TU078 | Identification of pesticide metabolites on honey bees | claire Jabot (France) | c. Jabot, l. Belzunces, B. Giroud, a. Bulete, H. casabianca, e. Vulliet TU079 | Micro Flow UHPLC-MS/MS in Pesticide Analysis of Infant Foods | Udo Burger (Shimadzu Schweiz GmbH, Switzerland) | d. Baker, U. Burger, c. Meisenbach, n. loftus, S. Hird TU080 | Monitoring the presence of phosphodiesterase type V inhibitors in sewage water | ana causanilles (netherlands) | a. causanilles, e. emke, p. de Voogt TU081 | Effluent and surface water analysis of classical and novel drugs used in cancer treatment: 5-FU and protein kinase inhibitors | Margaretha lamoree (netherlands) | M. lamoree, K. Swart, c. Houtman TU082 | Online SPE-nano-LC-HRMS of polar organic contaminants in environmental samples | Michael Stravs (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland) | M. Stravs, p. longree, H. Singer, l. Ferguson, J. Hollender TU083 | Pharmaceuticals and PCPs in groundwater: Results from French National screening | anne Togola (BRGM, France, Metropolitan) | a. Togola, B. lopez, p. ollivier, n. Baran, J. Ghestem TU084 | The LC-ESI-MS/MS method of simultaneous detection of 21 antidepressants in surface water samples and its application in assessing the presence of the pharmaceuticals in two rivers of central Poland | Joanna Giebułtowcz (poland) | J. Giebułtowcz, G. nalecz-Jawecki TU085 | EU Water Framework Directive demands on emerging contaminants water analysis - suspended organic matter and particulates effects on bulk samples | Joana cavalheiro (lcaBieipReM, France) | J. cavalheiro, H. preudhomme, d. amouroux, M. Monperrus TU086 | Application of Information Dependent Acquisition experiments in LC MS/MS

method to identification of biotransformation products of selected anti-depressants | Katarzyna czaplicka (Medical University of Warsaw, poland) | K. czaplicka, p. Zielinski, M. Wawryniuk, R. Marszalek, G. nalecz-Jawecki TU087 | Detection and identification of ozonation products in water by non-target approach | ewa Borowska (eawag aquatic Research, Switzerland) | e. Borowska, M. Bourgin, c. Mcardell, U. von Gunten TU088 | Elucidating exposure pathways of phthalate esters in the indoor environment: combining measurement and modelling techniques. | Georgios Giovanoulis (iVl Swedish environmental Research institute ltd, Sweden) | G. Giovanoulis, T. Bui, J. Magner, a. palm cousins, c. ostman, c. de Wit, i. cousins TU089 | Analytical Method to Determine Precursors to Poly/Perfluorinated Compounds in Air and Water by GC-MS | ian Ken dimzon (netherlands) | i. dimzon, T. Knepper, p. de Voogt TU090 | Analysis of brominated, chlorinated and phosphorous flame retardants using GC-MS, GC-MS/MS and GC-TOF-MS | Jakob Gustavsson (Swedish University of agricultural Science) | J. Gustavsson, l. ahrens, S. Josefsson, K. Wiberg TU091 | Development of a one-step integrated pressurized liquid extraction and cleanup method for determining polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in marine sediments | Minkyu choi (national Fisheries Research and development institute, Korea (South)) | M. choi, y. Kim, i. lee, H. choi TU092 | Quantification of azole and pyrethroid pesticides in extracts of D. magna using QuEChERS and GC-ECD - method development and matrix effects | andreas Kretschmann (University of copenhagen, denmark) | a. Kretschmann, n. cedergreen, J. christensen TU093 | Quantifying sampling artifacts for semi-volatile organic contaminants (SVOCs) in three active air sampling configurations

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and assessing inter-sampler comparability | lisa Melymuk (Masaryk University Faculty of Science ReceToX, czech Republic) | l. Melymuk, p. Bohlin, p. Kukucka, J. Klanova TU094 | Fast GCMS Analysis of 60 VOC compounds using Headspace-Trap sampling | lorna Moffat (Shimadzu Schweiz GmbH, Switzerland) | H. Baier, c. Meisenbach, l. Moffat TU095 | Determination of geosmin and 2-methylisoborneol in environmental water samples by headspace solvent microextraction and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry | carlos alexandre Galinaro (Universidade de Sao paulo, Brazil) | G. Ribeiro, c. Galinaro, e. Vieira TU096 | Pixel-by-pixel retention time shift correction of GC x GC-HRTOFMS data | yasuyuki Zushi (Japan) | y. Zushi, J. Gros, S. Hashimoto, S. arey TU097 | Recursive data processing for quantitative non-target screening in GC x GC-HRTOFMS | yasuyuki Zushi (Japan) | y. Zushi, S. Hashimoto, K. Tanabe TU098 | The analysis of new and emerging halogenated organic pollutants in the Great Lakes using passive sampling and comprehensive Two Dimensional Gas Chromatography and High Resolution Mass Spectrometry | Miren penna (University of Toronto, canada) | M. Robson, a. Muscalu, l. Shen, M. penna, K. Jobst, X. ortiz, e. Reiner, i. Brindle, p. Helm TU099 | Screening for new compounds in complex matrices using two dimensional gas chromatography (GCxGC) coupled to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) | John Kucklick (national institute of Standards Technology, United States) | J. Kucklick, n. Rosenfelder, c. davis, y. nuevo-ordonez, K. Huncik TU100 | Optimizing a solid phase extraction method for tributyltin using a design of experiment and quantification with ID-GCICP-MS | ina Fettig (BaM Federal institute Materials Research and Testing, Germany) | i. Fettig, J. Richter, R. philipp, c. piechotta, e.

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alasonati, B. Fabbri, p. Fisicaro TU101 | Application of Chemical & Nuclear Techniques to study the Groundwater Contamination at Delhi India | Shilpi Saxena (University of delhi delhi india, india) | S. Saxena, J. Shrivastava, M. Rao, c. Kumar, B. Kumar Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the laboratory to the Field (p). chaired by: James lazorchak, dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell TU102 | Selection of the dirty dozen of pharmaceuticals of greatest concern to the aquatic environment. | Rachel donnachie (centre for ecology and Hydrology, United Kingdom) | R. donnachie, a. Johnson, J. Sumpter TU103 | Screening of hot spots of emerging pollutants in soil, ground water and surface water in The Netherlands: breaking the vicious cycle | Joost lahr (netherlands) | J. lahr, T. ter laak, a. derksen TU104 | Can ocean acidification affect the susceptibility to emerging contaminants in marine bivalve early-life stages? | Marco Munari (University of padova, italy) | M. Munari, G. chemello, V. Matozzo, M. Marin TU105 | Environmental Risk Assessment for Aquatic Organisms Exposed to Tamiflu Use under Seasonal Influenza and Pandemic Conditions | chung-Min liao (national Taiwan University, Taiwan) | c. liao, W. chen TU106 | Investigations of Photochemical Degradates of Pharmaceuticals in Water Samples | Wendy cory (college of charleston) | W. cory TU107 | Managing the quality of fish and shellfish immune capacities after diclofenac exposure in mesocosms. | anne Bado-nilles (France) | a. Bado-nilles, R. Beaudoin, S. Betoulle, S. Joachim, a. Geffard, a. pery, J. porcher, W. Sanchez TU108 | Transcriptome dynamics in Hydra after exposed to three pain relievers | Se-

TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

ungshic yum (Korea institute of ocean Science and Technology, Korea (South)) | S. yum, S. Woo TU109 | Evidence of neurotoxic effects of caffeine and ibuprofen on Corbicula fluminea | Gabriela aguirre-Martinez (Universidad de cadiz, Spain) | G. aguirre-Martinez, c. andre, F. Gagne, T. delValls, M. Martin-diaz TU110 | Acetaminophen ecotoxicity in a changing environment: oxidative effects in the edible clam Venerupis philippinarum under different conditions of salinity | Rosa Freitas (portugal) | R. Freitas, B. correia, e. Figueira, a. Soares, B. nunes TU111 | Ecotoxicity of four non-steroidal anti-inflammatory pharmaceutical pollutants on germination and growth of Lactuca sativa seeds | Mª Rosa pino (Spain) | M. pino, J. Val, e. navarro, e. langa TU112 | Dealing with confounding factor: Alterations of Dreissena polymorpha gonads exposed to a pharmaceutical pollutant (diclofenac) or to nutritive stress | Séverine paris (France) | S. paris, o. dedourge-Geffard, a. Baron, i. Henry-Bonnard, V. Gaillet, e. Kerambrun, J. porcher, s. joachim, a. Bigot-clivot, e. david, a. pery, a. Geffard TU113 | Assessment of direct and indirect photodegradation of selected drugs acting on the central nervous system | Milena Wawryniuk (poland) | M. Wawryniuk, K. czaplicka, G. nalecz-Jawecki TU114 | Toxic effects of carbamazepine on aquatic insect larvae | dennis Becker (Germany) | d. Becker, S. Teichert, J. oehlmann, S. Wagner TU115 | Effects of carbamazepine and fluoxetine to the springtail Folsomia candida under a multigeneration exposure | diogo Filipe nunes cardoso (ceSaM University of aveiro, portugal) | d. nunes cardoso, M. oliveira, a. Soares, S. loureiro TU116 | Presence of carbamazepine in coastal systems: effects on bivalves | Rosa Freitas (portugal) | R. Freitas, a. almeida, V. calisto,

V. esteves, a. Soares, e. Figueira TU117 | Environmental Risk Assessment of Propranolol | Kathryn Hutchinson (UK) | K. Hutchinson, n. Budgen, c. coleman, R. Murray-Smith, S. owen, p. Robinson, G. panter, J. Snape TU118 | Assessing the environmental hazard of mixtures of pharmaceuticals: chronic toxicity of fluoxetine and propranolol to the crustacean Daphnia magna | elena Fabbri (University of Bologna, italy) | V. Varano, e. Fabbri, a. pasteris TU119 | Initial microbial ecotoxicity assessment of Thioridazine, Thioridazine 5-Sulfoxide and photolytic mixtures of Thioridazine | Jakob Menz (leuphana University lüneburg, Germany) | J. Menz, c. Trautwein, M. Wilde, M. Schneider, K. Kümmerer TU120 | Combined effects of the pharmaceutical sertraline and Microcystis exposure on Daphnia magna | Melanie Hedgespeth (lund University, Sweden) | M. Hedgespeth, p. Sparks, o. Berglund, e. van donk, l. de Senerpont domis TU121 | Environmentally relevant concentrations of antidepressants affect crustaceans | alex Ford (University of portsmouth, United Kingdom) | M. Bossus, S. Short, S. Kohler, y. Guler, a. Ford TU122 | Genetic damage, lipid peroxidation and biotransformation enzymes in amphipods Ampelisca brevicornis in relation to pharmaceutical products spiked in sediment: carbamazepine, ibuprofen and propranolol. | luciane Maranho (Universidad de cadiz, Spain) | l. Maranho, T. del Valls casillas, M. Martin-diaz TU123 | State-of-the-art environmental risk assessment for valsartan | Birgit Hoeger (Switzerland) | B. Hoeger, J. Hellstern TU124 | Genotoxicity and ecotoxicity screening of photolytic mixtures from the selective ß1-receptor blockers Atenolol and Metoprolol | Mandy Schneider (Universität lüneburg, Germany) | M. Schneider, a. Tool-

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aram, J. Menz, T. Rastogi, K. Kümmerer TU125 | Predicting antibiotic resistance in aquaculture production systems and surrounding environments | andreu Rico (Wageningen University, netherlands) | a. Rico, p. van den Brink, a. Tello TU126 | Do environmental concentrations of pharmaceuticals and PCPs select for anti-microbial resistance? | aimee Murray (University of exeter, United Kingdom) | a. Murray, l. Zhang, B. Brown, J. Snape, W. Gaze TU127 | Residual toxicity of sulfamethoxazole transformation products on bioluminescence and growth of vibrio fischeri (24 h) | Marius Majewsky (Karlsruhe institute of Technology KiT, Germany) | M. Majewsky, M. delay, l. cuny, d. Wagner, S. Braese, H. Horn, V. yargeau TU128 | Residues and health risk assessment of quinolones and sulfonamides in cultured fish from Pearl River Delta, China | Xiangping nie (china) | X. He, X. nie TU129 | Non-target effects of ivermectin residues on soil organisms at 4 grassland sites (France, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Canada) | adam Scheffczyk (ecT oecotoxikology, Germany) | a. Scheffczyk, K. Floate, K. Floate, p. coghlin, R. duering, a. Klockner, J. lahr, J. lumaret, T. Tixier, M. Wohde, J. Roembke TU130 | An international ring test to assess effects of ivermectin | Joost lahr (netherlands) | J. lahr, K. Floate, K. Floate, J. lumaret, T. Tixier, M. Wohde, R. duering, J. Roembke TU131 | Short-term exposure to erythromycin and enrofloxacin can induces alterations in neuronal and oxidative stress parameters of zebrafish | Rhaul oliveira (University of Brasilia, portugal) | R. oliveira, T. andrade, J. lugo ladewig, a. Soares, a. nogueira, i. domingues TU132 | Biological and structural changes in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) after long-term exposure to clotrimazole |

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Viktoriia Burkina (University of South Bohemia in ceske Budejovice, czech Republic) | V. Burkina, R. oliveira, H. Schmidt-posthaus, i. domingues, G. Fedorova, c. Steinbach, S. Sakalli, T. Randak, V. Zlabek TU133 | Development of an obesogenic test in Daphnia magna | carlos Barata (cSic, Spain) | R. Jordao, M. lemos, a. Soares, J. casas, G. Fabrias, R. Tauler, c. Barata TU134 | Reducing the emissions of CO2 from a therapeutic intervention in patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with etanercept or adalimumab | Mª Rosa pino (Universidad San Jorge, Spain) | a. Gonzalez, J. Borras, e. Giner, n. loste, M. pino, M. Gomez TU135 | Omeprazole exposure induces biochemical and morphological changes in the fish gills. | Marisa Fernandes (Univeridade Federal de Sao carlos, Brazil) | M. Fernandes, e. Marques, V. cavicchioli azevedo, J. Barreiro, M. denadrai, Q. cass TU136 | Exposure concentration- and generation-dependent effect of antibiotic tetracycline on D. magna gene expression using Microarray analysis | Hyun young Kim (Korea atomic energy Research institute KaeRi, Korea (South)) | H. Kim, S. yu, T. Kim, J. Ra, T. Jeong, S. Kim TU137 | Fate of propranolol in soils in presence of Cu(II) | Rose-Michelle Smith (Université de Reims champagne-ardenne, France) | R. Smith, S. Sayen, e. Guillon TU138 | Relative importance of microplastics as a pathway for the transfer of hydrophobic organic contaminants to marine life | adil Bakir (University of plymouth enterprise ltd, United Kingdom) | a. Bakir, S. Wright, S. Rowland, T. Galloway, R. Thompson TU139 | Interaction of microplastics and oceanographic features in the North Atlantic | amy lusher (GalwayMayo insitute of Technology, ireland) | a. lusher, S. Fennell, i. o’connor, R. officer TU140 | Accumulation of plastic-derived chemicals in tissues of seabirds ingesting

TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

marine plastics: Leaching of hydrophobic chemicals from ingested plastics to digestive fluid | Kosuke Tanaka (Tokyo University of agriculture and Technology, Japan) | K. Tanaka, H. Takada, R. yamashita, K. Mizukawa, M. Fukuwaka, y. Watanuki TU141 | AhR agonists in beached marine plastic debris in the Pacific Ocean | Magnus engwall (orebro University, Sweden) | M. engwall, G. He, S. Frazer, M. larsson, M. denison TU142 | Beyond the Ocean: Plastic particles in limnetic ecosystems | christian laforsch (Germany) | c. laforsch, H. imhof, n. ivleva TU143 | Detection and analysis of plastics in the watercycle | Stefan Kools (KWR Watercycle Research institute, netherlands) | S. Kools, p. Bauerlein, W. Siegers, e. cornelissen, p. de Voogt TU144 | Embryotoxicity of microplastic particles to the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus | concepcion Martinez-Gomez (instituto español de oceanografia, Spain) | c. Martinez-Gomez, S. caselles, V. leon, d. Vethaak TU145 | Leaching of Plastic Additives to Marine Organisms | albert Koelmans (Wageningen University, netherlands) | a. Koelmans, e. Besseling, e. Foekema TU146 | Microplastics contamination in two planktivorous and commercial fish species | France collard (Belgium) | F. collard, e. parmentier, K. das TU147 | Modeling the Fate of Nano- and Microplastics in freshwater systems | ellen Besseling (WUR, netherlands) | e. Besseling, J. Quik, a. Koelmans TU148 | Producing fragmented micro- and nano-sized expanded polystyrene particles with an accelerated mechanical abrasion experiment | Won Joon Shim (Korea institute of ocean Science and Technology, Korea, South) | W. Shim, S. a, S. Hong, M. Jang, G. Han

micro-plastics in high-tidal coastal environments | Seung-Kyu Kim (department of Marine Science college of natural Sciences incheon national University, Korea (South)) | d. chae, i. Kim, S. Kim TU150 | Partitioning of selected hydrophobic organic chemicals between microplastics and seawater | Jung-Hwan Kwon (Korea University, Korea, South) | H. lee, W. Shim, J. Kwon Detection and characterisation of nanomaterials in complex aqueous matrices (P). chaired by: patrick Bauerlein, Ralf Kaegi TU151 | Coupling asymmetrical flow fieldflow fractionation with orbitrap high resolution mass spectrometry for the determinatino of (functionalised) aqueous fullerene aggregates. | patrick Bauerlein (KWR, netherlands) | p. Bauerlein, e. emke, p. Herrero, e. pocurull, p. de Voogt TU152 | Potential of hyperspectral imaging microscopy for semi-quantitative analysis of nanoparticle uptake into cells | alexander Gogos (agroscope, Switzerland) | M. Mortimer, a. Gogos, n. Bartolome, T. Bucheli, V. Slaveykova TU153 | Characterization and behavior of CdTe quantum dots in the aquatic environment: effects of salinity, pH and natural organic matter | Thiago Rocha (University of algarve, portugal) | T. Rocha, T. Gomes, V. Santos, M. Teixeira, J. pinheiro, M. Bebianno TU154 | Characterization of silver nanoparticles in aqueous matrices using asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation | Min-Hee Jang (Korea institute of Toxiclolgu, Korea (South)) | M. Jang, y. Hwang, y. lee Fate and effects of nanomaterials in soil (P). chaired by: c.a.M. van Gestel, david Spurgeon TU155 | Effect of silver nanoparticles in the microbiome of the isopod Porcellionides pruinosus | Jacinta oliveira (portugal) | J. oliveira, i. Henriques, a. correia, a. Soares, S. loureiro

TU149 | Variability in spatial distribution of

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TU156 | Internalization and depuration of silver nanoparticles in earthworm coelomocytes | youn-Joo an (Konkuk University, Korea (South)) | J. Kwak, y. an

us buchholzi (Oligochaeta) | patricks Voua otomo (Unit for environmental Sciences, South africa) | p. Voua otomo, V. Wepener, M. Maboeta

TU157 | Effects of TiO2 nanoparticles on the symbiosis of red clover and Rhizobium trifolii in a hydroponic system | Janine Moll (Switzerland) | J. Moll, a. Gogos, K. Knauer, T. Bucheli, M. Van der Heijden, F. Widmer

TU166 | Effect of trophic transfer of quantum dots in soil food chain | youn-Joo an (Konkuk University, Korea (South)) | S. Kim, J. Kwak, y. an

TU158 | Behavior of copper oxide nanoparticles in soil and their totxicity to Paronychiurus kimi (Collembola) | yun-sik lee (Korea Univ, Korea (South)) | y. lee, S. yu, y. Kim, H. Mo, K. cho TU159 | The toxicity of phenanthrene to the soil organisms Porcellionides pruinosus and Folsomia candida in the presence of CeO2 nanoparticles | paula Tourinho (University of aveiro, portugal) | p. Tourinho, J. Kool, c. van Gestel, a. Soares, S. loureiro TU160 | Toxicity of silver and zinc oxide nanoparticles to the terrestrial isopod Porcellionides pruinosus | patricia Silva (portugal) | p. Silva, p. Tourinho, S. loureiro TU161 | Soil type influence on Ag Nanoparticles by earthworms, Eisenia fetida | Jennifer Mariyadas (denmark) | J. Mariyadas, M. amorim, J. Scott-Fordsmand TU162 | Fate of silver nanoparticles after uptake into earthworms tissues - dissolution and/or excretion? | ana Romero (UGR, Spain) | a. Romero, e. lahive, M. diez ortiz, c. Svendsen TU163 | In vivo cytotoxicity of silver nanoparticles in three different sizes with earthworms | youn-Joo an (Konkuk University, Korea (South)) | J. Kwak, y. an TU164 | Induced genotoxicity by silicon nanoparticles with different Zeta potential on earthworm coelomocytes | Walter di Marzio (Universidad nacional de lujanconiceT, argentina) | W. di Marzio, S. curieses, M. Saenz TU165 | Single and mixture toxicity of gold nanoparticles and gold(III) to Enchytrae-

162

Usage, fate and risk of carbon based nanomaterials (P). chaired by: Marinella Farre, Thilo Hofmann, Melanie Kah TU167 | Increased sensitivity of second generation Hyalella azteca to the nanocomposite Carbo-Iron | Mirco Weil (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | M. Weil, T. Meissner, a. Springer, K. duis TU168 | Effect of the NM presence on the bioavailability of flame retardants | dàmia Barceló (iiQaBcSic, Spain) | G. Santín, e. eljarrat, d. Barcelo TU169 | Toxicity of unmodified and functionalized diet-borne C60 fullerene to the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis | pim leonards (VU University institute for environmental Studies, netherlands) | p. leonards, J. Kamstra, M. Kurth, J. Koene, d. Vethaak, T. Hamers TU170 | Green algae interacting with single-walled carbon nanotubes affect the feeding behaviour of mussels, mitigating nanotube toxicity | Majed alshaeri (HeriotWatt University, United Kingdom) | M. alshaeri, M. Hartl, p. cyphus TU171 | Toxicity evaluation in Xenopus laevis tadpoles exposed to multi walled carbon nanotubes under normalized conditions | Florence Mouchet (ecolaB UMR cnRS UpS inpT, France) | F. Mouchet, a. perrault, R. Saria, J. Boutonnet, e. Flahaut, e. pinelli, l. Gauthier TU172 | Genotoxicologic and histopathologic studies on Zebrafish (Danio rerio) exposed to cup-stacked carbon nanotubes | Jose de Souza Filho (University of Brasilia, Brazil) | J. de Souza Filho, l. Rivera, l. Franchi, c. Takahashi, J. Rosolen, c. Grisolia

TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

TU173 | Development of an analytical method for the determination of fullerenes in biological matrices | pim leonards (VU University institute for environmental Studies, netherlands) | S. Brandsma, p. leonards TU174 | Ecotoxicological effects of single walled carbon nanotubes against benthic organisms | Messika Revel (inRSinstitut armandFrappier, canada) | M. Revel, M. Fournier, p. Robidoux TU175 | Bioaccumulation and Ecotoxicity of Carbon Nanotubes | dana Kühnel (Helmholtzcentre for environmental Research, Germany) | d. Kühnel, p. Jackson, n. Jacobsen, a. Baun, R. Birkedal, K. Jensen, U. Vogel, H. Wallin TU176 | Carbon nanotubes in aqueous environments - fate and interaction with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons | Berit Glomstad (norwegian University of Science and Technology, norway) | B. Glomstad, l. Sorensen, l. Stoen, a. Booth TU177 | Toxicity of PAHs to freshwater algae and Daphnia magna in the presence of carbon nanotubes and natural organic matter | Berit Glomstad (norwegian University of Science and Technology, norway) | B. Glomstad, d. altin, a. Booth

genmortel, c. Janssen, K. de Schamphelaere TU181 | The influence of salinity and copper exposure on copper accumulation and physiological impairment in the sea anemone, Aiptasia pallida | Gretchen Bielmyer (Valdosta State University, United States) | G. Bielmyer, p. patel TU182 | Application of biotic ligand model theory in predicting Ni uptake and toxicity to Enchytraeus crypticus | erkai He (VU University amsterdam, netherlands) | e. He, H. Qiu, c. van Gestel TU183 | Toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics of cadmium in Folsomia candida exposed in a sand-solution matrix | Masoud ardestani (netherlands) | M. ardestani, c. Van Gestel TU184 | Effects of Nickel on Gammarus-induced avoidance behaviour of Chironomus riparius | Marnix van Gheluwe (aRcHe, Belgium) | l. nguyen, M. van Gheluwe, c. Schlekat, e. Garman, c. Janssen TU185 | Acute toxicities of 40 rare metals and others with Daphnia magna. | akira okamoto (University of Tokyo, Japan) | a. okamoto, n. Tatarazako

Bioavailablity and effects of metals and metal mixtures (P). chaired by: Koen oorts, Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere, paul Whitehouse

TU186 | Toxicity of thorium to various aquatic and terrestrial organisms | Matthias Findeiß (RWTH aachen University institute for environmental Research, Germany) | M. Findeiß, c. possberg, a. Schaeffer

TU178 | Derivation of ecologically relevant effects threshold concentrations for Pb in marine waters | patrick Van Sprang (aRcHe, Belgium) | p. Van Sprang, M. chowdhury

TU187 | A randomization test for statistical significance of non-additive toxicity in metal mixtures | Joseph Meyer (aRcadiS, United States) | J. Meyer, K. Farley

TU179 | A BLM-normalization software tool for freshwater risk assessment | patrick Van Sprang (aRcHe, Belgium) | i. Vercaigne, c. nys, J. Gustafsson, M. chowdhury, K. de Schamphelaere, p. Van Sprang, F. Verdonck

TU188 | Ecotoxicological assessment with Echytraeus crypticus of metal-mine waste polluted soils from Mediterranean Southeast Spain | M. nazaret González-alcaraz (Faculty of earth and life Sciences VU University, netherlands) | M. González-alcaraz, R. Verweij, c. a M

TU180 | A comparison of copper Biotic Ligand Models and different Daphnia magna clones and the first steps towards a generic BioAvailability Model (gBAM) for copper. | Tina Van Regenmortel (Belgium) | T. Van Re-

TU189 | Insights into heavy metal speciation and bioavailability in soils with the technique AGNES | Josep Galceran (Universitat

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de lleida, Spain) | e. companys, J. Galceran, M. Ramos, S. Franco, M. Vilarrasa, T. Grima, J. puy TU190 | Preliminary investigation of the state of pollution of Ogun River at Kara Abattoir, near Berger, Laos | Rose alani (University of lagos nigeria, nigeria) | R. alani, B. alo, F. Ukor TU191 | Concept for the assessment of inorganic UVCB (Substances of Unknown or Variable composition, Complex reaction products or Biological materials) under REACH and CLP | Violaine Verougstraete (eurometaux, Belgium) | V. Verougstraete, H. Waeterschoot, d. Vetter, F. Verdonck, F. iaccino, K. oorts, K. arijs, K. delbeke, c. Braibant, a. Kotze, K. lacasse Modelling of chemical fate and exposure in a regulatory context (P). chaired by: Bernhard Gottesbueren, Henrik Sundberg, Kathrin Fenner TU192 | Refinement options of OPS for the estimation of atmospheric deposition of typical large particle-bound substance in colling towers refinement options of ops | philippe adrian (ceHTRa SaRl, France) | p. adrian, J. Kohli, S. Kirkham TU193 | Evaluating the spatial variability of PAH atmospheric concentrations through precipitation sampling | Melissa Morselli (University of insubria, italy) | M. Morselli, F. Tagni, G. Raspa, a. di Guardo TU194 | Long-range transport of e-waste: Part 1. An inventory of the global generation and trans-boundary exports towards nonOECD countries. | Knut Breivik (norwegian inst for air Research, norway) | K. Breivik, J. armitage, F. Wania, K. Jones TU195 | Long-range transport of e-waste: Part 2. Exploring the potential implications of trans-boundary e-waste exports on chemical emissions, fate and exposures | James Michael armitage (University of Toronto Scarborough, canada) | J. armitage, F. Wania, K. Breivik TU196 | Modelling the climatic evolution of

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benzo-ą-pyrene levels over Europe | nuno Ratola (department of physics University of Murcia, Spain) | p. Jimenez-Guerrero, a. Garrido, n. Ratola TU197 | The climate change induced difference in the multimedia fate of VOCs and PCDDs/DFs as assessed on a monthly basis | lia chang (Korea, South) | l. chang, y. lee, H. Kim, J. Song, J. Jung, d. lee TU198 | Sensitivity analysis of key environmental fate parameters used in PETRORISK version 6.02 for the environmental risk assessment of petroleum substances | claire McMillan (cambridge environmental assessments, United Kingdom) | c. McMillan TU199 | Development of environmental multi-media fate model to predict pollutants behavior in coastal area including intertidal wetland | Seung-Kyu Kim (department of Marine Science college of natural Sciences incheon national University, Korea (South)) | S. Kim, i. Kim, d. chae, B. Kim, y. Kim TU200 | Physical-chemical properties and evaluative fate modeling of ‘emerging’ and ‘novel’ brominated, and non-halogenated flame retardants | ioannis liagkouridis (iVl Swedish environmental Research institute, Sweden) | i. liagkouridis, d. Kong, a. palm cousins, i. cousins TU201 | Modelling organic carbon flows and contaminant transport in the Baltic Sea watersheds - impact of future climate and land use change | Kim dahlgren Strååt (Stockholm University, Sweden) | K. dahlgren Strååt, c. Morth, e. Smedberg, e. Undeman TU202 | PAH and OPAH air-water flux and toxicity before, during and after shoreline oiling from the DWH/BP oil spill | Kim anderson (oregon State University, United States) | K. anderson, l. Tidwell, S. allan, S. o’connell, K. Hobbie TU203 | Degradation in soil of a short hydrocarbon cut: comparison with biodegradation data under standardized conditions | philippe adrian (ceHTRa SaRl, France) | p. adrian, J. Kohli, S. le Floch, p. lemaire

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TU204 | Antifouling biocides in German inshore & inland waters - How reliable are exposure prognoses of EU scenario models for marinas? | Michael Feibicke (Umweltbundesamt, Germany) | d. daehne, M. Feibicke, B. Watermann, c. Fuerle, a. Thomsen TU205 | Assessment of river water quality in catchments: Impact of urbanization on particle bound pollutant fluxes | Gaelle Guillet (Tübingen University, Germany) | H. Ruegner, M. Schwientek, M. Rode, G. Guillet, p. Grathwohl TU206 | Mixture-toxicity exposure assessment in FOCUS surface water scenarios Development of a software tool and implementation of a promising risk assessment approach into a user-friendly interface | denis Weber (eurofins Regulatory aG) | d. Weber TU207 | Dynamic modelling of persistence in environmental compartments | peter Richard Fisk (Saxon House, United Kingdom) | H. disley, p. Fisk TU208 | Placing persistence in context Looking for the right P criteria | Krisztian Szegedi (BaSF Se, Germany) | K. Szegedi, B. Gottesbueren TU209 | Spatio-temporal assessment of increased copper contents in vineyard soils due to historical application of copper fungicides - model region results | Matthias Trapp (Rlp agroScience ifa, Germany) | M. Trapp, K. Thomas, B. altmeyer, W. Koenig, T. Frische TU210 | Catchment scale modelling to refine FOCUS scenario based risk estimates of selected veterinary medicines to drinking water | Tim pepper (United Kingdom) | T. pepper, G. Hughes, H. lyons, p. Marsden TU211 | INCA-Contaminants: A dynamic integrated model for assessing chemical contaminant fate in catchments | luca nizzetto (niVa, norway) | l. nizzetto, d. Butterfield, M. Futter, T. larssen TU212 | How to estimate application dates

for FOCUS surface water scenarios based on plant growth stages? | camila Gaviria (Germany) | c. Gaviria, c. Hoerold TU213 | New Drift Deposition Inputs for Modelling Applications of Herbicides in Orchards and Vineyards | Roy Jackson (dow agrosciences, United Kingdom) | R. Jackson, l. Fogg TU214 | Linking exposure models to regulatory and sustainability driven frameworks | Tineke de Wilde (aRcHe, Belgium) | T. de Wilde, p. isigonis, F. Verdonck, d. Barcelo, R. Bonnard, p. ciffroy, a. critto, g. fait, e. Giubilato, T. Tanaka, a. Zabeo, p. Van Sprang TU215 | Modelling concentrations of PPP in ground water after spray application to hop | dirk nickisch (Germany) | d. nickisch, G. Wiedemann, n. Seiterle-Winn TU216 | The plant uptake factor (PUF): An update on ongoing activities at EU level | inga Bonath (Federal environment agency, Germany) | i. Bonath, a. nehls, R. Herr, K. Kuppe, c. pickl TU217 | Lysimeter studies and inverse modelling as higher tier options for groundwater risk assessment? | anne osterwald (Germany) | a. osterwald, W. Koenig, G. Holdt, M. Klein, c. pickl TU218 | Wash-off implementation in FOCUSgw models | Gerald Reinken (Bayer cropScience aG, Germany) | G. Reinken, p. Sweeney, K. Szegedi, d. Tessier, d. yon TU219 | Coupling leaching simulations with groundwater transport models in the evaluation of monitoring data for plant protection products. | Benedict Miles (Germany) | B. Miles TU220 | Comparison of measured and modelled groundwater concentrations of chloridazon in Switzerland | Gregor Spickermann (eurofins Regulatory aG, Switzerland) | G. Spickermann TU221 | Adsorption coefficient of active pharmaceutical ingredients to sewage

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sludge: progress in measurement and prediction | laurence Berthod (astrazeneca University of portsmouth, United Kingdom) | l. Berthod, G. Roberts, a. Sharpe, G. Mills, d. Whitley Sorption and bioavailability of organic chemicals: mechanisms and applications in innovative remediation (p). chaired by: Jose-Julio ortega-calvo, John parsons TU222 | Sorption and remediation of halogenated organic pollutants from contaminated water sources using polyphenol-functionalized magnetic nanocomposites | Bradley newsome (University of Kentucky, United States) | B. newsome, M. petriello, B. Hennig TU223 | Impact of activated carbon and biochar on biodegradation of crude oil in produced seawater on off-shore oil platform | Geoffrey Marchal (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark) | G. Marchal, S. nielsen, S. do TU224 | Dehalogenation of hexachlorobenzene at environmentally relevant concentrations by novel laser-ablated Pd(0) nanocatalysts | leonard Boehm (Justus liebig University Giessen, Germany) | l. Boehm, l. neumann, M. Bunge, R. duering TU225 | Assessing contaminant bioavailability in sediment using direct and passive sampling methodologies | elisa Bizzotto (italy) | e. Bizzotto, F. Santoro, F. Rosignoli, J. conder, F. colombo TU226 | Improving bacterial transport and bioavailability by the combined effects of dissolved organic matter (DOM) and bacterial tactic responses | celia Jimenez Sanchez (inst de Recursos naturales y agrobiol de Sevilla, Spain) | c. Jimenez Sanchez, l. Wick, M. cantos, J. ortega-calvo TU227 | Promoting microbial life at the aqueous-interface of non aqueous phase liquids (NAPLs): a low-risk strategy to enhance biodegradation of sparingly bioavailable PAHs | Jose-Julio ortega-calvo (instituto de Recursos naturales y agrobiologia, Spain) | R. Sungthong, J. ortega-calvo

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TU228 | Simulation and measurement of bacterial growth on low soluble phenanthrene substrate | Stefan Trapp (danmark Tekniske Universitet, denmark) | S. Trapp, i. adam, a. Rein, a. Miltner, a. dacostaFulgencio, M. Kaestner TU229 | An energy-efficient and simple bioremediation technique for oil-contaminated soil clean-up by just spraying a versatile foam | Seung-Woo Jeong (Kunsan national University, Korea (South)) | S. Jeong, J. Jeong, y. Jeong, J. Kim TU230 | Ready biodegradability of poorly water-soluble substances: Evaluation of Bioavailability Improvement Methods (BIM) for Anthraquinone and Isodecyl neopentanoate in OECD 301 B test | cyril Sweetlove (loReal Sa, France, Metropolitan) | c. Sweetlove, J. cheneble, y. Barthel, G. Hetzel-naviliat, M. Boualam, J. lharidon TU231 | Structural similarity of organic aminomethylenephosphonates described by Tanimoto coefficient and its correlation with binding behaviour to a hydroxyapatite substrate | peter Richard Fisk (Saxon House, United Kingdom) | J. loesel, p. Fisk, R. Wildey TU232 | Effects of activated carbon amendment on Lumbriculus variegatus in PCB contaminated sediment: responses in freshly amended and aged systems | inna nybom (Finland) | i. nybom, K. Maenpaa, J. Kukkonen, M. leppanen, J. akkanen TU233 | The iso chemical structure on the ecotoxicity of ionic liquids | Joana luisa pereira (University of aveiro, portugal) | S. Ventura, T. Sintra, a. Goncalves, J. pereira, F. Goncalves, J. coutinho Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (P). chaired by: Tomas Rydberg TU234 | Assessment of natural resource depletion - a surprising diversity: A quantitative comparison of impact models | Jakob Rorbech (Technical University of denmark, denmark) | J. Rorbech, S. Hellweg, c. Vadenbo, T. astrup

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TU235 | How does the choice of ILCD’s recommended practice for characterization modelling change the assessment of environmental impacts in LCA of products? | alexis laurent (Technical University of denmark, denmark) | M. owsianiak, a. laurent, a. Bjorn, M. Hauschild TU236 | Reckoning of Operational and Environmental Benchmarks within 180 Wastewater Treatment Plants in Spain | Gumersindo Feijoo costa (University of Santiago de compostela, Spain) | y. lorenzo, S. chenel cebro, S. Mcennis, M. Moreira Vilar, G. Feijoo costa TU237 | The use of biomasses in the construction sector: the case study of hempbased building materials | Giovanni dotelli (politecnico di Milano, italy) | G. dotelli, p. Melia, G. Ruggieri, S. Sabbadini TU238 | Using Life cycle assessments for the integration of environmental aspects in a sustainable controlling tool within the system of water supply and wastewater disposal | nadine Jansky (TU darmstadt, Germany) | n. Jansky, l. Schebek TU239 | Regional Emission Account in Life Cycle Assessment of Agricultural System | albina yalaltdinova (Tomsk polytechnic University, Russia) | a. yalaltdinova, J. Kim, n. Sirina, n. Baranovskaya TU240 | Parameterized LCA models for geothermal energy systems: from detailed to simplified models by applying a Global Sensitivity Analysis | Mathilde Marchand (ecole des Mines de paris, France) | M. Marchand, a. Marquand, i. Blanc, S. Bezelgues courtade, a. Beylot TU241 | Analysis of Adequacy of LCA Comparison of types of walls on the ILCD methodology. Goal step to Inventory step. | catarina Moraes de oliveira Sombrio (Brazil) | c. Sombrio, R. Blumenschein, K. Miller TU242 | Improving resources use and depletion assessment phase during LCA | Jade Garcia (ScoRe lca, France) | J. Garcia, p. osset, c. petiot, F. Witte

TU243 | Regionalization of LCA using GIS: Environmental assessment of a coastal territory at a local scale. | laure nitschelm (inRaagrocampus ouest, France) | l. nitschelm, M. corson, J. aubin, V. Viaud, c. Walter TU244 | Water deprivation at the sub-river basin scale at midpoint and endpoint level in LCA | philippe loubet (Veolia eau d'ile-deFrance, France) | p. loubet, p. Roux, V. Bellon-Maurel TU245 | A novel multi-scale integrated framework for Life Cycle Impact Assessment of ecosystem services | Benedetto Rugani (centre de Recherche public Henri Tudor cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg) | B. Rugani, e. Benetto, R. Heijungs TU246 | Approach for Assessment of Land Use Impacts by Agricultural Intensification: The Case of Ukraine | Karoline Wowra (Germany) | K. Wowra, l. Schebek TU247 | A method for assessing green water flows: case study of Eucalyptus globulus forest in Portugal | paula Quinteiro (University of aveiro, portugal) | p. Quinteiro, a. dias, B. Ridoutt, l. arroja TU248 | Water-stress characterisation factors for future-oriented LCA | Montse núñez (Spain) | M. núñez, M. Vargas, S. pfister, a. anton TU249 | Land Use in LCIA: an absolute scale proposal for Biotic Production Potential. | Koldo Saez de Bikuña (denmark) | K. Saez de Bikuña, M. Hauschild, a. ibrom TU250 | Contribution to Arctic Climate Change from Countries in the Arctic Council | Tobias Schultz (ScS Global Services, United States) | T. Schultz TU251 | Characterizing regionalized land use flows for Swiss forestry products and quantifying their impact on biodiversity | abhishek abhishek (eTH Zurich, Switzerland) | a. abhishek, S. Hellweg TU252 | Quantifying variability in the carbon footprint of global wind power | Zoran

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Steinmann (Radboud University nijmegen, netherlands) | l. dammeijer, Z. Steinmann, M. Hauck, M. Huijbregts TU253 | A method for calculating the “grey water footprint” using the life cycle approach | lucas pereira (cnpeM, Brazil) | l. pereira, o. cavalett, a. Bonomi TU254 | TOX-TRAIN: the user-friendly toolbox for human and ecotoxicity assessment in LCA | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland) | X. Bengoa, M. Birkved, p. Fantke, l. Golsteijn, S. Humbert, S. Sourisseau, R. Van Zelm, R. Rosenbaum TU255 | AIIDA: The online database for sharing and computing ecotoxicity data in the context of REACH | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | J. payet, o. Hugonnot, e. Maillard TU256 | Comparing method and data availability for calculation of chemical footprint | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | J. payet, o. Hugonnot, e. Maillard

TU261 | Assessing chemical footprint of Europe to support chemical policies for products | Serenella Sala (Joint Research centre european commission, italy) | S. Sala

biota damage due to suspended sediments in water column | paula Quinteiro (University of aveiro, portugal) | p. Quinteiro, a. dias, a. araujo, B. Ridoutt, l. arroja

TU277 | The use of dye tracers in field-based regulatory studies to quantify pesticide spray drift | Tim pepper (United Kingdom) | l. Fogg, T. pepper

TU262 | The French Ecotoxicity Footprint project is using the Usetox model for assessing impacts of products on freshwater ecosystems | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | J. payet, e. Maillard, o. Hugonnot, c. Roussel

TU270 | Limits of the USEtox methodology for environmental labelling of rinse-off cosmetic products | Jacques lharidon (loReal, France) | J. lharidon, p. Martz, J. cheneble, J. campion

TU278 | Quantifying the efficiency of vegetative buffers in removing pesticide contained in surface runoff - under a range of field and climatic conditions | Tim pepper (United Kingdom) | T. pepper, G. Hughes, n. Brettell

TU263 | New characterisation approaches within the 4th generation ecological scarcity method: abiotic resources and nuclear waste | Rolf Frischknecht (Treezeltd, Switzerland) | R. Frischknecht, S. Buesser Knoepfel, a. Braunschweig, p. Gerber, n. egli, G. Hildesheimer TU264 | Dynamic and geographic extensions of LCIA for incorporation with an integrated assessment model | norihiro itsubo (Tokyo institute of Technology Tokyo Tech, Japan) | K. Tokimatsu, R. ii, R. yasuoka, n. itsubo, M. nishio

TU271 | Spatial and temporal variation of health damage factors for PM2.5 and ozone on a continent level | norihiro itsubo (Tokyo city University, Japan) | l. Tang, T. nagashima, K. Hasegawa, T. ohara, K. Sudo, n. itsubo TU272 | Indoor exposure to emissions from wood products: Complementary views from life cycle assessment and risk assessment | abhishek abhishek (eTH Zurich, Switzerland) | a. abhishek, S. Hellweg Monitoring the efficiency of risk mitigation measure protecting the environment from pesticide exposure and effects (P). chaired by: Katja Knauer, anne alix

TU257 | Towards a more robust fate modelling of metals’ long-term emissions in an LCIA context | ioannis Bakas (dTU, denmark) | i. Bakas, T. astrup, M. Hauschild, R. Rosenbaum

TU265 | How to use the available knowledge in LCIA to help understand relative importance and relevance in trade-offs and help making an informed decision | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland) | S. Humbert, o. Jolliet, M. Margni, R. Rosenbaum, c. Bulle

TU273 | Clarification analysis for bentazone findings in groundwater reservoirs in Germany | Wolfram Koenig (Federal environment agency UBa, Germany) | W. Koenig, S. Karl, a. Mueller, c. pickl, K. Thomas, M. Trapp

TU258 | Including the introduction of exotic species in Life Cycle Impact Assessment: the case of inland shipping | Rosalie Van Zelm (Radboud University, netherlands) | M. Huijbregts, M. Hanafiah, R. leuven, n. Sommerwerk, R. Van Zelm, K. Tockner

TU266 | “Base IMPACTS®”: setting up a database to support the French footprint programme on mass market products | olivier Rethore (adeMe, France) | o. Rethore

TU274 os for spatial GmbH,

TU267 | Carbon Footprint of Printing Industry in China and Data Quality Analysis | Sha chen (Beijing Unversity of Technology, china) | S. chen, y. li, l. cao, Z. liu, y. chen

TU275 | The use of monitoring data of Swiss surface water in the post-registration process | Katja Knauer (Federal office for agriculture, Switzerland) | K. Knauer

TU268 | The effect of land use changes on greenhouse gas emissions in the wine sector: a case study for the Ribeiro appellation (NW Spain) | Maria Moreira (University of Santiago de compostela, Spain) | p. Villanueva, i. Vázquez-Rowe, M. otero, R. Blanco, M. Moreira, G. Feijoo

TU276 | Atrazine Ecological Monitoring Program (AEMP): Stewardship and Best Management Practices (BMPs) in Runoff-Vulnerable Watersheds of the U.S. | clint Truman (Syngenta crop protection inc, United States) | c. Truman, M. White, S. chen, T. Barlow, d. campbell, c. Harbourt, a. lynn, l. carver

TU259 | Pursuing an ecological component for the Effect Factor in LCIA methods | nuno cosme (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark) | n. cosme, a. Bjorn, R. Rosenbaum TU260 | Large Marine Ecosystems and coastal water archetypes implemented in LCIA methods for marine eutrophication and metals ecotoxicity | nuno cosme (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark) | n. cosme, y. dong, M. Hauschild

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TU269 | Characterisation factors for aquatic

| Selection of worst-case scenarigroundwater risk assessment using data | Barbara Kind (WSc Scientific Germany) | B. Kind

TU279 | Mitigation measures to reduce the runoff and erosion in experimental field in Poland according to recommended TOPPS-Prowadis manual - Best Management Practices | Magdalena Bielasik-Rosinska (institute of environmental protection nRi) | M. Bielasik-Rosinska, d. Maciaszek, i. Kondzielski TU280 | Agri-environmental indicator for the risk of aquatic ecotoxicity | Simon Spycher (agroscope changinsWaedenswil Research Station acW, Germany) | S. Spycher, l. de Baan, o. daniel TU281 | Implications of climate change on the sustainability goals in the use of plant protection products in Germany | Konstantin Kuppe (Umweltbundesamt, Germany) | K. Kuppe, S. Huck, S. pieper, S. Matezki Risk assessment of chemical mixtures: strategies, bottlenecks, and the steps ahead (p). chaired by: Thomas Backhaus, lennart Weltje, Romanas cesnaitis TU282 | Development of the Hydrocarbon Block Method for Environmental Risk Assessment of Petroleum Products | Mike comber (United Kingdom) | M. comber, a. Redman, T. parkerton, M. leon-paumen, c. eadsforth, K. den Haan TU283 | Analytical Characterization of Petroleum Products | charles eadsforth (Shell international, United Kingdom) | c. eadsforth, M. comber, M. leon paumen, a. Redman, T. parkerton, K. den Haan TU284 | Applications of PETROTOX in hazard assessment of petroleum substances | aaron Redman (exxon Mobil Biomedical

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Sciences, United States) | a. Redman, T. parkerton, M. comber, M. leon paumen, c. eadsforth, K. den Haan TU285 | PETRORISK - an Excel based tool for conducting environmental risk assessment of petroleum substances | Miriam leon paumen (exxonMobil Biomedical Sciences, Belgium) | M. leon paumen, a. Redman, K. den Haan, T. parkerton, M. comber, c. eadsforth TU286 | Hydrocarbon Block Approach for Petroleum Products risk assessment - Summary and Conclusions, including further work | Mike comber (United Kingdom) | M. comber, a. Redman, T. parkerton, M. leon-paumen, c. eadsforth, K. den Haan TU287 | Assessing the cost effective potential sequential extraction offers to industrial management of steel process by-products. | Kiri Rodgers (University of the West of Scotland, United Kingdom) | K. Rodgers, a. Hursthouse, S. cuthbert TU288 | Ecotoxicological assessment of the environmental compatibility of construction products for outdoor applications | ines Heisterkamp (Hydrotox GmbH, Germany) | i. Heisterkamp, F. Flach, U. Schoknecht, n. Bandow, M. Burkhardt, c. dietschweiler, M. Ratte, o. ilvonen, S. Gartiser TU289 | Bio assays as integrated tool for the assessment of construction products | nicole Bandow (Federal institute for Materials Research and Testing, Germany) | n. Bandow, S. Gartiser, i. Heisterkamp, H. Mathies, U. Schoknecht TU290 | Contributions of individual metals to equitoxic mixture toxicity | Michiel Kraak (University of amsterdam, netherlands) | M. Kraak, R. Korver, R. Vis, J. Schutt, K. duinmeijer, S. Sjollema TU291 | Field relevance of laboratory metal mixture toxicity tests | Sascha Sjollema (University of amsterdam, netherlands) | S. Sjollema, R. Fernandez, K. Kloet, J. Kreuning, T. peters, a. Spelt, M. Kraak

TU292 | Uptake kinetics and toxicity of Cd, Cu and Pb mixtures in Asellus aquaticus using stable isotope techniques | Maarten de Jonge (University of antwerp, Belgium) | M. de Jonge, K. Sprangers, n. Van Turnhout, l. Bervoets, R. Blust TU293 | Environmental risk assessment of metal carboxylates | lieve claeys (aRcHe, Belgium) | l. claeys, K. oorts TU294 | Exploring mixture toxicity of herbicides in rivers and its treatment by ecotoxicological models | Sinéad Marley (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg) | S. Marley, r. carafa, T. Galle, M. Schmitt-Jansen, R. altenburger, a. Schaeffer TU295 | Should tank mixtures be considered in evaluating the risk of plant protection products to aquatic organisms? | otto daniel (agroscope acW, Switzerland) | R. Gauch, a. aldrich, K. lautenschlager, o. daniel TU296 | Binary mixture toxicity of triclosan and carbendazim on Daphnia magna | ana Silva (University of aveiro, portugal) | a. Silva, d. cardoso, a. cruz, J. lourenco, S. Mendo, a. Soares, S. loureiro TU297 | Evaluation of Genotoxic Effects of Ayahuasca in Wistar Rats | Willian Melo Junior (University of Brasilia, Brazil) | W. Melo Junior, e. caldas, J. de Souza Filho, c. Grisolia, a. pic-Taylor TU298 | Sensitivity of hypogean and epigean freshwater copepods (Crustacea Copepoda) to agricultural pollutants: single toxicants and mixtures | Walter di Marzio (Universidad nacional de lujanconiceT, argentina) | T. di lorenzo, d. Galassi, W. di Marzio TU299 | Impact of pollutant mixtures on feral fish - Biomarker analysis within the SOLUTIONS EU FP7 project and Joint Danube Survey 3 | Björn deutschmann (RWTH aachen University, Germany) | B. deutschmann, W. Brack, S. Kaisarevic, M. Krauss, T. Schulze, T. Seiler, S. Sipos, H. Hollert TU300 | Cytotoxic and genotoxic effects of

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TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

water and air samples from polluted areas in Kosovo | Fisnik asllani (University of prishtina, Kosovo) | a. alija, i. Bajraktari, n. Bresgen, e. Bojaxhi, M. Krenn, T. Bajra, a. Mustafa, V. Kostanica, F. Shala, F. asllani, p. eckl TU301 | Toxicological effects of mixtures of chemical pollutants at EQS concentrations | Raquel n. carvalho (european commission Joint Research centre, italy) | R. n. carvalho, a. arukwe, S. ait-aissa, a. Bado-nilles, S. Balzamo, S. Barbizzi, M. Buchetti, a. Baun, S. Belkin, M. Belli, M. Benisek, l. Blaha, M. dalla Bona, F. Brion, e. calabretta, d. conti, n. creusot, y. essig, V. Ferrero, V. Flander-putrle, M. Fürhacker, R. Grillari, a. lundebye, c. Hogstrand, c. Hopkins, a. Jonas, B. Jug, p. Kunz, R. lavado, R. loos, c. Martone, p. Masner, c. Modig, a. nekvapilova, p. olsson, a. pati, S. pillai, n. polak, M. potalivo, M. pipal, n. Bury, W. Sanchez, a. Schifferli, S. Schnell, K. Schirmer, l. Softeland, S. Sturzenbaum, S. Tavazzi, V. Turk, a. Viarengo, i. Werner, S. yagur-Kroll, R. Zounkova, T. lettieri TU302 | Mixtures of bioactive compounds associated with cyanobacterial water blooms | Jakub Javůrek (Research centre for Toxic compounds in the environment ReceToX, czech Republic) | J. Javůrek, K. novakova, o. adamovsky, J. Kohoutek, K. Hilscherova TU303 | Critical Evaluation of USEPA’s Toxicological Assessment of Benzo(a)pyrene & PAH Mixtures | Brian Magee (aRcadiS, United States) | B. Magee TU304 | Time-dependent mixture toxicity assessment for aquatic organisms | Gero eck (eurofins Regulatory aG, Switzerland) | G. eck, G. Spickermann, d. Weber TU305 | Preliminary studies for application of the WHO/IPCS framework on multiple chemicals to regulatory environmental risk assessment | Kunihiko yamazaki (env Health dep Ministry of the environment, Japan) | K. yamazaki TU306 | REACH-compliant risk assessment of a naturally-sourced complex substance | peter Richard Fisk (Saxon House, United Kingdom) | p. Fisk, l. Mclaughlin, a. Girling

TU307 | Use of the “Maximum Cumulative Ratio” as a tool for prioritization of mixtures exposures to Plant Protection Products (PPPs): a case study based on surface water monitoring in the USA. | nathalie Vallotton (dow europe GmbH, Switzerland) | n. Vallotton, p. price TU308 | Research recommendations to improve an environmental integrity and human health risk analysis in a groundwater-supplied borrow-pit lake ecosystem | Kurt Maier (east Tennessee State University, United States) | K. Maier, p. Scheuerman TU309 | Devils in the tails - Assessing mixture toxic pressure (msPAF) and chemical footprinting for emerging chemicals | dik van de Meent (RiVM, netherlands) | R. oldenkamp, M. Zijp, l. posthuma, d. de Zwart, d. van de Meent Chemical pollution in sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems - challenges and approaches from a Swiss perspective (P). chaired by: christian Stamm, nele Schuwirth, Mario Schirmer TU310 | Biocides in combined sewer systems: dry and wet weather occurrence and sources | Kai Bester (aarhus University, denmark) | U. Bollmann, c. petersen, e. eriksson, K. Jonsson, K. Bester

Poster Corners Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development (PC). chaired by: Tomas Rydberg TUpc01 | Risk and Life Cycle Impact Assessment of municipal waste management | denis Sarigiannis (Greece) | d. Sarigiannis, e. Handakas, a. Gotti, S. Karakitsios TUpc02 | Spatial differentiation for toxic emissions in LCA: the importance of “cumulated equivalent depth” on a 0.5° by 0.5° resolution | anna Kounina (Quantis epFl, Switzerland) | a. Kounina, M. Margni, a. Henderson, c. Wannaz, o. Jolliet TUpc03 | Human health impact assessment

171


TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

of indoor pollutants with USEtox in LCA | Ralph Rosenbaum (national Research institute of Science and Technology for environment and agriculture irstea, denmark) | R. Rosenbaum, R. doernen TUpc04 | Endpoint method for impact assessment of road traffic noise on human health | daniel Garrain (cieMaT, Spain) | e. Moliner, d. Garrain, R. Vidal TUpc05 | Accounting for variation in exposure settings in the Life Cycle Impact Assessment of indoor chemical emissions: the case of metal degreasing | Rosalie Van Zelm (Radboud University, netherlands) | l. Golsteijn, d. Huizer, M. Hauck, R. Van Zelm, M. Huijbregts

Fracking, seismics and spills: environmental risk assessment of oil and gas exploration and production (pc). chaired by: Mathijs Smit, pim leonards TUpc13 | Scenarios for shale gas development in the Baltic Basin, Northern Poland | Serenella Sala (Joint Research centre european commission, italy) | c. Baranzelli, i. Vandecasteele, R. Barranco, i. Mari Rivero, p. nathan, S. Sala, c. lavalle

TUpc20 | Environmental Risk Assessment of Metformin | Juerg oliver Straub (FHoffmannla Roche ltd, Switzerland) | d. caldwell, J. Straub, T. davidson, J. Tell, J. Ryan, K. Kappler, p. Robinson, R. Murray-Smith, V. d\’aco TUpc21 | Fish toxicity of diclofenac: ocular lesions and quantitatively evaluated histopathological organ changes | Julia Schwaiger (Bavarian environment agency, Germany) | c. Birzle, a. Blutke, H. Ferling, K. Scholz, R. Wanke, J. Schwaiger

TUpc14 | Bioanalytical and Chemical Assessment of Coal Seam Gas Associated Water | Beate escher (University of Queensland, australia) | J. Tang, J. edebeli, G. Jackson, p. Jagals, F. leusch, M. Taulis, B. escher

TUpc22 | Behaviour of diclofenac and structural related non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in nitrifying lab scale batch reactors | Sandra perez (idaea, cSic, Spain) | S. perez, V. osorio Torrens, B. Zonja, d. Barcelo

TUpc15 | Total Dissolved Solids Reflective of Natural Resource Extraction Activities Stimulate Growth and Toxicity of the Invasive Harmful Alga Prymnesium parvum | Bryan Brooks (Baylor University, United States) | K. prosser, W. Scott, S. eytcheson, J. lazorchak, c. nietch, l. Reynolds, B. Brooks

TUpc23 | Evaluation of biological endpoints in crop plants after exposures to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs | Wiebke Schmidt (european centre for environment and Human Health eceHH, United Kingdom) | W. Schmidt, c. Redshaw

TUpc08 | An investigation of the potential toxicity of dietary Pb to Ceriodaphnia dubia | charlotte nys (University of Ghent, Belgium) | c. nys, c. Janssen, K. de Schamphelaere

TUpc16 | Modelling effects of oil constituents on survival and reproduction of aquatic species | lisette de Hoop (Radboud University nijmegen, netherlands) | l. de Hoop, K. Viaene, a. Schipper, M. Huijbregts, F. de laender, c. Janssen, J. Hendriks

TUPC24 | Genotoxicity of two pharmaceuticals in zebra mussels hemocytes and sperm cells, after ex vivo and in vivo exposure | Gabrielle Magniez (Laboratoire dEcologie AnimaleEcotoxicologie, France) | G. Magniez, L. Delahaut, S. Joachim, E. Vulliet, A. Pery, J. Porcher, E. Guillon, A. Geffard, M. Bonnard

TUpc09 | Metal Distribution and Risk Assessment in Freshwater Sediments under the Influence of Metal Mining. | anne Kristiina Saarela (University of eastern Finland, Finland) | a. Saarela, T. Kauppila, J. Makinen, l. Solismaa, J. akkanen

TUpc17 | Factors Affecting Ecosystem Resilience and Recovery Associated with Oil Spills - Considering Acute and Chronic Effects | Joseph nicolette (enViRon international corporation, United States) | J. nicolette, M. Sorensen, S. deacon

TUpc10 | Long-term problems in the recovered area affected by the Aznalcóllar’s mine spill | ana Romero (UGR, Spain) | F. Martin peinado, a. Romero, i. Garcia Fernandez, M. Simon Torres, M. Sierra aragon, i. ortiz Bernad

Ecological Consequences of Exposure to Pharmaceuticals: From the laboratory to the Field (pc). chaired by: James lazorchak, dàmia Barceló, Joan Tell, daniel caldwell

Effects of Mining on the Local Environment (PC). chaired by: Benjamin davies TUpc07 | Death in the fast lane: Ion imbalance in Daphnia magna exposed in situ in acid mine drainage-impacted waters | James Ranville (colorado School of Mines, United States) | R. pastorinho, J. Ranville, M. Williams, J. Meyer

TUpc11 | Remediation of a metal-arsenic polluted soil using amendments. A case of study in El Arteal mining district (SE Spain). | Veronica Gonzalez (France) | V. Gonzalez, i. Garcia, J. Sanchez, F. del Moral, S. de Haro,

172

M. Simon

TUeSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

TUpc19 | Consumption based modelling of pharmaceuticals to predict environmental loads | Stefan Kools (KWR Watercycle Research institute, netherlands) | S. Kools, p. van diepenbeek, J. Hofman, H. Tolkamp, T. ter laak

173


WedneSday 14 May

Science Slam, Auditorium Montreal 16:30-18:00

Science slam

Platform and special sessions 08:10-12:50 13:55-16:00

Platform sessions + special session Platform sessions + special session

Poster display 07:45–08:10 10:15–10:45 12:50–13:55 16:00–16:30 17:15–18:30 18:30–19:00

Poster setup Morning coffee break: attend poster Lunch & poster session: attend poster Afternoon coffee break: attend poster Poster session & social: attend poster Poster take-down

Poster corner discussions 17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

17:20-18:30

174

WEPC01 – WEPC06 Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries. Chaired by: Serenella Sala, Tomas Ekvall, Guido Sonnemann WEPC07 - WEPC12 Teaching and communicating sustainability - paving the way to a common understanding and meaningful actions. Chaired by: Ralph Rosenbaum WEPC13 – WEPC18 Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling. Chaired by: Monika Nendza, Henriette Selck, Aurelia Lapczynski, Christian Schlechtriem WEPC19 – WEPC24 Research on communication and communication of research pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach. Chaired by: Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, Henner Hollert, Ursala Klaschka, Katharina Tarnacki

175


Special SeSSionS

Research on communication and communication of research – pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach (SS03) Wednesday, 14 May, 10:45 – 12:50, Shanghai 3/4 This special session will review and combine practical experiences and theoretical backgrounds to elaborate principles and strategies of science and risk communication for increasing the visibility of environmental sciences. Proper communication of research topics and findings is crucial for environmental sciences to have an impact with the public and policy. This became more than clear during the sessions on science communication at the SETAC World Meeting 2012 in Berlin and at the SETAC Europe Meeting 2013 in Glasgow. However, we also concluded that successful communication requires particular communication skills to engage with policy makers and the public, and that environmental scientists usually are not educated (enough) to do so. Actually, this is no surprise since communication as a subject is not part of most environmental scientists’ curriculum. It is, however, astonishing that a research field as relevant to people’s everyday life as environmental sciences seems to have a large deficit regarding communication with the public – and thus is still nearly invisible on daily news. Environmental sciences almost exclusively come into focus on the occurrence of emergencies and disasters; but they also disappear as quickly. With the first and acclaimed session on science and risk communication at Berlin 2012 we started a process to lead into a broad discussion about why environmental sciences fail to effectively translate their message, and how to change this situation for the better. The follow-up event at Glasgow – this time featuring a panel discussion – was also well-received. This strong attention definitely revealed a need for such topics at annual meetings and for a forum to further analyse and discuss the state of communication in environmental sciences. With a special session at the SETAC Europe Meeting 2014 in Basel we seek to bring together two sides of the story: colleagues with experience in science and risk communication from a practical point of view, and those with theoretical background based on their education. We provide presentations about both research on communication and communication of research. The session will present an overview of the state of science and risk communication within the SETAC community from a scientific and a practical point of view. We combine in one session practical experience and theoretical back-

176

Special SeSSionS

ground, rather commentary/opinion/discussion/report-like contributions with actual research and hard science. Of interest are presentations from several geographical regions to linking environmental science, health and risk communication in different parts of the world. We are especially interested in the methods used for communicating research findings to lay populations. Programme Chairs: Thomas-Benjamin Seiler (RWTH Aachen University, Germany), Henner Hollert (RWTH Aachen University, Germany), Ursula Klaschka (University of Capetown, South Africa), Katharina Tarnacki (RWTH Aachen University, Germany) 10:45 Introduction (Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, RWTH Aachen University, Germany) 10:50 Bridging the Gap: A Case for the use of Social Media in Environmental Science (Sarah Bowman, The Ohio State University, USA) 11:10 Blogging: a tool for informal communication of scientific research and technology (Jared Bozich, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA) 11:30 Uncertainties in environmental nanoparticle research: what is communicated in scientific literature and mass media (Ilona Heidmann, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany) 11:50 Effective environmental risk communication - success stories or urban legends? (Agnieszka Hunka, University of Twente, Netherlands) 12:10 Science Communication in the Field of Innovative Human Safety Assessment: The SEURAT-1 Dissemination Strategy (Tilman Gocht, University of Tübingen, Germany) 12:30 Pharmaceutical residues in the water cycle: Challenges of communicating an ‘uncertain risk’ to the public (Marion Dreyer, Dialogik, Germany) 17:20 Poster corner (Exhibition Hall): • ‘Evaludation’: Merging validation and evaluation of ecological models (Jacqueline Augusiak, Wageningen University, Netherlands) • The tribes from the chemistry planet: how they communicate to each other? (Philippe Garrigues, University of Bordeaux, France) • Consumers’ right to know about risks when using Personal Care Products in Europe and South Africa (Ursula Klaschka, University of Capetown, South Africa) • Emerging pollutants from animal husbandry - Risk assessment and communication (Katharina Tarnacki, RWTH Aachen University, Germany) • Evaluation of two methods of scientific outreach for adolescents in Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain) (Belén González-Gaya, CSIC, Spain)

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Special SeSSionS

Bridging the gap between LCA scientific research and application by practitioners (SS05) Wednesday, 14 May, 13:55 – 16:00, Shanghai 3/4 For today’s society to become more sustainable, science needs to work hand in hand with practitioners. Therefore, LCA science will become considerably more efficient if it addresses needs from industry. Industry, on the other hand, has to reach out to science in order to implement the latest scientific findings in everyday practice. SETAC conferences are usually attended mainly by scientists with presentations on methodological developments. SETAC Case Study Symposium conferences are mostly attended by practitioners who present their case studies. This situation leads to research that is not efficiently transferred from the universities to industry, as well as research projects in universities that do not optimally address the needs of the industry. Therefore, we would like to propose a session to better align industry and academia. We offer presentations that show how academic research projects have been successfully transferred into applications in industry or consultancy, as well as presentations from industry that highlight practical needs that have been solved by contributions from academic research projects. These presentations will be on aspects related to LCI and LCIA, and will also address process-related questions (such as, how to meaningfully simplify the LCA process so that it remains scientifically “valid”, yet is sufficiently easy to apply). Finally, we provide a broader discussion of where the LCA research should focus in the future to better address industry needs.

Special SeSSionS

Programme Chairs: Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland), Urs Schenker (Nestlé Research Centre, Switzerland) 13:55 Introduction (Sebastien Humbert, Quantis, Switzerland) 14:00 How a collaboration works between industry & academia (Manuele Margni, CIRAIG, Canada) 14:20 Issues related to recycling: consistency in system boundary and allocation approach reflecting reality (Sébastien Zinck, Steelcase, France) 14:40 Collaboration between industry and academia for more LCI data in the agrofood sector: the World Food LCA Database (Namy Espinoza-Orias, Nestlé Research Center, Switzerland) 15:00 Making USEtox applicable by industry: the Toxtrain project (Sebastien Humbert, Quantis, Switzerland) 15:20 The need for harmonized water assessment methods for industry (including the WULCA work) (Anne Prieur-Vernat, GDF Suez, France) 15:40 Discussion

The broad attendance of the SETAC Europe annual conference with high level scientists involved in research planning, as well as key stakeholders from industry and consultancy makes this conference the ideal platform for such a session. We are convinced that such a session would be of great value for the scientific community to better understand the current limitations of LCA for application in industry. Industry representatives would benefit by seeing examples of recent LCA research projects that have been directly applied in industry.

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Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35 Room

9:55 Session

365 | integrated approach for the identification, prioritisation and abatement of emerging pollutants - a SolUTionS - oriented approach | Werner Brack (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany) 366 | an innovative and comprehensive study to identify relevant emerging contaminants in French surface waters | Fabrizio Botta (ineRiS, France)

367 | How much risk can be covered by monitoring prioritized substances in surface waters? a complete pesticide screening example | christoph Moschet (eawag, Switzerland)

368 | are carboxylic acid metabolites from alkylated paHs a new class of potential contaminants in marine waters? | esther Sørensen Boll (University of copenhagen, denmark)

369 | occurrence, risk assessment and prioritization of emerging pollutants in Mediterranean (iberian) rivers | Maja Kuzmanovic (Spain)

370 | Forensic ecotoxicology in a multi-stressed Mediterranean river: unravelling major toxic effects of phytotoxins in a superfund site in ebro River (ne, Spain) | claudia Rivetti (idaea cSic Barcelona, Spain)

341 | Mechanisms of response to cu and ag materials: gene expression profile in enchytraeus crypticus | Susana Gomes (University of aveiro, portugal)

342 | arabidopsis thaliana defense mechanism to agand Tio2-nanoparticles, and carbon nanotubes exposure from transcriptomics analysis | Susana Garcia-Sanchez (University of the Basque country, Sweden) 343 | adverse outcome signalling pathways of dioxin-like compounds in danio rerio | eva oliveira (idaea cSic, Spain)

344 | Using transcriptomics to evaluate the impacts of paper mill effluent, androgens, and progestins on a potential bioindicator organism, the eastern mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) | erica Brockmeier (University of Florida, USa) 345 | Gene expression meta-analysis reveals a gene set that acts in a dose dependent manner suitable for effect based screening | Tjalf de Boer (Vrije Universiteit, netherlands)

346 | linking toxicity and adaptive response pathways across the transcriptome, proteome and phenotype of chlamydomonas reinhardtii exposed to silver | Smitha pillai (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatics, Switzerland)

381 | Toxicity of silver nanoparticles to a fish gill cell line: role of medium composition | yang yue (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland)

380 | Uptake of gold nanoparticles into Gammarus pulex from synthetic and natural waters | Sujung park (University of york, United Kingdom)

379 | Toxicity and accumulation of silver in euglena gracilis upon exposure to silver nanoparticles and silver nitrate | Xiaomei li (Switzerland)

378 | First evidences of paMaM dendrimers internalization in microalgae and cyanobacteria: linkages with toxicity and oxidative stress | Francisca Fernandez-piñas (Universidad autónoma de Madrid, Spain)

377 | citrate gold nanoparticle exposure in the marine clam Ruditapes philippinarum: Uptake, elimination and effect | Julian Blasco (inst ciencias Marinas de andalucia, Spain)

376 | a novel two-compartment barrier model for investigating nanoparticle transport in fish intestinal epithelial cells | Mark Geppert (eawag, Switzerland)

Biophysical Interactions at the Bio-nano Interface: Relevance for Aquatic Nanotoxicology (I) ismael Rodea-palomares, Renata Behra, laura Sigg

Singapore

Kairo 1/2 Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling (I) Monika nendza, Henriette Selck, aurelia lapczynski, christian Schlechtriem

delhi Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (I) Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke

Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (I) Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati

osaka/Samarkand

375 | are fluorinated alternatives to long-chain perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (pFcas), perfluoroalkane sulfonic acids (pFSas) and their precursors safer than the substances they replace? | Melissa ines Gomis (Stockholm University, Sweden)

374 | life-traits analysis for evaluation of long-term effects of perfluorinated compounds (pFaSs) on chironomus riparius (diptera, chironomidae) under a multi-generational approach | laura Marziali (iRSacnR Brugherio, italy)

373 | accumulation and elimination of perfluoroalkyl substances (pFaSs) by the insect (chironomus riparius) larvae (diptera, chironomidae) exposed to sediment | delphine Bertin (irstea, France)

372 | perfluorinated alkylated substances in freshwater fish on Svalbard | Roland Kallenborn (norwegian University of life Sciences, norway)

371 | Substitution of prioritized poly- and perfluorinated chemicals to eliminate diffuse sources (SUpFeS) | pim leonards (VU University inst. for environmental Studies, netherlands)

Recent advances and critical future research directions for poly- and perfuorinated alkyl substances (PFASs) (II) carla ng, lutz ahrens, ian cousins, Zhiyong Xie

Shanghai 3/4

Biodegradation and Environmental Fate of Chemicals - Regulatory Acceptance of Non-Standard Tests chris Mead, Graham Whale

Boston 1

Mechanistic effect modeling - beyond concentration response and constant environments (I) andré Gergs, elke Zimmer, Roman ashauer, annemette palmqvist

Boston 2

399 | evaluating the poster Spotlight: posters sustainability of recycling We170 | We171 packaging materials combining lca and Fuzzy Set Theory | Fredy dinkel (carbotech aG, Switzerland)

398 | integrating lca, Scenario Modelling and Multi-criteria decision analysis for Sustainable policy-Making in the energy Sector | Kathrin Volkart (paul Scherrer institut, Switzerland)

397 | Full integration of lca with other assessment tools - new application areas and harmonized modelling approaches | Jannick Hoejrup Schmidt (lca consultants, denmark)

396 | Geopolitical Supply Risk assessment: The case of France | eskinder demisse Gemechu (Universitat Rovira i Virgili, France)

395 | Multidimensional assessment of natural resources in lca for resource policy support | Serenella Sala (Joint Research centre european commission, italy)

394 | The Unep/SeTac life cycle initiative: Mainstreaming life cycle approaches for Sustainable consumption and production | llorenc Mila i canals (Unep)

Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries (I) Serenella Sala, Tomas ekvall, Guido Sonnemann

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See neXT paGe

Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (I) Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik

Sydney

Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (I) Susana cristobal, Mónica amorim

Montreal

WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)


183

Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35 Room

9:55 Session

382 | a tiered strategy for evaluating Bioaccumulation data in pBT assessments | adam lillicrap (niVa, norway)

383 | octamethyltrisiloxane (l3): assessment of biomagnification and toxicity through aquatic/dietary lab studies, fugacity ratios, and field data | Kent Woodburn (dow corning corporation, United States) 384 | How well can we model bioconcentration factor (BcF) from dietary accumulation or biomagnification factor (daF / dietary BMF)? | dave Kuo (city University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

385 | The environmental relevance of active transport inhibition | denise Kurth (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany)

386 | The power of analogy: predicting the properties and bioaccumulation behaviour of per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (pFaSs) using their fatty acid counterparts. | carla ng (eTH Zurich, Switzerland) 387 | Screening for low aquatic Bioaccumulation: prediction confidence and Quantitative Weight of evidence with the BcF Waiving Scheme | Monika nendza (analytisches laboratorium, Germany)

347 | earthworms responses to pesticide stress: adaptation strategies and soil implications | nicolas Givaudan (University of Southern denmark, France) 348 | impact of Biosolids on Structural endpoints of Soil Fauna | anja coors (ecT oekotoxicologie GmbH, Germany)

349 | a new approach for the evaluation of soil toxicity due to atmospheric fall-out | Susanna Sforzini (Universita del piemonte orientale amadeo avogadro, italy)

350 | evaluation of the risk for soil organisms under real conditions | andreas Toschki (Research institute gaiac, Germany)

351 | impact of no-till versus conventional maize plantation in soil mesofauna: a TMe experiment | Tiago natal da luz (University of coimbra, portugal)

352 | Species composition of a soil invertebrate multi-species test system determines the level of eco-toxicity | Valentina Sechi (the netherlands)

Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (I) Susana cristobal, Mónica amorim

Montreal

Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling (I) Monika nendza, Henriette Selck, aurelia lapczynski, christian Schlechtriem

Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (I) Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke

358 | Seasonal variation in effects of different land-uses on stream ecosystem structure and function | dominic englert (institute for environmental Sciences, Germany)

357 | co-occurrence patterns as a response of interaction network of terrestrial microbial communities to atmospheric pollution and seasonal variations | caroline Meyer (laboratory of chronoenvironment, France, Metropolitan)

356 | can soil communities and decomposition process in boreal forest recover from lead derived stress at a shooting range? | Salla Selonen (University of Helsinki, Finland)

355 | Site recovery in the Zn-pb mine of olkusz, poland, as shown by changes in the soil properties, nematode communities and plant tolerance | Martina polek (Switzerland)

354 | comparing Single species Toxicity Tests to community-level effects of excess Total dissolved Solids doses Using Model Streams | James lazorchak (US epa, United States)

353 | characterizing the role of pesticides impacting surface water ecosystems in multiple stressed environments | Ursula McKnight (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark)

Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (I) Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati

osaka/Samarkand

364 | estimating transformation rate constants from oecd 308 data - opportunities and limitations of existing data | Mark Honti (Hungary)

363 | improved test system to determine chemical degradation in laboratory water/sediment systems - experimental results | dieter Hennecke (Fraunhofer iMe institute for Molecular Biology and applied ecology, Germany)

362 | considerations when using oecd 301 tests to assess ‘degradation’ of hydrocarbon products | Graham Whale (Shell Health, United Kingdom)

361 | Repeat of previously conducted ready biodegradability studies following current regulatory guidance, and its effect on persistence assessment | Ravinder Menon (afton chemical corp, United States)

360 | enhanced Regulatory assessments within ReacH | Tim Martin (newcastle University, United Kingdom)

359 | Revisiting the evaluation process of biodegradation of chemical substances: the probaBio probability concept. | Thouand Gerald (University of nantes, France)

Biodegradation and Environmental Fate of Chemicals - Regulatory Acceptance of Non-Standard Tests chris Mead, Graham Whale

Boston 1

Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (I) Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik

Sydney

Biophysical Interactions at the Bio-nano Interface: Relevance for Aquatic Nanotoxicology (I) ismael Rodea-palomares, Renata Behra, laura Sigg

Singapore

Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries (I) Serenella Sala, Tomas ekvall, Guido Sonnemann

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See pReVioUS paGe

Kairo 1/2

delhi

WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)

Recent advances and critical future research directions for poly- and perfuorinated alkyl substances (PFASs) (II) carla ng, lutz ahrens, ian cousins, Zhiyong Xie

Shanghai 3/4

393 | predicting population recovery from chemical exposure: the influence of the environmental scenario | Faten Gabsi (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

392 | extent and time-dependency of synergistic effects in d. magna after pulsed exposure to azole and pyrethroid pesticides | Kristoffer dalhoff (University of copenhagen, denmark)

391 | combined effects of an endocrine disrupting chemical, elevated climatic temperature and inbreeding on sexual development and population viability in fish | andrew Ross Brown (astraZeneca, United Kingdom)

390 | an energy-based model to evaluate toxicity of an endocrine disruptor: a case study with tributyltin and the pond snail | Tjalling Jager (Vrije Universiteit, netherlands)

389 | a systems biology approach reveals a novel calcium dependent mechanism for basal toxicity in daphnia Magna | philipp antczak (University of liverpool, United Kingdom)

388 | Toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics of imidacloprid in six aquatic macroinvertebrates: model calibration and evaluation of predictions | andreas Focks (Wageningen UR, netherlands)

Mechanistic effect modeling - beyond concentration response and constant environments (I) andré Gergs, elke Zimmer, Roman ashauer, annemette palmqvist

Boston 2


185

425 | environmental fate and effects of new generation flame retardants | Susanne Waaijers (University of amsterdamiBed institute, netherlands) 426 | prioritization and monitoring of pollutants from emerging thin-film photovoltaic technologies | yannick-Serge Zimmermann (University of applied Sciences northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland)

427 | integration of effect-directed analysis in the chemical risk management in a chemical industry park in china | Xiaowei Zhang (nanjing University, china) 428 | Finding toxic needles in a haystack: identification of estrogenic chemicals in oil industry process waters using effect-directed analysis | alan Scarlett (University of plymouth, United Kingdom) 429 | identification of emerging pharmaceutical pollutants in a river impacted by an industrial effluent combining passive sampling and effect-directed analysis | Marie Helene devier (University of Bordeaux, France)

401 | Stressor-induced proteome alterations in zebrafish: widespread artefacts or a universal stress response? | Ksenia Groh (eawag, Switzerland) 402 | deciphering the major egg yolk proteins from the amphipod Gammarus fossarum by proteogenomics: key lessons regarding prediction of the functions of ecotoxicology-relevant proteins. | Judith Trapp (irstea, France)

403 | physiological and omic analysis reveal cryptic effects of low environmentally-relevant levels of chemical stressors on terrestrial plant species | anne-antonella Serra (UMR, France) 404 | Health impact assessment of emerging contaminants tested at low environmentally relevant doses individually and in mixture using genomic and metabolomics approach | Hamid Habibi (University of calgary, canada) 405 | High-throughput nanospray metabolomics to identify mixtures of chemical stressors and their effects in fish exposed to wastewater effluents | arthur david (University of Sussex, United Kingdom)

Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 Room

poster Spotlight: posters We178 | We179 | We180 | We173

434 | Smaller cladoceran species are more vulnerable to cunps | lan Song (institute of environmental Science, netherlands)

433 | Toxicity of different sized and shaped nanoparticles in zebrafish embryos | Jing Hua (the netherlands)

432 | The effect of doM on the algal toxicity of carbon nanotubes | daohui lin (china)

431 | platinum nanoparticle toxicity in freshwater algae and crustaceans: a physical or chemical effect? | Sara Sorensen (dTU environment, denmark)

430 | colloidal stability dictates the toxicity of nZVi towards the green alga p. subcapitata. | Gerardo pulido (Spain)

Biophysical Interactions at the Bio-nano Interface: Relevance for Aquatic Nanotoxicology (II) ismael Rodea-palomares, Renata Behra, laura Sigg

Singapore

452 | development of environmental impacts of Swiss consumption and production from 1996 to 2011 | Rolf Frischknecht (Treeze ltd, Switzerland)

451 | challenges of adding a life cycle perspective to municipal-level decision support for transition to a climate-neutral society | cecilia Sundberg (Swedish University of agricultural Sciences)

450 | emerging lc communities around the world: taking the right steps towards sustainable development | ana Quiros (eco GloBal alcala, costa Rica)

449 | Taking account of expert stakeholder knowledge: constructing a framework to meet WFd requirements using lcSa and peS for metal removal at abandoned non-coal mine sites. | Helen Baxter (University of Hull, United Kingdom)

448 | discussion on methods to include prevention activities in waste management lca | Simone nessi (politecnico di Milano, italy)

447 | environmental assessment of waste management policies: a Waste input-output analysis | antoine Beylot (France)

Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries (II) Serenella Sala, Tomas ekvall, Guido Sonnemann

Shanghai 1/2

Kairo 1/2 Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling (II) Monika nendza, Henriette Selck, aurelia lapczynski, christian Schlechtriem

delhi Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (II) Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke

Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (II) Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati

osaka/Samarkand

Environmental biodegradation rates and pathways: Dependence on environmental conditions Kathrin Fenner, Gary Bending, Russell davenport

Boston 1

MoRe WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See neXT paGe

424 | changes of accumulation profiles from pBdes to Brominated and chlorinated alternatives in Marine Mammals from South china Sea | Bingqing ZHU (city University of Hong Kong, china)

400 | proteomic response of l. rubellus, the red earthworm, to metal stress under different soil temperatures | Martina Höckner (University of innsbruck, austria)

Sydney Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (II) Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik

Montreal Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (II) Susana cristobal, Monica amorim

Room

WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)

11:50 12:10 12:30 Session

Mechanistic effect modeling - beyond concentration response and constant environments (II) andré Gergs, elke Zimmer, Roman ashauer, annemette palmqvist

Boston 2

458 | pharmaceutical residues in the water cycle: challenges of communicating an ‘uncertain risk’ to the public | Marion dreyer (Gemeinnützige Gesellschaft für Kommunikations und Kooperationsforschung mbH, Germany)

457 | Science communication in the Field of innovative Human Safety assessment: The SeURaT-1 dissemination Strategy | Tilman Gocht (University of Tuebingen)

456 | effective environmental risk communication - success stories or urban legends? | agnieszka Hunka (University of Twente, denmark)

455 | Uncertainties in environmental nanoparticle research: what is communicated in scientific literature and mass media | ilona Heidmann (interdisciplinary Research Group for environmental)

454 | Blogging: a tool for informal communication of scientific research and technology | Jared Bozich (UWMSFS, United States)

453 | Bridging the Gap: a case for the use of Social Media in environmental Science | Sarah Bowman (The ohio State University, United States)

Research on communication and communication of research - pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, Henner Hollert, Ursula Klaschka, Katharina Tarnacki

Shanghai 3/4


187

Room

Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 11:50 12:10 Room

12:30 Session

435 | Using coSMomic as a Mechanistic Model to predict phospholipid-Water partition coefficients of anions | Kai Bittermann (Germany)

436 | partitioning of pops into different lipid classes | anders Ruus (niVa, norway)

437 | abiotic and biotic drivers of arctic food web contaminant bioaccumulation in a changing climate | Katrine Borga (department of Bioscences University of oslo, norway)

438 | Trophic dilution of cyclic volatile methylsiloxanes (cVMS) across the pelagic food web of a temperate, deep water lake. | david powell (dow corning corporation, United States) 439 | limits of transferability of biodynamic parameters to the field for metal bioaccumulation modelling in macro-invertebrates | Sandrine Massarin (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg)

440 | Terrestrial field studies are needed to derive bioaccumulation potential of chemicals | nico van den Brink (Wageningen University, netherlands)

406 | What do we need to improve ecological relevance in soil risk assessment? State of the art and perspective for collembola | Juliane Filser (University of Bremen, Germany)

407 | prediction of effects of sea level rise on soil ecosystems | carla pereira (portugal)

408 | deriving a terrestrial pnec for silver: use of research findings in risk assessment | Graham Merrington (environment agency, UK)

409 | characterization of ecotoxicity and phytotoxicity of a cyanobacterial extract containing microcystins under realistic environmental concentrations and in a soil-plant system | Sylvain corbel (France) 410 | earthworm reproduction studies: is the growth of body weight during the range finding test a good indicator for successful reproduction? | Thomas Schmidt (Harlan laboratories ltd, Switzerland) 411 | Guideline values of lead in soils: a new soil-ecotoxicity approach | ana Romero (UGR, Spain)

Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (II) Susana cristobal, Mónica amorim

Montreal

Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling (II) Monika nendza, Henriette Selck, aurelia lapczynski, christian Schlechtriem

Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (II) Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke

417 | competition determines toxicant -effect, -recovery and -culmination of successive toxicant pulses | Matthias liess (UFZ center for environmental Research, Germany)

416 | pollution induced community Sensitization (picS): exploring the relevance of the conceptual coun-terpart of pollution induced community Tolerance (picT) | Thomas Backhaus (University of Gothenburg, Sweden)

415 | pesticide mixture toxicity and effects on benthic invertebrates and algae in agricultural streams - field and laboratory studies | Willem Goedkoop (Swedish University of agri Sciences, Sweden)

414 | Hexabromocyclododecane affects plankton communities and benthic-pelagic coupling in an experimental ecosystem | Johan naslund (Stockholm University, Sweden)

413 | a glimpse in the black box - ecotoxicological impacts on the yangtze Three Gorges Reservoir, china | Henner Hollert (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

412 | effects of abiotic factors on structure and abundances of freshwater macrofauna in ditches along bulb fields | oleksandra ieromina (institute of environmental Sciences leiden University, netherlands)

Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (II) Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati

osaka/Samarkand

423 | Modelling the fate of petroleum hydrocarbons in bioengineered piles in the antarctic | Mick Whelan (University of leicester, UK)

422 | potential for biodegradation of crude oil in the arctic marine environment | Katrine Scheibye (University of copenhagen, denmark)

421 | pH-dependent Biotransformation of ionizable organic Micropollutants in activated Sludge | Rebekka Gulde (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science, Switzerland)

Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (II) Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik

Sydney

Biophysical Interactions at the Bio-nano Interface: Relevance for Aquatic Nanotoxicology (II) ismael Rodea-palomares, Renata Behra, laura Sigg

Singapore

Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries (II) Serenella Sala, Tomas ekvall, Guido Sonnemann

Shanghai 1/2

Research on communication and communication of research - pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, Henner Hollert, Ursula Klaschka, Katharina Tarnacki

Shanghai 3/4

446 | Modelling community dynamics under toxicant stress | Mira Kattwinkel (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland)

445 | Using biological traits in ecological modeling: How to model the temporal dynamics of benthic invertebrate communities? | cedric Mondy (eawag Swiss Fed. inst. of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland)

444 | Food web modelling of a river ecosystem for risk assessment of downthe-drain chemicals: a case study with aQUaToX | antonio Franco (Unilever, United Kingdom)

443 | dynamic modelling and mechanistic effect models to analyse ecological interactions and toxic effects within a microcosm | dominique lamonica (Université claude Bernard lyon, France)

442 | impact of toxicant stress on the stability characteristics of 2-species competition models | Hans Baveco (netherlands)

419 | Using biodegradation for the removal of sulfonamides | Benjamin Ricken (University of applied Sciences northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland)

420 | Fate and metabolism of Tetrabromobisphenol a in soil under different environmental conditions | Rong Ji (nanjing University, china)

441 | Mechanistic effect model of a field earthworm and its application to interpret chemical risk assessment field trials | alice Johnston (University of Reading, United Kingdom)

Mechanistic effect modeling - beyond concentration response and constant environments (II) andré Gergs, elke Zimmer, Roman ashauer, annemette palmqvist

Boston 2

418 | How a new builder in automatic dishwashing detergent became ready biodegradable in the U.S.: Widespread microbial adaptation | Kathleen Mcdonough (pG, United States)

Environmental biodegradation rates and pathways: Dependence on environmental conditions Kathrin Fenner, Gary Bending, Russell davenport

Boston 1

MoRe WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See pReVioUS paGe

Kairo 1/2

delhi

WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)


189

Room

Session 14:00 14:20 14:40 15:00 15:20 Room

15:40 Session

poster Spotlight: posters We188 | We189 | We190 | We191

479 | combining MetFrag and pubMed for tackling environmental “Known Unknowns” | christoph Ruttkies (leibniz institute of plant Biochemistry, Germany)

480 | The SimpleBox Solution Multi-media mass balance model to predict environmental fate and ecotoxic effects of mixtures of chemical substances in eU river catchments | dik van de Meent (RiVM, netherlands) 481 | pollutants of tomorrow and developments in society | Susanne Moritz (Germany)

461 | investigating the hepatic transcriptomic response of brown tout exposed to a model oestrogen, e2, and the anti-androgen, linuron, using Rna-seq | Tamsyn Uren Webster (United Kingdom)

462 | developing a platform of environmental omics for the green-lipped mussel perna viridis | chi Ho ip (The University of Hong Kong, china)

463 | identification of biomarkers of metal exposure by transcriptome analysis of elodea nuttallii | nicole Regier (University of Geneva, Switzerland)

poster Spotlight: posters 464 | de novo transcriptomic profile in the gonad- We133 | We134 | We135 al tissues of the intertidal We136 whelk Reishia clavigera | Kevin Ho (The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)

485 | a proposal for regulation of nano-ag, nano-Zno and nano-cuo based on comparison to dissolved metals | Bernd nowack (eMpa, Switzerland)

484 | lca-Ra combined approach by using a Bayesian model: example of the aquatic ecotoxity impact/risk of the nano Tio2 production. | Veronique adam (University of Strasbourg cnRS, France)

483 | Species Sensitivity Weighted distribution (SSWd) as screening tool for ecological risk assessment of engineered nanomaterials: The n-Tio2 case study | elena Semenzin (ca Foscari University of Venice, italy)

504 | adapting teaching and communication of life cycle Thinking to industrial practitioners and stakeholders | Mélanie Guiton (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg)

503 | TBd

502 | Using an experiential Serious Game to Stimulate life cycle Thinking in organisations and in education | Samuel Vionnet (Quantis, France)

501 | Teaching Sustainability in the packaging & Graphical industry - experiences from Teaching in Swiss professional courses | Roland Hischier (eMpa, Switzerland)

500 | coaching instead of teaching lca: 20 years of experience at universities of applied science | Thomas Kägi (carbotech aG, Switzerland)

499 | problem Based learning and sustainability: experiences from teaching lca at aalborg University | lokke Soren (aalborg University, denmark)

Teaching and communicating sustainability - paving the way to a common understanding and meaningful actions Ralph Rosenbaum

Shanghai 1/2

Statistical challenges in ecotoxicology John Green, Sandrine charles

Kairo 1/2

Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (III) Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati

osaka/Samarkand

Persistent, Bioaccumulative and Toxic (PBT) substances - identification, assessment and regulatory decision making with a special focus on socio-economic aspects Georg Streck, Silke Gerda Margaret Gabbert, Martin Scheringer, Hans-christian Stolzenberg

Boston 1

MoRe WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00) See neXT paGe

Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (III) Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke

delhi

486 | What are appropriate fate descriptors and modelling approaches to predict environmental concentrations of engineered nanomaterials for risk assessment? | antonia praetorius (eTH Zurich, Switzerland)

478 | diagnostic strains of the Salmonella/microsome assay as a potential tool in effect directed analysis - application to a solution-oriented project | Gisela Umbuzeiro (Faculty of Technology UnicaMp, Brazil)

460 | characterization of thyroid metabolism disruption at the level of transcriptome, morphology and behavior | ifakat Bagci (antwerp University, Belgium)

482 | Human health no-effect levels of (nano) particles as a function of their primary size | alexis laurent (Technical University of denmark, denmark)

477 | planar-yeS in effect directed analysis | Sebastian Buchinger (Federal institute of Hydrology, Germany)

459 | ethynylestradiol (ee2) effect on global gene expression in primary rainbow trout (oncorhynchus mykiss) hepatocytes | Maria Hultman (norwegian institute for Water Research, norway)

Environmental risk assessment of nanomaterials: open issues, pitfalls and recommendations Birgit Sokull-Klüttgen, Thomas Backhaus

Singapore

Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (III) Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik

Sydney

Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (III) Susana cristobal, Mónica amorim

Montreal

WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00)

Predicting molecular properties of environmental contaminants Marjan Vracko, alessandra Roncaglioni

Boston 2

631 | Final discussion | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland)

630 | The need for harmonized water assessment methods for industry (including the WUlca work) | anne prieur-Vernat (GdF SUeZ, France)

629 | Making USetox applicable by industry: the Toxtrain project | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland)

628 | collaboration between industry and academia for more lci data in the agrofood sector: the World Food lca database | namy espinoza-orias (nestec ltd, United Kingdom)

627 | issues related to recycling: consistency in system boundary and allocation approach reflecting reality | Sébastien Zinck (Steelcase, France)

626 | How a collaboration works between industry & academia | Manuele Margni (ecole polytechnique de Montreal, canada)

Bridging the gap between LCA scientific research and application by practitioners Sebastien Humbert, Urs Schenker

Shanghai 3/4


191

Room

Session 14:00 14:20 14:40 15:00 15:20 Room

15:40 Session

494 | Generalized mixed models for ecotoxicology: avoiding pseudoreplication and unnecessary data transformations | Will White (United States)

495 | MoSaic_repro: a new user-friendly web interface to analyse bioassay reproduction data directly on-line | Sandrine charles (University lyon, France)

496 | The development and application of the probabilistic exposure-response space in describing toxicity for ecological risk assessment | Wayne landis (Western Washington University, United States)

497 | Hierarchical modelling of species sensitivity distribution: a case study with diatoms exposed to several herbicides | Guillaume Kon Kam King (Université claude Bernard lyon, France) 498 | Quantifying uncertainty in trophic magnification factors using Bayesian inference. | Jostein Starrfelt (niVa, norway)

466 | Modification to seedling emergence and growth test to reduce quantities of test materials | Heather McShane (McGill University, canada)

467 | non-avoidance behaviour to boric acid could be related with the GaBaergic mechanism | carina Bicho (Universidade de aveiro, portugal)

468 | expression of metallothionein isoforms in embryos of the terrestrial snail cantareus aspersus reveals early life stage adaptation to metal stress | pierre-emmanuel BaURand (Université de Franche comté UMR cnRS, France) 469 | cd-sensitive and cd-tolerant coi haplotypes couples in the standard test species eisenia andrei (oligochaeta) | laetitia Voua otomo (northWest University, South africa) 470 | ecolotoxicological evaluation of 2,5-furandicarboxylic acid (Fdca), a novel green chemical from Bio-based industry | Guangquan chen (netherlands)

Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (III) Susana cristobal, Mónica amorim

Montreal

493 | choice and evaluation of Statistical Models Used to analyze ecotoxicity experiments | John Green (dupont, United States)

465 | Revealing the effects of silver-induced selective pressure on soil microbial communities by high throughput sequencing diversity screening | Sotirios Vasileiadis (University of South australia, italy)

509 | Global flow of contaminants: from consumer products in north america to landfills in developing countries | Golnoush abbasi (University of Toronto, canada)

508 | in silico strategies for the screening and prioritization of potential SVHc substances | alessandra Roncaglioni (istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario negri, italy)

507 | Regulation of pBT and vpvB chemicals within ReacH: a stock-pollution approach to authorisation and restriction | Silke Gerda Margaret Gabbert (Wageningen University, netherlands)

506 | pBT classification under ec 1107/2009: practical issues and a case example of chlorpyrifos | Keith Solomon (University of Guelph, canada)

505 | State-of-the-art on bioaccumulation and toxicity criteria for non-aquatic organisms within the pBT/ vpvB assessment framework | Stefania Gottardo (italy)

Persistent, Bioaccumulative and Toxic (PBT) substances - identification, assessment and regulatory decision making with a special focus on socio-economic aspects Georg Streck, Silke Gerda Margaret Gabbert, Martin Scheringer, Hans-christian Stolzenberg

Boston 1

476 | Using stable isotope poster Spotlight: posters analysis in vegetated We301 | We302 | We303 flow-through stream meso- | We304 cosms to study aquatic-terrestrial subsidies | Matthias Wieczorek (Germany)

475 | Stressor-induced biodiversity gradients: revisiting biodiversity - ecosystem function relationships | christoph Mensens (Ghent University UGent, Belgium)

474 | The importance of direct toxicity and an altered food quality for fungicide effects on leaf-shredding invertebrates | Jochen Zubrod (institute for environmental Sciences University of Koblenz landau, Germany)

473 | interaction between environmental gradients and micropollutants on the structure and functioning of natural phytoplankton communities | Francesco pomati (eawag, Switzerland)

472 | effects of intra and interspecific competition on the response of aquatic species to carbendazim: the importance of ecological interactions for risk assessment. | ana del arco (University of Jaén, Spain)

471 | interaction between stress induced by competition and an insecticide on the response of aquatic invertebrates | andreu Rico (Wageningen University, netherlands)

Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (III) Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati

osaka/Samarkand

Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (III) Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik

Sydney

Environmental risk assessment of nanomaterials: open issues, pitfalls and recommendations Birgit Sokull-Klüttgen, Thomas Backhaus

Singapore

Teaching and communicating sustainability - paving the way to a common understanding and meaningful actions Ralph Rosenbaum

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00) See pReVioUS paGe

Statistical challenges in ecotoxicology John Green, Sandrine charles

Kairo 1/2

Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (III) Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke

delhi

WedneSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS pM (13:55-16:00)

Bridging the gap between LCA scientific research and application by practitioners Sebastien Humbert, Urs Schenker

Shanghai 3/4

492 | estimation of toxicological properties using internet accessible models | Marjan Vracko (Kemijski inštitut, Slovenia)

491 | ecotoxicity analysis of cholinium-based ionic liquids | Joana pereira (University of aveiro & ceSaM, portugal)

490 | influence of pH and cations on the speciation, bioavailability and toxicity of uranium in lemna minor | nele Horemans (Belgean nuclear Research centre ScKcen, Belgium)

489 | Measuring logp>8.5 for risk assessment - a question of standards | Frederic Begnaud (Firmenich, Switzerland)

488 | predicting equilibrium partitioning of organic chemicals - Validation of existing Models | Kai-Uwe Goss (Germany)

487 | QSaRinS: a new software for the development and validation of MlR models and QSaRinS-chem: insubria datasets and new QSaR/QSpR models for environmental pollutants. | paola Gramatica (University of insubria, italy)

Predicting molecular properties of environmental contaminants Marjan Vracko, alessandra Roncaglioni

Boston 2


WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

Environmental OMICs: high-throughput strategies to decipher mechanism of response to stressors (p). Chaired by: Susana Cristobal, Mónica Amorim We001 | Tracking multilevel effects of nickel in Porcellionides pruinosus (Isopoda): from genomics to organisms | nuno Ferreira (ceSaM Universidade de aveiro, portugal) | n. Ferreira, R. Morgado, d. nunes cardoso, M. Santos, l. cunha, c. Morris, c. Rocha, a. amaro, M. novo, a. Morgan, i. duarte, p. Kille, a. Soares, S. loureiro We002 | Toxicogenomic mechanisms of 2,2-bis(bromomethyl)-1,3-propanediol using E.coli knockout mutant screen | Miao Guan (nanjing University, china) | M. Guan, X. Zhang We003 | Proteomic analysis in Daphnia magna exposed to Lead (II) acetate trihydrate and Atrazine for potential biomarkers screening | Vu Quynh anh le (Korea, South) | V. le, y. Kim, J. Min We004 | Proteomic response of Unio pictorum mussel to a mixture of glyphosate and microcystin-LR | claudia Wiegand (University of Southern denmark, denmark) | M. Malecot, B. Guevel, c. pineau, M. Bormans, c. Wiegand WE005 | Effects of the antifouling biocide tralopyril on the proteome of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis | isabel Maria de carvalho Benta Santos oliveira (University of aveiro ceSaM, portugal) | i. de carvalho Benta Santos oliveira, K. Groh, R. Schonenberger, c. Barroso, K. Thomas, M. Suter

192

WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

We008 | Assessment of the toxicogenomic potential of complex industrial wastewater effluents from a treatment plant in Germany | leonie nuesser (RWTH aachen University institute for environmental Research, Germany) | l. nuesser, c. Hug, W. Brack, M. Hecker, S. Wiseman, T. Seiler, H. Hollert, S. patterson, J. Zee

Spain) | J. campillo, a. Sevilla, M. albentosa, c. Bernal, a. lozano, M. canovas, c. González-Fernández, V. leon

We009 | Biological multi-endpoint analysis for an integrative sediment toxicity assessment with higher plants | alexandra Geilen (German Federal institute of Hydrology, Germany) | a. Geilen, R. Klein, G. Reifferscheid, U. Feiler, S. Buchinger

We016 | Automatic fitting of concentration-response models and prediction of mixture effects on DNA transcription | Rolf altenburger (UFc centre for environmental Research, Germany) | S. Jesenska, W. Busch, R. altenburger

We010 | Integrative assessment of benzene exposure to Caenorhabditis elegans using toxicogenomics and computational behavior analysis | Hyunjeong eom (Korea (South)) | H. eom, H. Kim, B. Kim, T. chon, J. choi

We017 | De-Novo assembly of the Daphnia Magna transcriptome and development of a gene expression microarray | you Song (norwegian institute for Water Research niVa, norway) | y. Song, H. Heiaas, M. Hultman, T. Hogaasen, K. petersen, K. Tollefsen

We011 | A comparison of acute stress-responses in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) exposed to different oxidation states of antimony using transcriptomics | you Song (norwegian institute for Water Research niVa, norway) | y. Song, l. Heier, e. Mariussen, B. Salbu, K. Tollefsen

We306 | Development of native sediment ecotoxicity species Glyptotendipes tokunagai using comparative ecotoxicogenomics approach with Chironomus riparius | Jinhee choi (University of Seoul, South Korea) | S. park, S. lee, J. choi

We012 | Transcriptomics and multiple stress: can gene expression elucidate interactive effects in response to multiple stressors? | Karel a.c. de Schamphelaere (Ghent University, Belgium) | J. asselman, M. pfrender, J. lopez, J. Shaw, M. Stock, B. de Baets, K. de Schamphelaere

We015 | A mixed-mode LC-MS method for endogenous metabolite detection | adrian ammann (eawag, Switzerland) | a. ammann, M. Suter

Soil Biodiversity and Ecotoxicology (P). Chaired by: Rick Scroggins, Jörg Römbke We018 | Testing indicators for soil biodiversity and ecological function in the European FP7 project EcoFINDERS | Jörg Roembke (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | J. Roembke, J. Faber, B. Griffiths

We006 | Protein expression of Pacific Oysters Crassostrea gigas exposed in situ to effluents containing sanitary sewage, Florianópolis, SC | Tània Gomes (University of algarve, portugal) | F. Flores nunes, T. Gomes, R. company, a. c d Bainy, M. Bebianno

We013 | Increased disease susceptibility of rainbow trout that were fed polyaromatic hydrocarbons is reflected in transcriptional changes of innate immune-relevant genes | lawrence curtis (oregon State University, United States) | l. curtis, c. Bravo, M. arkoosh, c. Bayne, S. Tilton, T. collier, J. Meador

WE019 | Occurrence and distribution of soil microarthropods in agricultural landscapes across Europe with regard to testing for responses to plant protection products | axel dinter (dupont, Germany) | a. dinter, J. Bendall, M. Bergtold, M. coulson, B. Garlej, G. ernst, p. Kabouw, a. Sharples, G. von Mérey, G. Weyman, T. Vollmer, o. Klein ,

We007 | Metaproteomic analysis of Baltic soil exposed to human pharmaceuticals: next generation environmental assessment | Susana cristobal (linköping University, Sweden) | H. Froberg, G. danielsson, J. Kuruvilla, S. cristobal

We014 | Impact assessment of agricultural inputs into a Mediterranean coastal lagoon (Mar Menor, SE Spain) on transplanted clams (Ruditapes decussatus) by targeted metabolomics | carmen González-Fernández (Spanish institute of oceanography,

We020 | Is general microbial diversity a sensitive indicator of changes in soil function and processes? | paola Meynet (newcastle University, UK) | p. Meynet, R. davenport, d. Werner

We021 | Isolation, Identification and characterization of soil borne fungi from QU field 2, field 3 and QU farm | Meaad aljassim (Qatar University, Qatar) | M. aljassim, n. alkrobi, F. al-naemi We022 | In situ variability of the bait lamina response: consideration of the soil moisture content factor in improving test readability | Sophie campiche (Swiss centre for applied ecotoxicology, Switzerland) | S. campiche, c. Maurer-Troxler, e. Grand, e. Vermeirssen, B. Ferrari, i. Werner , We023 | Life traits comparison of earthworm cocoons in populations originating from different agricultural practices | nicolas Givaudan (University of Southern denmark, denmark) | n. Givaudan, c. Wiegand, B. Martineau, M. Guillaumin, F. Binet We024 | Isolation, Identification and characterization of soil borne fungi from Qatar university field 2, field 3 and Qatar University farm | Meaad aljassim (Qatar University, Qatar) | M. aljassim, n. al-korbi, F. al-naemi We025 | Trophic transfer of soil arsenate and associated toxic effects in a plant-aphid-parasitoid system | Hyoung-ho Mo (Korea (South)) | H. Mo, M. Kim, y. Kim, y. lee, J. Wee, K. cho We026 | Ecotoxicological assessment of a remediation procedure in a hydrocarbon-contaminated soil | Jaume Bori (Universitat politecnica de catalunya Upc, Spain) | J. Bori, J. Ribo, M. Mendez, c. Galvan, F. Herrera, l. ortega, B. Valles, c. Riva We027 | Evaluating an alternative procedure for the assessment of the avoidance response with Collembolans | Jaume Bori (Universitat politecnica de catalunya Upc, Spain) | J. Bori, J. Ribo, c. Riva We028 | Genetic methods to characterize test species in ecotoxicology: | Jörg Roembke (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | J. Roembke, M. aira, T. Backeljau, K. Breugelmans, J. dominguez, e. Funke, n. Graf, M. Hajibabaei, M. perez-losada, M. pfenninger, p. porto, J. Vierna, a. Vizcaino

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We029 | Ecotoxicology of soils contaminated with Pb and Zn by soil respiration bioassay | ana Romero (UGR, Spain) | a. Romero, M. Sierra aragon, e. Fernandez ondono, F. Martin peinado We030 | Do traits provide a clue for predicting metal accumulation and sensitivity in different earthworm species? | Hao Qiu (leiden University, netherlands) | H. Qiu, W. peijnenburg, M. Vijver We031 | Development and standardization of an ecotoxicological test method for the risk assessment of GMP | Johannes Bauer (ecT oekotoxicologie GmbH, Germany) | J. Bauer, S. Jänsch, M. otto, J. Roembke, H. Teichmann We032 | Joint toxicity of chlorpyrifos and mancozeb to the terrestrial isopod Porcellionides pruinosus: a multiple biomarker approach | Rui Morgado (University of aveiro, portugal) | R. Morgado, n. Ferreira, d. nunes cardoso, a. Soares, S. loureiro

We038 | The effects of mercury contaminated food to Folsomia candida: bioaccumulation and growth | diogo Filipe nunes cardoso (ceSaM University of aveiro, portugal) | d. nunes cardoso, n. Ferreira, c. Santos, a. Soares, S. loureiro We039 | Assessing the potential hazard of wastes as soil amendments | Tiago natal da luz (University of coimbra, portugal) | J. Renaud, S. chelinho, p. alvarenga, J. Sousa, T. natal da luz We040 | Is the sensitivity of Folsomia candida from laboratory cultures comparable to that of field organisms? | Tiago natal da luz (University of coimbra, portugal) | J. pontes, T. natal da luz, J. Sousa

We033 | The comparison of adult and juvenile earthworms Eisenia fetida sensitivity to cadmium | Jurate Zaltauskaite (lithuania) | J. Zaltauskaite

We041 | A rose by any other name would smell as sweet: The “namesake” obstacle to overcome when immediate analysis is required in non-radiolabelled Eisenia fetida bio-concentration studies. | Kirsty-Jo Muddiman (Smithers Viscient, United Kingdom) | K. Muddiman, p. coveney

We034 | Ecotoxic effects of antibiotics depend on micro-scale variability of soil microbial diversity | Sören Thiele-Bruhn (University of Trier, Germany) | S. Thiele-Bruhn, U. Hammesfahr, R. Reichel

We042 | Evaluation of terrestrial ecotoxicity of ionic liquids - a neglected issue | Brezana peric (Faculty of pharmacy University of Barcelona, Spain) | B. peric, J. Sierra, e. Marti, R. cruanas, M. Garau

We035 | Vicia-micronucleus test to assess soil genotoxicity potential | adrien dhyevre (liec, France) | a. dhyevre, d. Blaudez, S. Muller, S. cotelle

We043 | Flow cytometric analysis of soil algal toxicity in soil extracts polluted by heavy metals | youn-Joo an (Konkuk University, Korea (South)) | S. nam, y. an

We036 | A novel passive dosing-based PICT detection method reveals no increased tolerance to benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene (BTEX) in soil bacterial communities exposed to gasoline vapours | Jakub Modrzynski (University of copenhagen, denmark) | J. Modrzynski, p. Mayer, J. christensen, d. Gilbert, K. Brandt

We044 | Optimization and validation of oxidative stress and metallothionein markers in Folsomia candida, a case study for Cu and Cd | Monica amorim (Universidade de aveiro, portugal) | V. Maria, M. Ribeiro, M. amorim

We037 | Molluscidal baits represent high risk to key species in the soil compartment |

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diogo Filipe nunes cardoso (ceSaM University of aveiro, portugal) | d. nunes cardoso, M. Santos, n. Ferreira, a. Soares, S. loureiro

We045 | Different food sources make different in reproduction and body weight of Eisenia fetida | Maher Haeba (Benghazi University, libya) | M. Haeba, a. Mohamed

WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

We046 | Avoidance behaviour of Eisenia fetida to contaminated soil around Benghazi city, Libya | Maher Haeba (Benghazi University, libya) | M. Haeba, H. elwerfalli, W. awgie We047 | Using earthworm to investigate soil contamination in different time of exposure around Benghazi City, Libya | Maher Haeba (Benghazi University, libya) | M. Haeba, H. elwerfalli We048 | Effects of Zn, Cd and Ni on the midgut structure of the cricket Gryllus assimilis | elzbieta pyza (Jagiellonian University, poland) | e. pyza, R. laskowski, d. Semik We049 | How protective is the chronic earthworm endpoint to soil arthropods in the ERA? | otto daniel (agroscope acW, Switzerland) | e. Kohlschmid, d. Ruf, o. daniel We050 | Physiological and molecular responses of springtails exposed to combined chemical and drought stress by passive dosing | Stine Schmidt (aarhus University, denmark) | S. Schmidt, M. Holmstrup, c. damgaard, J. Sorensen, S. Slotsbo, p. Mayer Community and ecosystem ecotoxicology (P). chaired by: Mirco Bundschuh, Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Francesco pomati We051 | Effects of variable temperature and the influence of copper on Gammarus fossarum Koch, 1835 | lara Schmidlin (Switzerland) | l. Schmidlin, S. von Fumetti, p. nagel We052 | Invertebrate avoidance behaviour as a screening tool for biochar-amended soils under viticulture | Marija prodana (University of aveiro, portugal) | a. amaro, S. loureiro, d. cardoso, R. Morgado, M. prodana, F. Verheijen, a. Soares, M. Santos, a. Bastos

| Frederik de laender (Université de namur aSBl, Belgium) | F. de laender, c. Melian, R. Bindler, p. van den Brink, M. daam, H. Roussel, J. Juselius, d. Verschuren, c. Janssen We055 | Ecological interactions alter the sensitivity of Daphnia magna populations to chemical stress. | Karel Viaene (Ghent University, Belgium) | K. Viaene, a. Rico, c. Janssen, p. van den Brink, F. de laender We056 | Tolerance on a plate - a novel assay using natural bacterial communities to estimate increased long-term tolerance to multiple chemical stressors using MT2 microplates | asa arrhenius (University of Gothenburg, Sweden) | a. arrhenius, M. andersson, l. Gamfeldt, H. Johansson, M. Matzke, F. Roger, T. Backhaus We057 | Trophic niche metrics of gastropods (Lymnaea stagnalis) in pond mesocosms exposed to hydrocarbons: A new sensitive endpoint for dose-response characterization? | yannick Bayona (inRaagrocampus ouest, France) | y. Bayona, M. Roucaute, K. cailleaud, a. Basseres, l. lagadic, T. caquet We058 | A model ecosystem experiment to study the recovery capability of a macrozoobenthos community after a pesticide stress | Marco Vighi (University of Milano, italy) | a. ippolito, R. Giacchini, c. Bruno, B. Maiolini, S. endrizzi, M. Vighi We059 | Environmental stressors can enhance the development of community tolerance to a toxicant | Mikhail Beketov (UFZ Helmholtz centre for environmental Research, Germany) | n. Stampfli, S. Knillmann, y. noskov, R. Schaefer, M. liess, M. Beketov

We053 | Prediction of salinisation effects on soil ecosystems using Terrestrial Model Ecosystem | carla pereira (portugal) | c. pereira, i. lopes, i. abrantes, J. Sousa, S. chelinho

We060 | Towards a better understanding of algal ecology in ditches and streams -Monitoring phytoplankton and periphyton in agricultural landscapes- | Friederike Breuer (MeSocoSM GmbH institut für Gewässerschutz, Germany) | F. Breuer, p. Janz, l. doeren, K. ebke, e. Farrelly

We054 | Intraspecific variability and biodiversity sustenance along toxicity gradients

We061 | MicroCokit: Microbial Community-based indicator of water quality to inte-

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grate in a modeling scenario | anna Barra caracciolo (national Research council, italy) | a. Barra caracciolo, p. Grenni, c. Foy, G. Mengs, c. Garbi, M. Martin, l. Medlin, V. Ferrero, n. ademollo, p. luisa, J. pinto Grande, T. lettieri

We068 | Refinement of Biodegradation Tests to Prepare for Subsequent E-Fate Testing and Assessment | Ralf arno Wess (Harlan laboratories ltd, Switzerland) | R. Wess, G. eisner, S. Hoeger

We062 | Sensitivity of Functional Diversity Indices (FDI) in higher-tier ERA: Cross comparison of macroinvertebrate traits in stream and pond mesocosms exposed to a fungicide and a petroleum distillate | yannick Bayona (inRaagrocampus ouest, France) | y. Bayona, M. Roucaute, K. cailleaud, a. Basseres, l. lagadic, T. caquet

We069 | Novel simulation test to assess the primary and ultimate biodegradability of chemicals in sediments: Application to surfactants | Kathleen Mcdonough (pG, United States) | K. Mcdonough, n. itrich, e. Schwab, T. Federle

We063 | The ecological consequences of various chemical emission patterns in food webs | Karel Viaene (Ghent University, Belgium) | K. Viaene, F. de laender, a. di Guardo, M. Morselli, c. Janssen

We070 | The AnBUSDiC Test; a New Screening Method for the Anaerobic Degradability of Surfactants | Thomas austin (SHell, UK) | c.V. eadsforth, T. austin, a. Bouvy, G. cassani, J. deFerrer, c. Hager, d. Schowanek, K. Taeger, a. Willing

We064 | Simulation of the environmental situation of the tributary ecosystem Daninghe River in the Yangtze Three Gorges Area | Martina Ross-nickoll (RWTH aachen, Germany) | B. Scholz-Starke, R. ottermanns, T. Floehr, a. Holbach, H. Hollert, l. Bo, U. Rings, a. Schaeffer, H. Wei, X. yuan, M. Ross-nickoll

We071 | An assessment of biodegradability of quaternary carbon containing fragrance compounds: Comparison of experimental OECD screening test results and in silico prediction data | Markus Seyfried (Switzerland) | M. Seyfried, a. Boschung

We065 | Consecutive dry-wet cycles influence toxicity of aqueous fractions of biochar-amended soil | Marija prodana (University of aveiro, portugal) | M. prodana, S. loureiro, a. Soares, n. abrantes, a. Bastos We066 | Effect of different environmental regimes on the fate and isomeric fractionation of the flame retardant HBCDD in experimental aquatic ecosystems | clare Bradshaw (Stockholm University, Sweden) | c. Bradshaw, a. Strid, H. von Stedingk, K. Gustafsson Biodegradation and Environmental Fate of Chemicals - Regulatory Acceptance of Non-Standard Tests (P). chaired by: chris Mead, Graham Whale We067 | Assessing the Persistence of Chemicals in the Environment: Future Research Priorities | Jason Snape (astrazeneca UK ltd, United Kingdom) | J. Snape, S. Marshall, G. Whale, M. Galay Burgos, c. Rauert,

196

d. Merckel

We072 | Improving biodegradation of low solubility chemicals: What can we do? | chris Mead (Harlan laboratories ltd, United Kingdom) | c. Mead We073 | Comparison of OECD 314B dieaway results with OECD 303A simulation study results and field data | Kathleen Mcdonough (pG, United States) | K. Mcdonough, n. itrich, T. Federle We074 | Biodegradation of selected compounds in different water-sediment systems - water-sediment screening tool (WSST) vs. simulation studies | Thomas Junker (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | T. Junker, e. Heusner, d. Gilberg, p. Ferreira, W. Graef, J. Roembke, d. Hennecke, K. Fenner Environmental biodegradation rates and pathways: Dependence on environmental conditions (P). chaired by: Kathrin Fenner, Gary Bending, Russell davenport

WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

We075 | New Approach for Active Biomass Measurement and Dynamics of Bacterial Communities in Sediment | cecilia diaz (Fraunhofer iMe, Germany) | c. diaz, d. Hennecke, K. Fenner, T. Junker

We083 | Remarkably rapid dissipation of the herbicide glyphosate in eutrophic Lake Greifensee during summer | Sebastian Huntscha (agroscope, Switzerland) | S. Huntscha, i. Buerge, T. poiger

We076 | Impact of erosion of microbial diversity on 2,4-D degradation | Jessica princivalle (United Kingdom) | J. princivalle, e. Shaw, K. Thomas, S. Marschall, i. Bramke

We084 | Flume experiments to study the dynamics and mass balance of pharmaceuticals and their key transformation products in the water/sediment environment | Zhe li (Sweden) | Z. li, M. Radke

We077 | Microbial community structure in faecal matter of copepods: Does changes induced by presence of petrogenic oil alter biodegradation? | ingvild Størdal (norwegian University of Science and Technology, norway) | i. Størdal, a. olsen, d. altin, R. netzer, B. Jenssen We078 | Microbial community capability of PCB degradation in marine sediments | anna Barra caracciolo (national Research council, italy) | a. Barra caracciolo, p. Grenni, M. di lenola, B. Matturro, S. Rossetti We079 | Biodegradation of crude oil in adapted and unadapted environments | Mette Kristensen (University of copenhagen, denmark) | M. Kristensen, a. Johnsen, J. christensen We080 | The microbial potential for crude oil degradation off the coast of Western Greenland is limited. | anders Johnsen (Geological Survey of denmark and Greenland, denmark) | a. Johnsen, l. Malmquist, J. aamand, J. christensen We081 | Developing a new saturates biodegradation index for weathered oils, based on samples from the Deepwater Horizon disaster | Jonas Gros (Switzerland) | J. Gros, S. arey, c. Reddy, c. aeppli, R. nelson, c. carmichael We082 | Atmospheric deposition as a source of bioavailable Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons for their subsequent biodegradation in the surface global oceans. | Belen Gonzalez-Gaya (institute of environmental assessment and Water Research, Spain) | B. Gonzalez-Gaya, B. Jimenez, n. Berrojalbiz, J. dachs

We085 | Fate of Imidacloprid in soil: Evaluation of various extraction methods and LC-MS analysis of Imidacloprid and its metabolites | Florian Schmidt (Germany) | F. Schmidt, c. possberg, c. possberg, a. Schaeffer We086 | Fate of lindane and imidacloprid in terrestrial model ecosystems (TMEs) during a sampling period of one year | claudia possberg (institute for environmental Research RWTH, Germany) | c. possberg, c. possberg, M. Hammers-Wirtz, a. Toschki, a. Schaeffer We087 | The influence of the spectral quality of light on the degradation rate of two crop protection products | Mark day (University of Warwick, United Kingdom) | M. day, c. nichols, S. Marshall, H. Schaefer, l. Hand, G. Bending We088 | Enantioselective degradation of mecoprop in subsoil previously exposed to phenoxy-herbicides | Kai Bester (aarhus University, denmark) | Z. Frkova, a. Johansen, U. Gosewinkel, K. Bester We089 | Comparison of terrestrial field dissipation half-lives of pesticides and their metabolites across Europe | Robin Sur (Bayer cropScience lp, United States) | R. Sur We090 | Degradation of atrazine applied as a controlled released formulation in a Brazilian acrisol | deborah dick (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil) | d. dick, d. Barbosa, p. Burauel We091 | Fate and degradation of Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) in the soil of a tropical rainforest | luca nizzetto (niVa,

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norway) | l. nizzetto, Q. Zheng, X. liu, K. Borga, J. li, y. Jiang, X. liu, K. Jones, G. Zhang We092 | Microorganism and Medicago sativa synergic effects on PCB degradation in a contaminated soil | paola Grenni (national Research council cnR, italy) | p. Grenni, a. Barra caracciolo, M. di lenola, G. Garbini, V. ancona, a. Massacci We093 | Plant-assisted bioremediation as a green technology for recovering soil from PCB contamination | paola Grenni (national Research council cnR, italy) | p. Grenni, a. Barra caracciolo, a. Massacci We094 | Degradation of 3- and 4-ring azaarenes by bacterial isolates from soil | Margit Fernqvist (aarhus University, denmark) | M. Fernqvist, U. Gosewinkel, K. Bester We095 | The degradation efficiency of oil properties of Rhodococcus sp. Y2-2 at low temperature, isolated from oil-contaminated soil in South Korea | Seung-Woo Jeong (Kunsan national University, Korea (South)) | V. pham, J. Jeong, S. Jeong, J. Kim We096 | Mineralisation and biodegradation of aromatic organophosphorus flame retardants | John parsons (University of amsterdam, netherlands) | S. Jurgens, S. Waaijers, R. Helmus, M. Kraak, W. admiraal, p. de Voogt, J. parsons We097 | Biological treatment of micropollutants in drinking water resources | Janneke Wittebol (the netherlands) | J. Wittebol, M. Wagelmans We098 | Determination of transport properties and biodegradation of acesulfame in laboratory column experiments, batch studies, and a fixed-bed reactor | Florian Storck (dVGWTechnologiezentrum Wasser, Germany) | F. Storck, c. Skark, a. Woessner, F. Remmler, n. Zullei-Seibert, H. Brauch We099 | Removal of estrone with biogenic manganese oxide nanoparticles | Kai Bester (aarhus University, denmark) | K. Furgal, R. Meyer, K. Bester

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We100 | Biodegradation of Nitrosamines and Nitramines under Anoxic Conditions | andy Booth (SinTeF Materials and chemistry, norway) | l. Sorensen, o. Brakstad, a. Hyldbakk, K. Zahlsen, a. Booth We101 | The fate of fluoxetine under ironand sulfate-reducing conditions | Ferdinand Fischer (Federal institute of Hydrology, Germany) | F. Fischer, a. Wick, T. Ternes We102 | Transformation of veterinary pharmaceuticals and biocides in (liquid) manure - International validation ring test | Thomas Junker (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | T. Junker, e. Heusner, d. Gilberg, p. Ferreira, W. Graef, J. Roembke, M. Herrchen, d. Hennecke, c. atorf, S. Berkner, S. Konradi, S. Boehling We103 | Draft OECD test guidance for transformation of veterinary pharmaceuticals and biocides in liquid manure - robustness test | Monika Herrchen (Fraunhofer institute for Molecular Biology and applied ecology (iMe), Germany) | d. Hennecke, M. Herrchen, c. atorf, T. Junker, R. duering, S. Berkner We104 | Transformation of veterinary medicines in liquid manure - A literature study | Manuel Wohde (Germany) | M. Wohde, l. Schwarz, R. duering We105 | Dissipation of the antiparasitic agent ivermectin in cattle dung and soil at 4 parallel field studies | Manuel Wohde (Germany) | M. Wohde, K. Floate, p. coghlin, K. Floate, J. lahr, J. lumaret, J. Roembke, a. Scheffczyk, T. Tixier, R. duering We106 | Accelerated Biodegradation of Antibiotics in Agricultural Soils Following Exposure in the Field | edward Topp (agricultural and agriFood canada, canada) | e. Topp, l. Sabourin, M. Sumarah, F. Martin-laurent We107 | Tracking the uptake and metabolism of munitions compounds in coastal marine ecosystems using stable isotopic tracers: Role of sediment | Thivanka ariyarathna (University of connecticut, United States) | T. ariyarathna, p. Vlahos, c. Tobias, R. Smith, M.

WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

We108 | Climate change effects on PAH photodegradation in Mediterranean soils: A pilot study | Montse Marques (Rovira i Virgili University, Spain) | M. Marques, M. Mari, M. Schuhmacher, J. domingo, M. nadal

polychlorinated biphenyls, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and heterocyclic compounds present in natural sediments | Miriam Zimmer (RWTH aachen University institute for environmental Research, Germany) | M. Zimmer, k. eichbaum, M. Brinkmann, H. Hollert, G. Reifferscheid, S. Buchinger

We109 | phytotreatment of polychlorinated biphenyls contaminated soil by Chromolaena odorata (L) King and Robinson | Raymond oriebe anyasi (University of South africa, South africa) | R. anyasi, H. atagana

We117 | A novel method for sediment extraction and cleanup for chemical and effect screening of polar contaminants | Riccardo Massei (Germany) | R. Massei, H. Byers, W. Brack, T. Schulze, M. Krauss

We110 | In-vitro study of acyl-transferase activity of Rhodococcus and Bacillus | Monika Sogani (engineering chemistry and environmental Sciences Research centre JecRc, india) | M. Sogani, p. Bakre, n. Mathur

We118 | Development of effect-directed analysis methods for amphiphilic substances in sediment and phytobenthic communities. | Harry Byers (Germany) | H. Byers, R. Massei, c. Werner, M. Krauss, M. SchmittJansen, W. Brack

Ballentine, c. cooper

Identification and prioritisation of hazardous emerging pollutants (P). chaired by: Werner Brack, Jaroslav Slobodnik We111 | Applicability of existing sequential extraction schemes to identify the fractionation of fluorine in soil | Hyun a lee (Korean Basic Science institute, Korea (South)) | H. lee, J. an, J. lee, H. yoon We112 | Optimization of ultrasound assisted enzymatic extraction for the analysis of fluorine contents in rice samples | Junseok lee (Korea (South)) | J. lee, J. an, H. lee, H. yoon We113 | A comparative study of rare earth elements (REEs) ecotoxicity. Implications on risk assessment. | Veronica Gonzalez (France) | V. Gonzalez, d. Vignati, c. Bojic, c. leyval, l. Giamberini We114 | Monitoring of soil pollution in the area of Kara-Balta | Bermet Khudaibergenova (institute of Biotechnologynat academy of Sciences, Kyrgyzstan) | B. Khudaibergenova, K. Kydralieva, B. Uzbekov We115 | Petroleum hydrocarbon contamination of urban soils in Accra, Ghana | Marlene Schatz (Germany) | M. Schatz, l. Boehm, S. adiku, R. duering We116 | Desorption and bioavailability of

We119 | Identification of tetra propyl ammonium in river Rhine with LC-Orbitrap MS | Ronald Boer (Rijkswaterstaat, netherlands) | R. Boer We120 | Illicit drugs of emerging concern in surface and waste water | yolanda pico (University of Valencia, Spain) | y. pico, M. andres, V. andreu We121 | Development of an affordable and useful analysis for the measurement of pharmaceuticals in surface water | Martijn pijnappels (Rijkswaterstaat, netherlands) | M. pijnappels, J. Tiesnitsch, S. van Vliet, H. Zemmelink We122 | Pharmaceuticals as indicators of wastewater pollution in marine sediments from an urbanized bay of Korea | Minkyu choi (national Fisheries Research and development institute, Korea (South)) | M. choi, e. Furlong, S. Werner, i. lee, H. choi We123 | Determination of an Indicator Micropollutant in Surface Water and Water Treatment Plant | Kyung-duk Zoh (Seoul national University, Korea (South)) | K. Zoh, S. nam, d. choi We124 | Screening and target analysis of emerging contaminants in waste and sur-

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face water in the river Danube in the surrounding of the point at the 1255 km | Mirjana Vojinovic Miloradov (Serbia) | i. Spanik, M. Vojinovic Miloradov, i. Mihajlovic, J. Radonic, o. Vyviurska, M. Sremacki, M. Milanovic, n. Milic We125 | Adaptation of a method for simultaneous chemical analysis of antifouling biocides | lia Gracy Rocha diniz (Sรฃo paulo State University institute of chemistry, Brazil) | l. diniz, G. Zanuto, G. Ribeiro, T. pinto, T. oliveira, d. Silva, c. Galinaro, l. cappelini, T. Franco, e. Vieira

We132 | Occurrence and fate of different classes of endocrine disrupting chemicals in sewage treatment system and evaluation of their removal efficiency | Qian Wu (United States) | Q. Wu, W. lam, S. lam We133 | Onsite large volume solid phase extraction - how to get 1000 litres of water into the laboratory? | Tobias Schulze (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany) | T. Schulze, M. Krauss, a. Bahlmann, c. Hug, K. Walz, W. Brack

We126 | Aquaculture area using expanded polystyrene buoys can be an area of concern for HBCD contamination in the marine environment | Sang Hee Hong (Korea institute of ocean Science and Technology, Korea (South)) | S. Hong, n. al-odaini, G. Han, M. Rani, M. Jang, y. Song, W. Shim

We134 | Technical Report on Aquatic Effect-Based Monitoring Tools in the context of the European Union (EU) Water Framework Directive | Robert Kase (Swiss centre for applied ecotoxicology eaWaG epF, Switzerland) | a. Wernersson, M. carere, c. Maggi, B. Gawlik, R. Kase

We127 | Occurrence of organophosphate flame retardants and plasticizers in seawater from the South China Sea | lok Shun lai (The State Key laboratory in Marine pollution, Hong Kong) | l. lai

We135 | Application of bioanalytical tools indicative of adaptive stress response pathways for water quality assessment | peta neale (The University of Queensland, australia) | p. neale, l. Jin, J. Molendijk, d. Stalter, J. Tang, B. escher

We128 | Identification strategies for halogenated flame retardants and related chemicals | alin ionas (University of antwerp, Belgium) | a. ionas, a. Ballesteros Gomez, p. leonards, a. covaci We129 | Atmospheric deposition of polybromodiphenyl ethers in remote mountain regions of Europe | Joan Grimalt (Spain) | J. Grimalt, p. Fernandez, l. arellano We130 | Alternative halogenated and organophosphate flame retardants: estimated physical-chemical properties and persistence in indoor and outdoor environments | Miriam diamond (University of Toronto, canada) | d. Serodio, M. diamond, a. Krol, X. Zhang, a. Blum, V. Singla We131 | Assessment of legacy and emerging persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in southern hemisphere Humpback whale blubber: A non-target screening approach | Greta dalle luche (italy) | G. dalle luche, M.

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Schlabach, S. Bengtson nash

We136 | Chemical and bioanalytical characterisation of AhR agonists in PAH-contaminated soils during full-scale bioremediation | Maria larsson (orebro University, Sweden) | M. larsson, o. Westman, M. engwall We137 | Integrated chemical and toxicological methods for early detection of hazardous chemicals in drinking water | Karin Wiberg (Swedish University of agricultural Sciences SlU, Sweden) | l. ahrens, a. oskarsson, S. Kohler, B. Hellman, e. Wall, H. pekar, a. Glynn, p. Mcleaf, R. aslund Troger, K. Wiberg We138 | Estrogenic activities in water and sediment from French rivers using zebrafish-based bioassays | Manoj Sonavane (ineRiS, France) | M. Sonavane, n. creusot, e. Maillot-Marechal, c. Turies, B. piccini, J. porcher, a. pery, F. Brion, S. ait-aissa We139 | Miniaturization of the micronucleus

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assay to 96-well plate setup presents advantages for application in EDA | Hongxia Xiao (Rwthaachen University, Germany) | H. Xiao, c. di paolo, B. Thalmann, S. Heger, H. Hollert

We147 | Source discrimination of priority and emerging pollutants in the framework of an immission cadastre for Luxembourgish surface waters | Tom Galle (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg) | T. Galle, p. denis

We140 | The value of cell based and zebrafish bioassays for the evaluation of mutagenic compounds in EDA | yvonne Mueller (RWTH aachen University, Germany) | y. Mueller, c. di paolo, B. Thalmann, S. Keiter, W. Brack, H. Hollert, T. Seiler

We148 | Evaluation of alternative modeling approaches to estimate material-air partition ratios for semi-volatile organic chemicals. | efstathios Reppas- chrysovitsinos (Sweden) | e. Reppas- chrysovitsinos, a. Sobek, M. Macleod

We141 | planar-YES: steps towards a fast, robust and sensitive tool for effect-directed analysis of estrogenic activity | andreas Schรถnborn (ZHaW, Switzerland) | a. Schรถnborn, a. Grimmer

We149 | Method optimization and analyses of organic environmental pollutants from meat processing industry wastewater | Maja Turk Sekulic (Serbia) | M. Sremacki, M. Vojinovic Miloradov, J. Radonic, M. Turk Sekulic, M. Stosic, J. Simic, n. Zivancev

We142 | Comparison of two simplified fractionation protocols for the assessment of organic contaminants in aqueous samples using effect-directed analysis | Sanja Koprivica (Rudjer Boskovic institute, croatia) | S. Koprivica, i. Mikac, S. Terzic, M. ahel We143 | Evaluating hazardous pollutants from fire event: an EDA approach. | Sabrina Manente (ca Foscari University of Venice, italy) | S. Manente, F. Vazzola, l. Sperni, G. paolucci, G. Ravagnan We144 | Towards higher throughput in Effect-Directed Analysis | Margaretha lamoree (netherlands) | M. lamoree We145 | Optimization of an on-line solid phase extraction (SPE) coupled with UHPLC-MS/MS, for the determination of hormonal compounds in sewage from wastewater treatment plants of Gran Canaria (Spain) | Rayco Guedes-alonso (Universidad de las palmas de Gran canaria, Spain) | R. Guedes-alonso, S. Montesdeoca, Z. Sosa-Ferrera, J. Santana-Rodriguez We146 | NORMAN MassBank - status and new developments | Tobias Schulze (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany) | T. Schulze, e. Schymanski, S. neumann, M. Stravs, e. Mueller, M. Krauss, y. nihei, K. nishioka, T. nishioka, J. Slobodnik, J. Hollender, W. Brack

We150 | Present and future emerging pollutant mixtures in European rivers predicted by use pattern emission modeling | dik van de Meent (RiVM, netherlands) | d. van de Meent, d. de Zwart, l. posthuma, S. Fischer, K. Kramer We151 | Using monitoring data to assess persistence, bioaccumulation and longrange transport | Beate Baensch-Baltruschat (Federal institute of Hydrology, Germany) | B. Baensch-Baltruschat, e. claus, a. coors, K. duis, i. prutz, c. Rauert, H. Ruedel, J. Schoenfeld, M. Keller Recent advances and critical future research directions for poly- and perfuorinated alkyl substances (PFASs) (P). chaired by: carla ng, lutz ahrens, ian cousins, Zhiyong Xie We152 | Screening and ranking of PFASs by MultiCriteria Decision Making approach in QSARINS for highlighting the priority compounds | Stefano cassani (University of insubria, italy) | S. cassani, p. Gramatica We153 | The Environmental Profiles of 8:2 and 6:2 Fluorotelomer Alcohols | Robert Buck (e i dupont de nemours co inc, United States) | R. Hoke, a. Samel, T. Sloman, R. Buck We154 | Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFASs) in Swedish Rivers and the Baltic Sea | Minh nguyen (Sweden) | M. nguyen, l.

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ahrens, S. Josefsson, e. Ribeli, K. Wiberg We155 | Spatial distribution and partitioning behaviour of selected PFASs in surface water and sediment: a French nationwide survey | Gabriel Munoz (lpTcepoc cnRS, France) | G. Munoz, J. Giraudel, F. Botta, F. lestremau, H. Budzinski, p. labadie We156 | Characterization of the Perfluorinated Compounds Pattern in Mediterranean Aquatic Ecosystems: the Xúquer River as study case | yolanda pico (University of Valencia, Spain) | y. pico, J. campo, F. pérez, M. Farre, a. Masia, d. Barcelo We157 | Perfluorinated Organic Compounds in the Housatonic River Estuary and Long Island Sound | penny Vlahos (University of connecticut, United States) | J. elmoznino, p. Vlahos, M. Whitney We158 | Pharmacokinetics of Ten Perfluoroalkyl Acids (PFAAs) in Microminipigs: A New Experimental Animal for Chemical Studies | Keerthi Guruge (Japan) | K. Guruge, M. noguchi, K. yoshioka, M. yoshioka, n. yamanaka, M. ikezawa, n. Tanimura, M. Sato, S. Taniyasu, e. yamazaki, n. yamashita, H. Kawaguchi We159 | Bioaccumulation of perfluorinated alkyl acids in bivalves of the Po river delta (Adriatic Sea) | Sara Valsecchi (Water Research institute italian national Research council iRSacnR, italy) | M. Mazzoni, c. ng, S. corsolini, S. polesello, M. Rusconi, S. Valsecchi We160 | PFASs exposure routes for midges (Chironomus riparius): a field experiment | delphine Bertin (irstea, France) | d. Bertin, p. labadie, B. Ferrari, J. Garric, H. Budzinski, M. Babut We161 | Distribution and elimination parameters of PFASs using a physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model | Francesc Fabrega (Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain) | F. Fabrega, V. Kumar, M. nadal, e. Benfenati, M. Schuhmacher, J. domingo We162 | Influence of perfluorooctane sulphonate (PFOS) on the toxicity of emerging

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contaminants | eulalia Beltran (inia national institute for agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain) | e. Beltran, e. Beltrán, M. pablos, M. Gonzalez-doncel, c. Fernandez We163 | Emerging contaminants: Environmental Risk Assessment for soil organisms after biosolids application in agricultural land | eulalia Beltran (inia national institute for agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain) | e. Beltrán, e. Beltran, M. porcel, a. de la Torre, i. navarro, M. Martinez, c. Fernandez We164 | Sublethal effects of Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) on Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) | Julia Schwaiger (Bavarian environment agency, Germany) | J. Schwaiger, H. Ferling, M. Sengl We165 | Radiolytic decomposition of PFOS and toxicity assessment in aqueous media | Tae Hun Kim (Korea atomic energy Research institute KaeRi, Korea (South)) | T. Kim, H. Kim, S. yu, J. Ra, S. Kim We166 | Mammalian toxicology of shortchain 6:2 fluorotelomer-based raw materials and degradation products | Robert Buck (e i dupont de nemours co inc, United States) | R. Buck, M. Russell, R. Mingoia, S. MacKensie, M. Himmelstein We167 | Mammalian and aquatic toxicology of short-chain 6:2 fluorotelomer-based commercial products | Robert Buck (e i dupont de nemours co inc, United States) | R. Buck, R. Valentine, S. anand, M. Russell, R. Hoke We168 | Anaerobic transformation of 10:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (10:2 FTOH) and 6:2 fluorotelomer sulfonate (6:2 FTS) | Trine eggen (Bioforsk, norway) | T. eggen, a. arukwe We169 | Substitution of prioritized polyand perfluorinated chemicals to eliminate diffuse sources (SUPFES) | pim leonards (VU University institute for environmental Studies, netherlands) | p. leonards, H. andersson, U. Berger, i. cousins, p. Gillgard, G.

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peters, S. posner, J. Weiss, c. Jonsson We170 | Is perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) biomagnified in riverine food webs? A case study of two French rivers. | Marc Babut (irstea, France) | M. Babut, p. labadie, G. Munoz, H. Budzinski, B. Ferrari, d. Bertin, o. perceval We171 | Bioaccumulation of perfluorinated alkyl acids in two benthic invertebrates: Lumbriculus variegatus and Chironomus riparius | Sara Valsecchi (Water Research institute italian national Research council iRSacnR, italy) | S. Valsecchi, l. Marziali, M. Mazzoni, S. polesello, M. Rusconi, F. Stefani Biophysical Interactions at the Bio-nano Interface: Relevance for Aquatic Nanotoxicology (P). chaired by: ismael Rodea-palomares, Renata Behra, laura Sigg We173 | Effect of sulfidation and natural organic matters on toxicity of AgNPs of sediment dwelling organism, Chironomus riparius | Si-Won lee (University of Seoul) | S. lee, S. park, J. choi

We178 | Flow Cytometry as a tool to investigate the interactions between nanoparticles and aquatic microorganisms and their toxic effects at the cellular and subcellular level | nadia von Moos (University of Geneva institut Fa Forel, Switzerland) | n. von Moos, V. Slaveykova We179 | Preparation of Higher Plant and Phytoplankton Cells for the Study of Nanoparticle Uptake and Transport Using Electron Microscopy | Fabienne Schwab (duke University, United States) | F. Schwab, a. Turner, B. espinasse, S. Marinakos, B. colman, M. Gignac, M. Wiesner We180 | Cytotoxicity assessment of graphene oxide (GO) and carboxyl graphene (CXYG) nanoplatelets - alone and in combination with aromatic environmental pollutants | Tobias lammel (inia, Spain) | T. lammel, p. Boisseaux, J. navas Environmental risk assessment of nanomaterials: open issues, pitfalls and recommendations (P). chaired by: Birgit Sokull-Klüttgen, Thomas Backhaus

We174 | Effects of dimercaptosuccinate-functionalized magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles on aquatic organisms | ya-Qi Zhang (University of Bremen, Germany) | y. Zhang, c. petters, R. dringen, M. Gogolin, J. Koeser, S. Stolte

We181 | Precautions in the ecotoxicity testing of silver nanoparticles: loss of ionic silver by adsorption and photoreduction over the test period | Ryo Sekine (University of South australia, australia) | R. Sekine, K. Khurana, K. Vasilev, e. lombi, e. donner

We175 | Antioxidant responses and histological changes of the gills of freshwater fish Prochilodus Lineatus after acute and chronic exposure to titanium dioxide nanoparticles | Talita carmo (Brazil) | T. carmo, V. cavicchioli azevedo, J. Baldon, M. Fernandes

We182 | Environmental Implications of Nanosilver - Case study to quantify the potential environmental risk associated with the exposure from nanosilver from textiles | doris Völker (Federal environment agency Germany, Germany) | K. Schlich, d. Völker, l. Hohndorf, W. Koch, U. Kuehnen, K. HundRinke

We176 | Uptake of gold nanoparticles in Daphnia magna in the presence and absence of food using electron microscopy | lars Skjolding (dTU, denmark) | l. Skjolding, S. Sorensen, a. Thit Jensen, c. Kobler, K. Molhave, a. Baun We177 | Biodegradable Polymeric Nanoparticles and Fungi | Joao Fernandes (Universidade Federal de São carlos, Brazil) | J. Fernandes, R. Kitamura, M. Forim, a. Terezan, o. Bueno, M. Fernandes, M. da Silva, p. Vieira

We183 | Possibilities and limitations of the N-transformation test (OECD 216) | Kerstin Hund-Rinke (Fraunhofer iMe, Germany) | K. Hund-Rinke, K. Schlich We184 | Towards the development of improved OECD guidelines for the testing of nanomaterials - The OECD Expert Meeting on Ecotoxicology and Environmental Fate | dana Kühnel (Helmholtzcentre for environ-

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mental Research, Germany) | d. Kühnel, c. nickel, K. Schwirn, d. Völker We185 | The DaNa Knowledge Base Nanomaterials - Latest research results on the effects of nanomaterials on humans and the environment | dana Kühnel (Helmholtzcentre for environmental Research, Germany) | d. Kühnel, K. nau, c. Marquardt, H. Krug, B. Mathes, c. Steinbach We186 | Using Species Sensitive Distribution to assess and compare the toxicity of Silver nanoparticles and its bulk material through an aquatic trophic chain | cesar Grisolia (University of Brasilia, Brazil) | R. oliveira, J. de Souza Filho, c. Grisolia We187 | Biological Activity of Magnetite-Humics Nanocomposite in Biotest-Systems | Vera Terekhova (institute of ecology and evolution RaS, Russian Federation) | V. Terekhova, K. Kydralieva, d. Matorin, o. lisovitskaya We188 | Improving Environmental Flow Modelling for Exposure Assessment of MNM - Implications for a Time Dynamic Modelling Approach | nikolaus Bornhöft (eMpa Technology Society lab, Switzerland) | n. Bornhöft, T. Sun, l. Hilty, B. nowack We189 | Comprehensive Probabilistic Modelling of Environmental Emissions of Engineered Nanomaterials | Tianyin Sun (Switzerland) | T. Sun We190 | Flows of engineered nanomaterials through the recycling process in Switzerland | alejandro caballero Guzman (eMpa, Switzerland) | a. caballero Guzman, T. Sun, B. nowack We191 | Adequacy of current regulatory assessment for nanopesticides | Melanie Kah (University of Vienna, austria) | M. Kah, T. Hofmann Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling (P). chaired by: Monika nendza, Henriette Selck, aurelia lapczynski, christian Schlechtriem

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We192 | A weight-of-evidence (WoE) approach for evaluating trophic magnification in the environment. | david powell (dow corning corporation, United States) | d. powell, F. Gobas, R. Seston, K. Woodburn

tion and Maternal Transfer of Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products in Zebrafish (Danio Rerio) | Fangfang chen (national University of Singapore, Singapore) | F. chen, Z. Gong, B. Kelly

We193 | Comparison of trophic magnification factors (TMFs) based on trophic level positions derived from stable isotope signatures to TMFs based on trophic level positions obtained from FishBase. | david powell (dow corning corporation, United States) | d. powell, d. Muir, R. Seston, K. Woodburn

We201 | Validation of an HPLC method for determining log Pow values of non-ionic surfactants | charles eadsforth (Shell international, United Kingdom) | c. eadsforth, c. adams, T. austin, T. corry, S. Forbes, S. Harris

We194 | Gastrointestinal absorption processes of substances: Do they have an impact on bioaccumulation? | ariane Zwintscher (Fraunhofer iTeM, Germany) | a. Zwintscher, S. Hahn, R. Kühne, G. Schuurmann, W. drost, J. ackermann, U. Joehncke, c. Schlechtriem, M. nendza We195 | Modelling the Passive Membrane Permeability for neutral molecules using experimental blood-brain barrier (BBB) data | Kai Bittermann (Germany) | K. Bittermann, K. Goss We196 | Determination of partition coefficients of ionogenic organic chemicals to phospholipid membranes in TRANSIL system | yi chen (institute for Risk assessment Sciences, netherlands) | y. chen, J. Hermens, S. droge We197 | The fish eyes as new target organ for trace elements accumulation - a new insight on environmental risk assessment | patrícia pereira (portugal) | p. pereira, J. Raimundo, e. leite, S. Guilherme, M. Santos, J. canario, M. pacheco, a. almeida We198 | The Relevance of Soil for Human Exposure to PCDD/F | Frank neugebauer (eurofins Gfa lab Service GmbH, Germany) | F. neugebauer, n. lohmann, o. paepke We199 | Predicting bioaccumulation of chemicals in worm - moving beyond chemical partitioning | dave Kuo (city University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong) | d. Kuo We200 | Bioaccumulation, Tissue distribu-

We202 | Evaluation of currently available methods for determining the log Kow values of surfactants | charles eadsforth (Shell international, United Kingdom) | c. eadsforth, B. Bossuyt, a. Bouvy, J. colling, M. enrici, M. Guerts, G. Hodges, d. Miller, G. oetter, p. Sun, J. Venzmer We203 | Development of a reference list of chemicals for evaluating alternatives to in vivo fish bioaccumulation studies | neus Rodriguez-Sanchez (liverpool John Moores University, United Kingdom) | n. Rodriguez-Sanchez, M. cronin, a. lillicrap, J. Madden, e. Tollefsen We204 | Bioaccumulation of narcotic compunds | Walter di Marzio (Universidad nacional de lujanconiceT, argentina) | W. di Marzio, M. Saenz, J. alberdi We205 | A selective mobilization of PCB congeners from adipocytes during the lipolysis | caroline louis (Belgium) | c. louis, G. Tinant, e. Mignolet, J. Thome, c. debier We206 | Monitoring bioaccumulation of PCBs in eel; the role of ecology | Michiel Kotterman (iMaReS, netherlands) | M. Kotterman, S. Van leeuwen, S. Bierman

wenhuizen, R. Hoogenboom, M. Kotterman We209 | Does PAH bioaccumulation by macro-invertebrates follow suspended matter pollution dynamics? | Tom Galle (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg) | M. Frelat, r. carafa, T. Galle, p. denis We210 | Biotransformation of fungicides in the aquatic invertebrate Gammarus pulex | andrea Rösch (eawag, Switzerland) | a. Rösch, J. Jeon, J. Hollender We212 | A triple isotope (đ13C, đ15N and đ34S) approach to study bioaccumulation of legacy and current-use flame retardants in White-tailed Eagle Haliaeetus albicilla | igor eulaers (University of antwerp, Belgium) | i. eulaers, V. Jaspers, d. Halley, G. lepoint, T. nygard, R. pinxten, a. covaci, M. eens We213 | Evaluation of Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) contamination in estuarine ecosystem in Brazil | Juliane Rizzi (Brazil) | J. Rizzi, S. Froehner We214 | Binding of tributyltin or tetrodotoxin to recombinant saxitoxin and tetrodotoxin binding proteins from the pufferfish, Takifugu rubupires | yuji oshima (Faculty of agricutlure Kyushu University, Japan) | y. oshima, S. nonaka, a. nakamura, J. lee, T. Kusakabe, S. Komatsu, y. Shimasaki We215 | Degradation of methyl and propyl paraben in laboratory test while Nile Tilapias (Oreochromis Niloticus) | carlos alexandre Galinaro (Universidade de Sao paulo, Brazil) | d. da Silva, c. Galinaro, l. diniz, l. capellini, l. Serrano, e. almeida, e. Vieira

We207 | Bioaccumulation of Triclosan in great pond snails from a pond mesocosm study | Stefan Meinecke (Umweltbundesamt, Germany) | S. Meinecke, S. Wende, W. Mailahn, M. Feibicke, R. Berghahn, R. Schmidt

We216 | Effect of calcium and nutrients on strontium-90 uptake and distribution for dose rate assessments in Lemna minor | nele Horemans (Belgean nuclear Research centre ScKcen, Belgium) | a. Van Hoeck, n. Horemans, d. Knapen, R. Blust, H. Vandenhove

We208 | Pollutant bioaccumulation in the invasive species Chinese Mitten Crab | Stefan van leeuwen (RiKilT, netherlands) | S. van leeuwen, M. van der lee, M. Hoek-nieu-

We217 | Relating subcellular copper partitioning to the growth effect in Ruditapes philippinarum (Bivalvia: Veneridae) exposed to continuous, increasing and pulse

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impact of copper contaminated sediments | Julian Blasco (inst ciencias Marinas de andalucia, Spain) | l. Santana, o. campana, l. lotufo, d. abessa, J. Blasco We218 | Influence of sediment modifying factors on uranium bioaccumulation in the freshwater midge | Sarah crawford (University of Saskatchewan Toxicology centre, canada) | S. crawford, K. liber

We226 | Chlordecone decontamination potential in growing male goats | Marie-laure lastel (Université de lorraine inRa, France) | M. lastel, S. lerch, a. Fournier, S. Jurjanz, c. Feidt, G. Rychen

We219 | Metal bioaccumulation in natural river biofilms collected in an urban contamination gradient | lise Fechner (France) | J. Fabure, M. dufour, l. Fechner

We227 | Investigating Chemical Biodegradation with Artificial Neural Network Ensembles | adam lee (Simulations plus inc, United States) | a. lee, M. lawless, R. Frackiewicz, R. clark, W. Woltosz

We220 | Copper, cadmium and zinc exposures in the coral prawn, Metapenaeopsis crassissima: Males Vs. females and the role of cadmium metallothioneins | Marilyn Bennet-chambers (curtin University, australia) | M. Bennet-chambers

We228 | Mapping partitioning properties and bioaccumulation potential onto GCxGC chromatograms of complex mixtures containing nonpolar analytes | deedar nabi (epFl, Switzerland) | d. nabi, J. Gros, p. dimitriou-christidis, S. arey

We221 | Regulation of body metal concentrations: toxicokinetics of Cd and Zn in crickets | agnieszka Bednarska (Jagiellonian University, poland) | a. Bednarska, R. laskowski, M. opyd, e. Zurawicz

We229 | Calculation of physicochemical properties for Short- and Medium-Chain Chlorinated Paraffin | Juliane Glüge (eTH Zurich, Switzerland) | J. Glüge, c. Bogdal, M. Scheringer, a. Buser, K. Hungerbuehler

We222 | Selenium Bioaccumulation: Impact on the Fat Body Histology of Silkworm Bombyx. Mori L. | arava Vijaya Bhaskara Rao (dept of ecology and environmental Sciences, india) | a. Vijaya Bhaskara Rao, S. Smitha

We230 | Influence of 3D molecular structure on partitioning and sorption behaviour of organic chemicals - ą cyclodextrin binding as a test case | lukas linden (Germany) | l. linden, S. endo, K. Goss

We223 | Seasonal variability of metal bioaccumulation in gammarids and inter-species comparison: a biomonitoring investigation under an urban diffusive contamination gradient | nastassia Urien (irstea, France) | J. lebrun, n. Urien, o. Geffard

We231 | UFZ-LSER Database: Descriptors and Parameters for Linear Solvation Energy Relationships (LSERs) and Polyparameter Linear Free Energy Relationships (PPLFERs) | Satoshi endo (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany) | S. endo, n. Watanabe, n. Urlich, G. Bronner, M. Willig, K. Goss

We224 | Heavy metals in shells: considerations around a possible bioinertization process by using bioaccumulation factors | alessandra Zuin (ca Foscari University of Venice, italy) | a. Zuin, G. cipolato, F. Visin, W. cairns, S. Manente, G. Rampazzo, G. Ravagnan We225 | Modelling Pb and Cd bioaccumulation in Gammarus pulex: Application to realistic environmental conditions and impor-

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tance of water chemistry | nastassia Urien (irstea, France) | n. Urien, e. Uher, l. Fechner, o. Geffard, J. lebrun

We232 | iSafeRat® HA-QSARs vs. commonly used predictive models : A statistical comparison | Faizan Sahigara (ceHTRa SaS, France) | F. Sahigara, p. Bicherel, p. Thomas Mechanistic effect modeling - beyond concentration response and constant environments (P). chaired by: andré Gergs, elke Zimmer, Roman ashauer, annemette palmqvist

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We233 | Can survival of Gammarus pulex under four different exposure regimes of carbendazim be simulated with one toxicokinetic-toxicodynamic model parameterisation? | andreas Focks (Wageningen UR, netherlands) | a. Focks, i. Roessink, l. Rongua, T. Brock We234 | Parameterisation of TKTD models to predict the survival of five aquatic species exposed to chlorpyrifos, pyrene and carbendazim | andreas Focks (Wageningen UR, netherlands) | a. Focks, K. Viaene, F. de laender, p. van den Brink We235 | Damage-recovery modeling with Hill function for switch-like responses in tilapia exposed to pulsed waterborne copper | chung-Min liao (national Taiwan University, Taiwan) | W. chen, c. liao We236 | Predicting energetic consequences of toxic stress in holometabolic insects | dragan Jevtic (institute of environmental Sciences Jagiellonian Univeristy, poland) | J. Maino, d. Jevtic, a. Bednarska We237 | Carbaryl toxicity prediction to soil organisms under high and low temperature regimes. | Maria lima (aveiro University, portugal) | M. lima, d. nunes cardoso, a. Soares, S. loureiro We238 | Responses of Triticum aestivum and Brassica rapa to carbaryl and ultraviolet radiation. | Maria lima (aveiro University, portugal) | M. lima, a. Soares, S. loureiro

change conditions | Jennifer Hochmuth (Ghent University, Belgium) | J. Hochmuth, K. de Schamphelaere We242 | Quantifying complex behaviour: The relevance of movement and its representation at different scales for estimating the recovery of aquatic macroinvertebrates | Jacqueline augusiak (Wageningen UR, netherlands) | J. augusiak, p. van den Brink We243 | Toxicant Mixtures: Ambiguities in the Determination of Toxicant Interactions | Tom Kinraide (United States) | T. Kinraide, y. le We244 | Population dynamics of Paryale hawaensis associated to algae belt at Itanhaém beach, southeastern Brazil, as a tool for the establishment of possible ‘endpoints’ for ecotoxicological analysis. | lucas alegretti (Brazil) | l. alegretti, M. nicoletti Flynn We245 | Accounting for adaptation in understanding population-level responses to anthropogenic stressors. | christopher Salice (Texas Tech University, United States) | c. Salice We246 | An Individual Based Model of the Eurasian minnow - a virtual laboratory for extrapolating sub-lethal effects of pesticides to the population level | Udo Hommen (Fraunhofer iMe, Germany) | l. ibrahim, c. Hazlerigg, T. preuss, U. Hommen

We239 | Influence of temperature on sublethal toxicity of zinc chloride to sea urchin embryos | Rahime oral (Turkey) | R. oral, F. Koçbaş, n. Turkcu

We247 | Coupled individual based models as a new tool to predict ecological effects in multi-species systems | Karel Viaene (Ghent University, Belgium) | K. Viaene, a. Focks, h. baveco, p. van den Brink, F. de laender, c. Janssen

We240 | Modelling the interaction between light intensity, nutrient concentration and oxidative stress in Lemna minor | elke Zimmer (Belgian nuclear Research centre ScKcen, netherlands) | e. Zimmer, n. Horemans, n. cedergreen, T. Jager, H. Vandenhove

We248 | Population modeling - Use of scenarios to avoid different levels of protection in current risk assessment | Magnus Wang (WSc Scientific GmbH, Germany) | M. Wang

We241 | Combined effects of copper and cyanobacteria on population dynamics of Daphnia magna under projected climate

We249 | An optimal Environmental Impact Assessment of Waste Water Treatment Plant: Risk Assessment & Predictive Tool | Stellio casas (Veolia environnement Re-

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cherche et innovation, France) | S. casas, y. liao, a. Maitrejean We250 | Modelling impacts of environmental stressors and intra-/inter-specific interactions on shaping meiobenthos biodiversity in British estuaries | Xiaoliang Sun (United Kingdom) | X. Sun, d. lallias, S. creer, F. Falciani We251 | Vitellogenin is not a suitable biomarker of crustacean feminisation | alex Ford (University of portsmouth, United Kingdom) | S. Short, G. yang, p. Kille, a. Ford We252 | Influenza virus-host-environment interaction dynamics for assessment and control of respiratory disease risks | yi-Hsien cheng (national Taiwan University, Taiwan) | y. cheng, c. liao Statistical challenges in ecotoxicology (P). chaired by: John Green, Sandrine charles We253 | Challenging Responses from Ecotoxicity Experiments | John Green (dupont, United States) | J. Green, T. Springer We254 | Statistical Analysis of Aquatic Experiments Using Solvents | John Green (dupont, United States) | J. Green We255 | Breaking up is hard to do: Investigating the importance of breaking up algal chains in reducing the mean %CoV for section-by-section specific growth rate in Anabaena flos-aquae Toxicity Testing | Kirsty-Jo Muddiman (Smithers Viscient, United Kingdom) | a. evans, K. Muddiman We256 | Portion of time foraging (PT): How to avoid different levels of protection in the acute and chronic risk assessment | Magnus Wang (WSc Scientific GmbH, Germany) | M. Wang We257 | PROERA: A Multi-Criteria based Decision Support System for probabilistic ecological risk assessment | philippe ciffroy (edF, France) | p. isigonis, a. Zabeo, p. ciffroy, e. Semenzin, S. Giove, a. critto, S. andres, a. pery, a. Marcomini

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WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries (P). chaired by: Serenella Sala, Tomas ekvall, Guido Sonnemann

innovative battery technology through the BiBAT project (LIFE+ 2012, Environment Policy and Governance) | elise naveaux (cea Grenoble, France) | e. naveaux, a. Brunot, i. noirot le Borgne

We258 | Hybrid LCA approach for the assessment of greenhouse gas emissions of first and second ethanol production technologies in Brazil | Marcos Watanabe (Brazilian Bioethanol Science and Technology labora, Brazil) | M. Watanabe, M. chagas, o. cavalett, M. cunha, a. Bonomi

We266 | Chemical storage for electricity surplus - a complementary possibility of physical storage? | Sandra Belboom (Belgium) | S. Belboom, S. ali, G. Heyen, a. leonard

We259 | The potential role of LCA for the implementation and optimization of energy access projects? | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland) | F. Graveaud, B. Verzat, e. carlu, S. Humbert, B. chappert We260 | Life-cycle impact of lignin on carbon, cost, and health from U.S. cellulosic biofuels | corinne Scown (lawrence Berkeley national laboratory, United States) | c. Scown, a. Horvath, T. McKone We261 | Between energy policy support and methodological research: a case study on the effective combination of equilibrium models with LCA to predict future impacts | Benedetto Rugani (centre de Recherche public Henri Tudor cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg) | B. Rugani, e. igos, S. Rege, e. Benetto, l. drouet, d. Zachary We262 | Production of electricity from forest residues in Portugal: environmental gains and losses using carbon footprint and LCA | ana dias (University of aveiro, portugal) | a. dias, M. demertzi, l. arroja We263 | Integration of environmental criteria for public procurement of photovoltaic electricity | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | J. payet, B. evon We264 | Environmental performance comparison between Pumped-Hydro Energy Storage and Battery Energy Storage System in Mexico | leonor Guereca (UnaM, Mexico) | l. Guereca We265 | Assessing the sustainability of an

We267 | Hydrogen mobility life cycle assessment | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland) | B. Verzat, B. chappert, l. payen, S. Humbert, l. Bodineau We269 | Tiered decision framework for the development of sustainable chemical products and processes - Application to the biobased economy | akshay patel (copernicus institute of Sustainable development Utrecht University, netherlands) | a. patel, e. Heugens, l. posthuma We270 | Defining planetary boundaries for chemicals: a proposal for Persistent Organic Contaminants (POPs) | Marco Vighi (University of Milano, italy) | M. Vighi, T. Backhaus, M. diamond, a. Bjorn, i. Holoubek, R. lohmann, S. Molander, l. persson, S. Sala, M. Scheringer, S. Villa, c. Zetzsch We271 | LCA in support of more qualified air pollution abatement policies: Case of NMVOC emissions in European countries for 2000-2010 | alexis laurent (Technical University of denmark, denmark) | a. laurent, M. Hauschild We272 | Determination of the environmental footprint of the anthropic water cycle using LCA | Sylvie Groslambert (University of liège, Belgium) | S. Groslambert, a. leonard

Switzerland | claudio Beretta (eTH Zurich, Switzerland) | c. Beretta, S. Hellweg We275 | Developing eco-efficiency indicators for Swiss waste management | Grégoire Meylan (Switzerland) | G. Meylan We276 | How can Collaborative LCA (CoLCA) scheme empower a transition from Assessment to the Creation of Shared Benefits? | Stephane Morel (Renault, France) | S. Morel, F. aggeri We279 | Organizational Life Cycle Assessment - Guidance for organizations to conduct LCA considering their value chain | Julia Martínez-Blanco (Technische Universität Berlin, Germany) | J. Martínez-Blanco, S. Valdivia, a. Quiros, a. inaba, M. Finkbeiner We280 | A proposal for standardization of the biofuel energy balance calculation | anna lúcia Mourad (iTal institute of Food Technology, Brazil) | a. Mourad, a. Walter We281 | Role and responsibilities of analysts in communicating Life Cycle Assessment results to decision makers: a case study in building sector | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | M. Sié, J. payet We282 | Defining, Quantifying and Teaching “Sustainable Nanotechnology” | elena Semenzin (ca Foscari University of Venice, italy) | V. Subramanian, e. Semenzin, S. Stemberger, G. alberti, a. arcoleo, d. Hristozov, a. Marcomini, i. linkov We283 | Implementing a Life Cycle Management capability maturity model at an Indian chemicals company | Sanjeevan Bajaj (Federation of indian chambers of commerce industry, india) | S. Bajaj, a. datta, S. Gupta

We273 | Life cycle assessment for sustainable cockle farm management in Malaysia | Siti dina pahri (institute for environment and development national University of Malaysia, Malaysia) | S. pahri, a. Mohamed

Persistent, Bioaccumulative and Toxic (PBT) substances - identification, assessment and regulatory decision making with a special focus on socio-economic aspects (P). chaired by: Georg Streck, Silke Gerda Margaret Gabbert, Martin Scheringer, Hans-christian Stolzenberg

We274 | Environmental Impact of Food Losses from Agriculture to Consumption in

We284 | Incorporating Environmental Im-

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pacts in the Benefit -Risk Evaluation of Veterinary Medicinal Products (VMP) | daniela Gildemeister (Umweltbundesamt Federal agency of environment, Germany) | d. Gildemeister, T. Backhaus, a. Boxall, S. Hickmann, a. Kuester, l. porsch, K. Thiele, R. Vidaurre, M. Faust We285 | Sensitivity comparison of fish and daphnia toxicity - evaluation of ecotoxicological testing strategies and chronic fish testing | Martin May (Fraunhofer iTeM, Germany) | M. May, W. drost, S. Germer, T. Juffernholz, S. Hahn We286 | AIST-MeRAM: an easy-to-use tool for aquatic environmental risk assessment and management of chemicals | Bin-le lin (national institute of advanced industrial Science, Japan) | B. lin, R. ogikami, M. Kamo, W. naito We287 | How to avoid dangerous alternative to banned chemicals in a benign by design approach: screening of Flame Retardants by the cumulative PBT-Index in QSARINS | Stefano cassani (University of insubria, italy) | S. cassani, a. Sangion, p. Gramatica We288 | Method development to screen and identify new persistent, bioaccumulative, toxic (PBT) substances | Viktoria Harzl (Fachhochschule Technikum Wien, austria) | V. Harzl, d. Ruenzler, R. Hornek We289 | Steps needed to incorporate scientific developments into regulatory practice - needs to improve the PBT/vPvB assessment | Johanna peltola-Thies (ecHaeuropean chemicals agency, Finland) | J. peltola-Thies, V. Bonnomet, J. caley, p. lepper, p. phrakonkham, l. Ribeiro, G. Streck, c. Tissier We290 | Main findings of the ECETOC Task Force on PBT Criteria (Annex XIII of REACH) | Miriam leon paumen (exxonMobil Biomedical Sciences, Belgium) | B. Brown, M. claessens, i. colombo, M. embry, J. Franklin, B. Hidding, S. Jacobi, M. leon paumen, n. McGrath, c. Miyata, K. Woodburn, H. Vrijhof We291 | Effectiveness of measures adopted for the reduction of nonylphenol concentra-

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tions in European rivers: the case study of river Lambro, Northern Italy | Sara Valsecchi (Water Research institute italian national Research council iRSacnR, italy) | M. Rusconi, l. patrolecco, S. Valsecchi, S. polesello We292 | Fluoroalkyl Substances and Flame Retardants in Air in the Canadian Arctic and Great Lakes Basin | Hayley Hung (environment canada, canada) | H. Hung, M. Shoeib, H. Xiao, e. Sverko, K. Brice, n. alexandrou, e. Barresi, p. Fellin We293 | Articles with POP-BDEs: recycling or incineration? | Martien Janssen (nat inst publ Health environ, netherlands) | M. Janssen, c. luttikhuizen, H. leslie, p. leonards, S. Brandsma, B. van Hattum, n. Jonkers We294 | Baseline of Chemical assessment of PCBs, POPs and PAHs in sediment and sea anemones on natural populations from different climatic scenariou | Juliana Gadelha (University of aveiro, portugal) | J. Gadelha, M. Memije, y. Roca, p. Gomes, F. Morgado, a. Soares, J. Von osten We295 | Dioxins and PCBs in eel and Chinese mitten crabs in the Rhine-Meuse estuary | Bert van Hattum (Vrije Universiteit amsterdam, netherlands) | B. van Hattum, p. nijssen, J. Focant, J. de Boer We296 | Pendimethalin - Refined Characterization of Persistence, Bioaccumulation and Toxicity under Regulation EC 1107/2009 | Jan Hassink (BaSF Se, Germany) | J. Hassink, B. Jene, M. Habekost, p. dohmen We297 | Persistence of pharmaceuticals measured in two Swedish lakes by chemical benchmarking | Hongyan Zou (Stockholm University, Sweden) | H. Zou, M. Radke, M. Macleod, a. Kierkegaard, M. Mclachlan We298 | Improvements on the Brazilian Antifouling Research Network (BARN) | Gilberto Fillmann (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Brazil) | G. Fillmann, a. Godoi, c. Rocha-Barreira, e. lamardo, i. castro, M. Fernandez, M. Marchi, M. Barcellos da costa, p. Tagliani, T. dos Santos Franco

WedneSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

We299 | Screening-level risk assessment of active ingredients in cleaning products based on the usage patterns of consumers | Jung-Hyun park (neoenBiz co, Korea (South)) | J. park, K. park, c. Kim, J. Shin, J. lee We300 | Source apportionment and spatial distribution of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in Swart River, Cape Town | Beatrice opeolu (cape peninsula University of Technology, South africa) | B. opeolu, o. Fatoki, o. olatunji, B. Ximba We301 | Consideration of environmental substance stock dynamics for informing decision-making on persistent substances in the environment. | oliver Warwick (peter Fisk associates limited, United Kingdom) | o. Warwick, p. Fisk, H. disley We302 | Screening and prioritization of chemicals in the context of REACH: the cumulative PBT Index model implemented in QSARINS | alessandro Sangion (italy) | a. Sangion, S. cassani, p. Gramatica We303 | Literature review in toxicological research and chemical risk assessment: the state of the science | Whaley paul (Messagewright, United Kingdom) | W. paul We304 | Feedback from an Authorization Dossier: Research of Alternatives, the Cornerstone of the Process. | philippe adrian (ceHTRa SaRl, France) | o. Sautel, R. Samsera, M. Stryszowska, d. drohmann, p. adrian Poster Corners Policy assessment in an integrated systems perspective: indicators and targets to ensure operating within safe planetary boundaries (PC). chaired by: Serenella Sala, Tomas ekvall, Guido Sonnemann Wepc01 | Taking a life cycle approach for sustainability assessment of energy policies. A case study of Ecuadorian electricity generation system | Sebastian espinoza (national institute of energy efficiency and Rewable energy, ecuador) | B. Rivela, S. espinoza, F. izurieta, a. Montero

Wepc02 | Multi-criteria Decision-making for Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment: A Case Study of Bioethanol | Jingzheng Ren (italy) | J. Ren, a. Manzardo, F. Zuliani, a. Scipioni Wepc03 | The role of the three cultural perspectives in LCA for policy making - human health impacts of future electricity production | Karin Treyer (paul Scherrer institute, Switzerland) | K. Treyer, c. Bauer, a. Simons Wepc04 | Agent-based modelling for LCA of electric vehicles deployment policies: what are the key drivers? | Florent Querini (Luxembourg) | F. Querini, E. Benetto Wepc05 | Hybrid eMergy-LCI and network's graphs analysis to inform on the sustainability of life cycle activities | Benedetto Rugani (Centre de Recherche Public Henri Tudor, Luxembourg) | B. Rugani, T. Navarrete Gutierrez, Y. Pigne, A. Marvuglia, D. Arbault, L. Tiruta-Barna, E. Benetto Wepc06 | Environmental impacts at the urban scale - application of different analytical environmental management tools | Ana Dias (University of Aveiro, Portugal) | A. Dias, D. Lemos, X. Gabarrell Durany, L. Arroja Teaching and communicating sustainability - paving the way to a common understanding and meaningful actions (PC). chaired by: Ralph Rosenbaum Wepc07 | Communication of sustainability in tourism: examples for Swiss ski tourism, cruises and a public festival | Salome Schori (Foundation myclimate, Switzerland) | S. Schori, c. Wildbolz, e. Mueller Wepc08 | Sustainable development integration strategies in higher education: Case study of two universities and five colleges in Quebec | Ben amor (Universite de Sherbrooke) | V. Bisaillon, B. amor, a. Webster Wepc09 | Communicating and teaching sustainability: Using LCA as a metrics in advancing Green Chemistry | G. Sonnemann (University of Bordeaux, France) | G. Sonnemann, a. Foulet, p. Garriques

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Wepc10 | The DPSIR approach applied to marine eutrophication in LCIA as a learning tool | nuno cosme (Technical University of denmark dTU, denmark) | n. cosme, S. olsen

nication of research - pinpointing the best practice to improve our outreach (PC). chaired by: Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, Henner Hollert, Ursula Klaschka, Katharina Tarnacki

Bioaccumulation processes and mechanisms: Implications for experimental assessments and modelling (PC). chaired by: Monika nendza, Henriette Selck, aurelia lapczynski, christian Schlechtriem

Wepc19 | Evaludation’: Merging validation and evaluation of ecological models | Jacqueline augusiak (Wageningen UR, netherlands) | J. augusiak, p. van den Brink, V. Grimm

Wepc13 | Interrelationship of bioaccumulation metrics (BCF, BAF, BMF, and TMF) and how they may be incorporated into a screening-level probabilistic risk assessment. | david powell (dow corning corporation, United States) | d. powell, a. Fairbrother, d. Mackay, K. Woodburn

Wepc20 | The tribes from the chemistry planet: how they communicate to each other? | philippe Garrigues (Université de Bordeaux, France) | p. Garrigues

Wepc14 | A dynamic multi-compartment fish bioaccumulation model with a focus on dietary chemical absorption | Ruiyang Xiao (Stockholm University, Sweden) | R. Xiao, J. arnot, M. Macleod Wepc15 | Mechanistic PBTK modelling for in vitro up-scaling | Wolfgang larisch (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research UFZ, Germany) | W. larisch, T. Brown, K. Goss Wepc16 | Evaluation of non-animal methods as alternatives to in vivo fish bioaccumulation studies | neus Rodriguez-Sanchez (liverpool John Moores University, United Kingdom) | n. Rodriguez-Sanchez, M. cronin, J. Madden, i. nerland, a. Hogfeldt, M. Hultman, H. Segner, K. Tollefsen Wepc17 | Predicting bioconcentration of fragrance ingredients by an in vitro-in vivo extrapolation model based on biotransformation rates in trout liver S9 fractions | Heike laue (Givaudan Schweiz aG, Switzerland) | H. laue, H. Gfeller, K. Jenner, J. nichols, a. natsch Wepc18 | A benchmarking approach to determine biotransformation rate constants for organic chemicals in fish from in-vivo experiments | Margaretha adolfsson-erici (Sweden) | M. adolfsson-erici, J. arnot, M. Mclachlan, M. Macleod Research on communication and commu-

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Wepc21 | Consumers’ right to know about risks when using Personal Care Products in Europe and South Africa | Ursula Klaschka (University of applied Sciences, Germany) | U. Klaschka, H. Rother Wepc22 | Emerging pollutants from animal husbandry - Risk assessment and communication | Katharina Tarnacki (RWTH aachen University, Germany) | K. Tarnacki, T. Wings, W. dott, R. Vossen, S. Jeschke Wepc23 | Evaluation of two methods of scientific outreach for adolescents in Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain) | Belen Gonzalez-Gaya (institute of environmental assessment and Water Research, Spain) | B. Gonzalez-Gaya, M. Fernandez-pinos, e. Jurado, B. Jimenez, J. dachs

THURSday 15 May

Closing ceremony including keynotes 13:55-15:30

Wrap-up keynotes discussing the highlights for each of the five main themes of the meeting • Life Cycle Analysis & Sustainability (Diederik Schowanek) • Environmental Chemistry (Pim Leonards) • Ecotoxicology (Virginie Ducrot) • Fate and effects of nanomaterials (Richard Handy) • Risk assessment, regulation and public perception (Sabine Duquesne) Young Scientist Awards 2014: best poster & best platform presentation Acknowledgements Future meetings

Platform and special sessions 08:10-12:50

Platform sessions + special session

Poster display 07:45–08:10 Poster setup 10:15–10:45 Morning coffee break: attend poster 12:50–13:55 Lunch & poster session: attend poster Special Session: Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production (SS04) Thursday, 14 May, 10:45 – 12:50, Shanghai 3/4 The value of the sustainability concept, and underlying concepts such as ecosystem services and footprints, for environmental management is best demonstrated when related to an actual case. As a follow-up on the successful ‘Whisky Session’ held at the 23rd annual meeting of SETAC Europe in Glasgow, the Sustainability and Ecosystem Services Advisory Groups propose to organise a special session on the Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production. The main ingredient of chocolate are cocoa beans, the fruit of cacao trees. The production of cocoa beans depends on a wide range of goods and services from ecological systems, such as nutrients from the soils, water and shade from the forests, and on the local agrarian society. These localized production

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Special SeSSion

Special SeSSion

systems connect to the global economic system through commerce, finance, and regulation. The high and still growing demand for cocoa beans is a threat to soil fertility and stimulates the farmers to use artificial fertilizers and pesticides. Older strains of cacao trees needed shade from the natural forest. New strains have been developed that allow a second harvest of beans and are more sunlight tolerant, which induces farmers to cut down the shade trees and plant more cacao trees (Filou & Kenny, 2011). Cocoa beans are grown in Africa, South America and South-East Asia (Fig. 1) and need to be imported in Switzerland, raising (land and carbon) footprint issues. As a result of the increasing demand for sustainable production, cocoa bean growing has been subjected to critical studies on environmental and social aspects. Life Cycle Analyses have been performed for milk production, needed for milk chocolate, in Switzerland.

The production of chocolate is an ideal topic to show the integrative dimensions of sustainability, ecosystem services and footprint concepts. The session will address the following topics: • The ecosystem services associated with chocolate production (cocoa beans and milk) • Environmental footprints of Swiss chocolate production • The social-economical importance of the chocolate industry in Switzerland • Human health aspects of chocolate consumption • Sustainability of the industry • How do the flow of goods and services from ecological systems connect to sustainability? The session might attract participants active in the fields of sustainability, systems ecology, ecosystem services, environmental footprints, tropical forestry, land degradation, biodiversity, life cycle analysis, and human health issues. Supported by the Advisory Group on Sustainability and the Ecosystem Services Advisory Group Programme Chairs: Joke van Wensem (TCB, The Netherlands), Larry Kapustka (LK Consultancy, Canada)

Fig. 1. Cocoa harvest 2011-2012. Source: International Cocoa Organization, Bulletin No. 4, November 2012.

Switzerland has a market economy based on international trade and banking. Agriculture employs less than 5% of the population, and since only 10% of the land is arable, the primary agricultural products are cattle and dairy goods (especially cheeses). Grains, fruits, and vegetables are also grown, and there is a large chocolate-processing industry. Mineral resources are scarce, and most raw materials and many food products must be imported. Tourism adds significantly to the economy. Electricity is generated chiefly from hydro-electrical and nuclear power sources. The annual sale of Swiss chocolate and related products was 172.376 tonnes in 2012, of which 60% was exported to 144 countries. The sales have been stable over the past years. The Swiss chocolate industry employed approximately 4300 persons in 2012 (www.chocosuisse.ch).

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10:45 Introduction (Joke van Wensem, TCB, Netherlands) 10:50 Ecosystem services, payment for ecosystem services, biodiversity: Securing future supplies and preserving biodiversity by paying cocoa farmers for Ecosystem Services (Amarens Felperlaan, CREM, Netherlands) 11:10 Environmental impacts of chocolate in a life cycle perspective (Niels Jungbluth, ESU-Services, Switzerland) 11:30 Overview of scientific evidence for chocolate health benefits (Joke van Wensem, TCB, Netherlands) 11:50 Ecological-social-ethical interactions that comprise the life cycle along the way from growers to the end product (Larry Kapustka, LK Consultancy, Canada) 12:10 Economics and sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production (Petra Heid, Chocolats Halba, Switzerland) 12:30 Discussion

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Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35

566 | investigation of Health effects associated with indirect potable Reuse Water | edwin Routledge (Brunel University, United Kingdom)

poster Spotlight: posters TH012 | TH013 | TH014 | TH011

553 | agricultural production guidelines as a basis for impact assessment - a case study of indian silk production | Miguel F. astudillo (United Kingdom)

554 | comprehensive environmental sustainability assessment on pampers baby wipes including supply chain specifics | Gert Van Hoof (procter Gamble Services, Belgium)

532 | a comparison of toxicity and accumulation kinetics in daphnia magna and lumbriculus variegatus exposed to differently coated silver nanoparticles | Kai paul (HeriotWatt University, United Kingdom)

552 | applying peF in practice - challenges related to the development of peFcRs and benchmarks | Markus Berger (Technische Universitaet Berlin, Germany)

551 | lca-related benchmarking process as part of environ-mental performance assessment for buildings - a contribution to sustainable construction works | Thomas luetzkendorf (Karlsruhe institute of Technology, Germany)

550 | creating a pilot eco-label assessment matrix based on life cycle assessment | G. Sonnemann (University of Bordeaux, France)

549 | Global principles and practices for Hotspots analysis | James Fava (pe inTeRnaTional inc, United States)

Toward sustainability: benchmarks, certification and LCA (I) Monica lavagna, christian Bauer, Sebastien Humbert

Shanghai 1/2

531 | indium and iTo induce endoplasmatic reticulum stress | nadja Brun (FHnWeTH, Switzerland)

530 | Role of Quantum dot Surface Functionality on Uptake and Function in Fathead Minnow ovarian Follicle cell primary cultures | candice lavelle (United States)

529 | in vivo tracking of single walled carbon nanotubes and their modulation of nutrient transport and processing genes during fish feeding studies | Tara Sabo-attwood (University of Florida, United States)

528 | Silver nanoparticles affect the homeostasis of copper in a multi-cellular fish in vitro system | Matteo Minghetti (eawag, Switzerland)

527 | Species differences and the waltz of nanoparticle recognition | yuya Hayashi (aarhus University, denmark)

Mechanistic toxicology of engineered nanomaterials: state of the art and future perspectives (I) Francesco dondero, Teresa Fernandes, peter Kille, Stephen Klaine

Singapore

Kairo 1/2 Applications of innovative passive sampling and dosing (I) annika Jahnke, philipp Mayer, Beate escher

delhi Measuring and modelling chemical bioavailability in soils (I) david Spurgeon, erik Smolders, elma lahive

Ecosystem structures and functions and their valuation in Ecological Risk Assessment (I) Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Sabine apitz, Mario Schirmer, angelique F Martinou

osaka/Samarkand

Mercury Biogeochemistry and Policy (I) nelson o’driscoll, Stefano covelli, davide Vignati, Michael Bank

Boston 1

MoRe THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See neXT paGe

565 | do concentrations of ethinylestradiol and estradiol in european rivers exceed proposed eU environmental quality standards? | andrew Johnson (ceH Wallingford, United Kingdom)

563 | Mind the gap: concerns using endpoints from endocrine screening assays in risk assessment | James R. Wheeler (dow agrosciences, United Kingdom)

512 | a 3R compliant testing strategy to predict chronic fish toxicity | lucia Vergauwen (University of antwerp, Belgium)

514 | inter-laboratory validation of the Xenopus embryonic Thyroid Signalling assay | andrew Tindall (Watchfrog Sa, France)

562 | proposal of how to update the standard information requirements in ReacH, pppR and BpR - a testing strategy for identification of endocrine disruptors | Henrik Holbech (SdU, denmark)

511 | development of a high accuracy model for determining the aquatic toxicity of mixtures | paul Thomas (ceHTRa SaS, France)

564 | MTBe and endocrine disrupting potential: an hypothesis-driven weight of evidence analysis | ellen Mihaich (eR, United States)

561 | Multi-generation study - reproductive effects of 17ß-dihydroequilin, estrone, and 17ß-estradiol in Japanese medaka (oryzias latipes) following combined protocols oecd 229 and oecd 234 | lisa constantine (pfizer inc, United States)

510 | enhancement of fish toxicity QSaR models for predicting acute lc50 and chronic noec values for non-polar narcotics: ecHa dossier submissions as an experimental data source | Thomas austin (SHell, United Kingdom)

513 | can adverse outcome pathways help to predict early life-stage toxicity in zebrafish? | Stefan Scholz (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research, Germany)

Endocrine Disruptors: Exposure, Hazard & Risk Assessment (I) lennart Weltje, Thomas Backhaus, Malyka Galay Burgos

Sydney

Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3Rs): Animal alternative approaches in ecotoxicology and risk assessment (I) adam lillicrap, Mark lampi

Montreal

THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)

Room

9:55 Session

Developments in Environmental Quality Standards: bridging the gap between science and practical regulatory implementation (I) adam peters, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2

520 | community responses to the interactive effect of surfactant exposure and water depth in a microcosm set-up | Jose luis Rodriguez Gil (University of Guelph, canada)

519 | assessing the effect of salinity on stream macroinvertebrate communities despite confounding factors and salinity pulses: the use of traits and large scale family turn-over. | Ben Kefford (University of canberra, australia)

518 | cumulative effects caused by pharmaceuticals and water intermittency on algae and bacteria living in stream biofilms | Sergi Sabater (catalan institute for Water Research icRa, Spain)

517 | combined and interactive effects of three stressors (phosphorus, temperature and zinc) in a freshwater community | dimitri Van de perre (Ghent University, Belgium)

516 | improving the WFd purposes by the incorporation of ecotoxicity tests and the assessment of pollutants availability | neus Roig (Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain)

515 | GloBaQUa: Managing the effects of multiple stressors on aquatic ecosystems under water scarcity | alícia navarro-ortega (idaea, cSic, Spain)

What do we know about the effects of multiple stressors and community responses on aquatic ecosystems? dàmia Barceló, Helmut Segner, alícia navarro-ortega

Shanghai 3/4


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Room

Session 8:15 8:35 8:55 9:15 9:35

533 | combining equilibrium passive sampling and dosing for determining the in situ mixture toxicity of environmental mixtures | Kilian Smith (Korean institute of Science and Technology europe, Germany)

534 | passive sampling with pociS for contaminants of emerging concern in drinking water | chris Metcalfe (Trent University, canada)

535 | passive sampling as a tool for monitoring pharmaceuticals and its metabolites in marine environment at trace levels | M.J Martinez Bueno (France)

536 | passive sampling method for the detection of pyrethroids and organophosphates in surface waters in the sub-ng/l range | Juliane Hollender (eawag, Switzerland)

537 | Measurement of labile fraction of paHs with polymeric membranes, in case of chronic or accidental pollution in rivers in France | adèle Bressy (paris est University, France)

poster Spotlight: posters TH053 | TH067 | TH068 | TH076

538 | development of a Freundlich-type model predicting cu, ni, and cd toxicity to earthworms | Hao Qiu (leiden University, netherlands)

539 | implementation of bioavailability into the effects assessment of lead in soils | Koen oorts (aRcHe, Belgium)

540 | Variability in the binding capacity of dissolved organic matters toward trace metals in soil: impact on predictive ecotoxicology | Matthieu Bravin (ciRad, France)

541 | evaluating toxicity of metals alone and in combination to terrestrial plants (l. sativa M.) by site-specific principles | yang liu (Faculty of Science leiden University, netherlands)

542 | Bioavailability and bioaccumulation of copper by sediment rooted plant Myriophyllum aquaticum | Matthias Grote (edF Rd, France)

poster Spotlight: posters TH084 | TH085 | TH086 | TH087 |

osaka/Samarkand

526 | evaluation of the ecosystem services of biocontrol and functional biodiversity in Mediterranean agroecosystems. The need for a multiple es evaluation protocol | angelique F Martinou (cUT, cyprus)

525 | Relation between ecosystem-service perception and environmental performance assessed by lca and emergy accounting: a case study of pond farming in France | Joël aubin (inRa agrocampus ouest, France)

524 | livestock activities as source of ecosystem services. a tool for agri-environment-climate payments in Rural development programs 2014-2020. The case of the autonomous province of Trento. | alessandra la notte (University of Torino, italy)

523 | assessment and valuation of ecosysem services: ensuring Relevance | Sabine apitz (Sea environmental decisions ltd, United Kingdom)

522 | Solution-focused landscape-level eco(toxico)logical assessment and management | leo posthuma (RiVM, netherlands)

521 | defining protection goals for ppp soil ecotoxicological risk asessements based on the ecosystem services concept | patrick Kabouw (BaSF Se, Germany)

Ecosystem structures and functions and their valuation in Ecological Risk Assessment (I) Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Sabine apitz, Mario Schirmer, angelique F Martinou

Boston 1

Montreal Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3Rs): Animal alternative approaches in ecotoxicology and risk assessment (I) adam lillicrap, Mark lampi

Sydney Endocrine Disruptors: Exposure, Hazard & Risk Assessment (I) lennart Weltje, Thomas Backhaus, Malyka Galay Burgos

Singapore Mechanistic toxicology of engineered nanomaterials: state of the art and future perspectives (I) Francesco dondero, Teresa Fernandes, peter Kille, Stephen Klaine

Boston 2

560 | protection goal directed monitoring strategy to implement environmental Quality Standards (eQSs) for biota | peter lepom (Germany)

548 | Methanogens as principal methylators in tropical areas | Wilkinson lazaro (UneMaT, Brazil)

Shanghai 1/2 Toward sustainability: benchmarks, certification and LCA (I) Monica lavagna, christian Bauer, Sebastien Humbert

What do we know about the effects of multiple stressors and community responses on aquatic ecosystems? dàmia Barceló, Helmut Segner, alícia navarro-ortega

Shanghai 3/4

559 | UK fish biomonitoring highlights issues with priority substances, such as mercury and pBdes | Monika Juergens (centre for ecology and Hydrology, United Kingdom)

558 | identification of threshold values of accumulated metals for the protection of the aquatic ecological status. a comparison among four different species. | lieven Bervoets (University of antwerp, Belgium)

557 | HBcd diastereomer levels in fish and suspended particulate matter from european freshwater and estuary sites - environmental quality standard compliance and trend monitoring | Heinz Ruedel (Fraunhofer iMe, Germany)

556 | applicability of sediment quality standard derived using standardized equilibrium partitioning method for the assessment of water bodies’ status | S. andres (ineRiS, France)

555 | Gaps in sediment quality guidelines: incorporation of sediment physicochemical characteristics in assessing uranium bioavailability | Sarah crawford (University of Saskatchewan Toxicology centre, canada)

Developments in Environmental Quality Standards: bridging the gap between science and practical regulatory implementation (I) adam peters, paul Whitehouse

547 | effect of oxygen, nitrate and aluminium addition on methylmercury efflux from mine-impacted reservoir sediments | Marc Beutel (Washington State University, United States)

546 | oxycline depth influences methylmercury production and pelagic accumulation in a small lake ecosystem | Tania perron (University of Montreal, canada)

545 | Benthic fluxes of mercury in a highly industrialized coastal environment (Mar piccolo, Taranto, italy) | andrea emili (italy)

544 | interactions between Hg in shallow aquatic environment and macrophytes | claudia cosio (Geneva University, Switzerland)

543 | Mercury flux from arctic snow - irradiation and temperature dependence | erin Mann (canada)

Mercury Biogeochemistry and Policy (I) nelson o’driscoll, Stefano covelli, davide Vignati, Michael Bank

MoRe THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15) See pReVioUS paGe:

Kairo 1/2 Applications of innovative passive sampling and dosing (I) annika Jahnke, philipp Mayer, Beate escher

delhi Measuring and modelling chemical bioavailability in soils (I) david Spurgeon, erik Smolders, elma lahive

THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM1 (8:15-10:15)

Room

9:55 Session


221

615 | chronic exposure to two components of tritanTM copolyester on daphnia magna and Moina macrocopa | Sol Jang (Korea (South))

616 | effects of benzophenone-3 exposure on endocrine disruption and reproduction in Japanese medaka (oryzias latipes) | Sujin Kim (Seoul national University, Korea, South)

617 | development of in-vitro tests for the assessment of reprotoxicity in fish | cinta porte (cSic iiQaB, Spain)

618 | a calibrated ecosystem model to assess the ecotoxicological risk of endocrine disrupters in aquatic environments | ludiwine clouzot (Universite laval, canada)

619 | assessment of endocrine disruption in australian rivers using chemical, in vitro, in vivo and in situ techniques | philip Scott (Griffith University, australia)

568 | development of an in Vitro approach to assess disruption of Steroidogenesis in native Fish Species | Markus Hecker (University of Saskatchewan, canada)

569 | physiologically based toxicokinetic models for in vitro-in vivo extrapolation of receptor-mediated effects in rainbow trout | Markus Brinkmann (RWTH aachen University institute for environmenta, Germany)

570 | a 3d spheroidal fish liver model alternative to better understand bioaccumulation in ecotoxicology | Matthew Baron (plymouth University, United Kingdom) 571 | predicting bioconcentration of benzo-apyrene in fish based on different fish cell lines | Julita Stadnicka-Michalak (eawagSwiss Federal inst of aquatic ScienceTechn, Switzerland) 572 | passive and active uptake of pharmaceuticals by a primary fish gill cell culture model | lucy Stott (Kings college london, United Kingdom)

Session 10:50 11:10 Room

607 | is carbon Footprinting an appropriate method to combine with data envelopment analysis for environmental benchmarking? The cFp+dea method | diego iribarren (instituto iMdea energía, Spain)

606 | defining and implementing a sustainability strategy in industry: lca and c2c® certification | alina Beloussova (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg)

605 | evaluation of the importance of impacts from potential deforestation for fiber-based products in the context of life cycle assessment for non-certified products | anna Kounina (Quantis epFl, Switzerland)

604 | evaluation of ilcd data network entry-level and peF data quality requirements in lca databases | paolo Masoni (enea, italy)

603 | Measuring the environmental performance of the UK chemical industry – a life cycle approach | iniobong ekang (University of Manchester, United Kingdom)

Toward sustainability: benchmarks, certification and LCA (II) Monica lavagna, christian Bauer, Sebastien Humbert

Shanghai 1/2

584 | interaction of engiposter Spotlight: posters neered nanoparticles with TH131 | TH132 | TH133 | paHs: could they act as TH134 “Trojan-horses” to induce biological responses in marine species? | awadhesh Jha (plymouth University, United Kingdom)

583 | interactive effects of n-Tio2 with other contaminants on immune and digestive gland function of the marine bivalve Mytilus | laura canesi (University of Genova, italy)

582 | TBd

581 | a microarray and qRT-pcR study on the effects of metal-containing nanoparticles (cuo, cdS and ag) on mussels M. galloprovincialis. | nerea duroudier (University of the Basque country UpVeHU, Spain)

580 | Highthroughput genomic and proteomic effects of silver nanoparticles in tissues of the marine ectothermic mollusc Mytilus galloprovincialis | Francesco dondero (Università del piemonte orientale avogadro, italy)

579 | Surface functionality dependent toxicity of graphene nanomaterials in the nematode caenorhabditis elegans: a systems ecotoxicology approach | Jinhee choi (Korea (South))

Mechanistic toxicology of engineered nanomaterials: state of the art and future perspectives (II) Francesco dondero, Teresa Fernandes, peter Kille, Stephen Klaine

Singapore

Kairo 1/2 Applications of innovative passive sampling and dosing (II) annika Jahnke, philipp Mayer, Beate escher

delhi Measuring and modelling chemical bioavailability in soils (II) david Spurgeon, erik Smolders, elma lahive

Ecosystem structures and functions and their valuation in Ecological Risk Assessment (II) Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Sabine apitz, Mario Schirmer, angelique F Martinou

osaka/Samarkand

Mercury Biogeochemistry and Policy (II) nelson o’driscoll, Stefano covelli, davide Vignati, Michael Bank

Boston 1

MoRe THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See neXT paGe

614 | development and validation of a partial life-cycle test with potamopyrgus antipodarum | cornelia Geiss (Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany)

567 | an alternative testing strategy for neurotoxicity using zebrafish | Jessica legradi (VU University amsterdam, netherlands)

Sydney Endocrine Disruptors: Exposure, Hazard & Risk Assessment (II) lennart Weltje, Thomas Backhaus, Malyka Galay Burgos

Montreal Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3Rs): Animal alternative approaches in ecotoxicology and risk assessment (II) adam lillicrap, Mark lampi

Room

THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:50-12:50)

11:30 11:50 12:10 12:30 Session

Developments in Environmental Quality Standards: bridging the gap between science and practical regulatory implementation (II) adam peters, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2

625 | discussion | Joke Van Wensem (TcB, netherlands)

624 | economics and sustainability of Swiss chocolate production | petra Heid (chocolats Halba, Switzerland)

623 | ecological-social-ethical interactions that comprise the life cycle along the way from growers to the end product | lawrence Kapustka (lK consultancy, canada)

622 | overview of scientific evidence for chocolate health benefits | Joke Van Wensem (TcB, netherlands)

621 | environmental impacts of chocolate in a life cycle perspective | niels Jungbluth (eSUservices ltd)

620 | ecosystem services, payment for ecosystem services, biodiversity: Securing future supplies and preserving biodiversity by paying cocoa farmers for ecosystem Services | amarens Felperlaan (cReM, netherlands)

Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production Joke Van Wensem, lawrence Kapustka

Shanghai 3/4


223

Room

Session 10:50 11:10 11:30 11:50 12:10 Room

12:30 Session

574 | effects of fungicides on leaf decompostion in vineyard streams | diego Fernández (University Koblenzlandau, Germany)

586 | application of passive dosing to the evaluation of toxicity of reactive hydrophobic organic chemicals | Jung-Hwan Kwon (Korea University, Korea, South)

587 | is equilibrium sampling applicable in routine sediment monitoring? | Sabine Schaefer (German Federal institute of Hydrology, Germany)

588 | coastal Bothnian Sea sediments as a source of dissolved pcdd/Fs and pcBs to water | anna Sobek (Sweden)

589 | initial laboratory validation experiment: comparing the accumulation of organophosphorus flame retardants in passive samplers and mussels (Mytilus edilus) during continuous exposure. | Tom Fisher (cefas, United Kingdom) 590 | legacy persistent organic pollutants Have Reached the Remoteness place on earth: the antarctic plateau | Jordi dachs (idaea, cSic, Spain)

592 | in vivo and in vitro tests of the bioavailability of dioxins and polycyclic aromatic compounds in field-contaminated soil | Sarah Josefsson (Swedish University of agricultural Sciences, Sweden) 593 | integrating mechanistic modelling in estimating metal accumulation in plants | yen le (Radboud University nijmegen, netherlands)

594 | an in silico model of ingestion bioaccessibility for selected polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in coking works soil using gene expression programming | darren Beriro (British Geological Survey, United Kingdom) 595 | Use of diffuse reflectance mid-infrared spectroscopy for rapid prediction of physico-chemical properties of sediments | Jose Martin Soriano disla (cSiRoUniversity of adelaide, australia)

596 | non-extractable residues (neR) from xenobiotics in soil: a new classification and relevance in the risk assessment | Karolina nowak (RWTH aachen University, Germany)

578 | invertebrate traits and trace metals in the impact assessment of an exceptional river reservoir flushing | dorothea Hug peter (institut Forel University of Geneva, Switzerland)

577 | assessing river bank filtration with micropollutants | eduard Hoehn (Switzerland)

576 | actively use sediments in groundwater pollution management | Marlea Wagelmans (Bioclear, netherlands)

575 | Hyporheic zones are important for the attenuation of pharmaceuticals - myth or fact? | Michael Radke (Stockholm University, Sweden)

602 | calculating mercury risk and evaluating remediation actions using Bayesian networks for the South River, Virginia, USa | annie Johns (Western Washington University, United States)

601 | Mercury pollution, population declines and Species loss: a Review of the evidence | Michael Bank (University of Massachusetts, United States)

600 | identification of artisanal gold mining as a mercury pollution source in South africa | V Somerset (South africa)

599 | critical Review of Mercury Toxicity Reference Values (TRV) and Sediment Quality Values (SQV) for protection of Fish and Benthic invertebrates | elisa Bizzotto (italy)

598 | Retrospective monitoring of mercury in fish of european freshwaters | Burkhard Knopf (iMe Fraunhofer, Germany)

597 | Mercury contamination in lake Maggiore in the vicinity of a chlor-alkali plant: contamination of sediments and aquatic organisms | laura Marziali (iRSacnR Brugherio, italy)

Mercury Biogeochemistry and Policy (II) nelson o’driscoll, Stefano covelli, davide Vignati, Michael Bank

Boston 1

Endocrine Disruptors: Exposure, Hazard & Risk Assessment (II) lennart Weltje, Thomas Backhaus, Malyka Galay Burgos

Sydney

Mechanistic toxicology of engineered nanomaterials: state of the art and future perspectives (II) Francesco dondero, Teresa Fernandes, peter Kille, Stephen Klaine

Singapore

Toward sustainability: benchmarks, certification and LCA (II) Monica lavagna, christian Bauer, Sebastien Humbert

Shanghai 1/2

MoRe THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50) See pReVioUS paGe

Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3Rs): Animal alternative approaches in ecotoxicology and risk assessment (II) adam lillicrap, Mark lampi

Montreal

573 | How widespread are effects of organic toxicants on ecosystem functions? | Ralf Bernhard Schaefer (University Koblenz landau, Germany)

585 | passive sampling of organic ions with ion exchange membranes - application for the determination of freely dissolved concentrations in protein binding experiments | luise oemisch (Germany)

591 | effect of various cations in phosphate-based washing solution on toxicity of washed arsenic-contaminated soils | eun Hea Jho (Seoul national University, Korea (South))

Ecosystem structures and functions and their valuation in Ecological Risk Assessment (II) Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Sabine apitz, Mario Schirmer, angelique F Martinou

Applications of innovative passive sampling and dosing (II) annika Jahnke, philipp Mayer, Beate escher

Measuring and modelling chemical bioavailability in soils (II) david Spurgeon, erik Smolders, elma lahive

osaka/Samarkand

Kairo 1/2

delhi

THURSday plaTFoRM pReSenTaTionS aM2 (10:45-12:50)

Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production Joke Van Wensem, lawrence Kapustka

Shanghai 3/4

613 | discussion | adam peters (Wca environment ltd, United Kingdom)

612 | closing the gap between setting standards and taking regulatory decisions | paul Whitehouse (environment agency, United Kingdom)

611 | The minimal model community as a comprehensive ecological risk assessment framework | yoshinari Tanaka (national institute for environmental Studies, Japan)

610 | deriving a Water Quality Standard for iron from Field evidence | adam peters (Wca environment ltd, United Kingdom)

609 | deriving environmental Quality Standards (eQS) for fungicides: the lack of biotests for aquatic fungi adds to uncertainty in eQS derivation | Marion Junghans, Swiss centre for applied ecotoxicology eawag epF, Switzerland)

608 | criteria for evaluating and Reporting ecotoxicity data (cRed) - Report from a ring test | Marlene agerstrand (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Developments in Environmental Quality Standards: bridging the gap between science and practical regulatory implementation (II) adam peters, paul Whitehouse

Boston 2


THURSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

Reduction, Replacement, and Refinement (3Rs): animal alternative approaches in ecotoxicology and risk assessment (p). chaired by: adam lillicrap, Mark lampi TH001 | Comparative vitellogenin expression in two alternative fish models using 17ą-Ethynylestradiol | Matthew Baron (plymouth University, United Kingdom) | M. Baron, c. dummett, T. Henry, a. Jha

TH009 | A thermodynamically driven QSAR model to predict aquatic toxicity for mixtures | pascal Bicherel (KReaTiS, France) | p. Bicherel, F. Sahigara, p. Thomas

TH002 | Molecular and physiological effects in zebrafish developing embryos exposed to binary mixtures of herbicides suspected of endocrine disruption | carla Quintaneiro (aveiro University, portugal) | c. Quintaneiro, S. novais, a. Soares, M. Monteiro

TH010 | Zebrafish embryotoxicity test (ZET): the importance of internal exposure analyses | Marysia Tobor-Kaplon (Wil Research europe BV) | c. de Koning, M. Beekhuijzen, S. de Vries-Buitenweg, M. Tobor-Kaplon, B. van de Waart, H. emmen

TH003 | Development of a microfluidic bioreactor for culture and analysis of the piscine intestinal cell line RTgutGC | carolin drieschner (Switzerland) | c. drieschner, K. Schirmer, p. Renaud

TH011 | Challenges in bioanalytical water quality assessment: the polar, the volatiles, the unknowns - case study drinking water | daniel Stalter (The University of Queensland, australia) | d. Stalter, M. Farre, B. escher

TH004 | Rainbow trout gut cell line (RTgutGC) characterization as a model for fish intestinal epithelia | Matteo Minghetti (eawag, Switzerland) | M. Minghetti, c. drieschner, n. Bramaz, K. Schirmer

TH012 | Round-robin test of the RTgill-W1 cell line assay to predict fish acute toxicity | Melanie Knöbel (eawag Swiss Federal institute of aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland) | M. Knöbel, K. Schirmer

TH005 | Fish cell lines in 3 dimensional (3D) cultures in ecotoxicological studies: is there oxygen in the middle? | awadhesh Jha (plymouth University, United Kingdom) | l. langan, n. dodd, S. owen, S. Jackson, W. purcell, a. Jha

TH013 | Fish cell lines : a screening tool for multiple stress scenarios. Interaction between fatty acid profile and heavy metals in rainbow trout hepatocytes (RTL-W1) | chloé Bonnineau (Uclouvain, Belgium) | c. Bonnineau, a. Ferain, a. Zuyderhoff, c. McGahan, M. pierloot, c. debier, J. Rees, y. larondelle

TH006 | Waiving chronic fish tests: possible use of acute-to-chronic relationships and interspecies correlations | aude Kienzler (european commission Joint Research centre) | a. Kienzler, M. Halder, M. crane, a. Worth TH007 | Systematic approach to investigate outliers of the fish embryo test to increase its predictive capacity and applicability domain for acute fish toxicity and beyond | Stefan Scholz (Helmholtz centre for environmental Research, Germany) | n. Klüver, R. Massei, J. ortmann, M. Koenig, a. Turek, S. Scholz TH008 | Bioconcentration of Human Phar-

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maceuticals: How useful is the trigger Kow for the performance of a fish study for the Environmental Risk Assessment? | Ulrich Memmert (eurofins Regulatory aG, Switzerland) | U. Memmert

TH014 | What’s the difference between a bird and a human? Comparative bioaccessibility for pharmaceuticals | Tom Bean (University of york, UK) | T. Bean, a. Boxall, J. lane, K. arnold, S. pietravalle

THURSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

guillicola crassus) and osmotic challenge. | Séverine paris (France) | S. paris, G. Simon, e. amilhat, G. patey, l. delahaut, e. Faliex, S. Biagianti-Risbourg TH016 | Effects of hypoxia on the toxicity of copper to zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Jennifer Fitzgerald (exeter University, United Kingdom) | J. Fitzgerald, H. Jameson, G. Bond, T. Uren Webster, J. cresswell, R. Wilson, i. Katsiadaki, e. Santos TH017 | Combined effects of copper and UVB radiation in single and multi-species algal assays | Vera Slaveykova (University of Geneva, Switzerland) | G. cheloni, V. Slaveykova TH018 | Influence of temperature increase on the response of river phototrophic biofilms to a chronic exposure to copper | anne-Sophie lambert (irstea lyon, France) | a. lambert, a. dabrin, S. Morin, a. Foulquier, J. Gahou, S. pesce TH019 | Natural variability of enzymatic biomarkers in riverine macrozoobenthos | Marco Vighi (University of Milano, italy) | a. ippolito, R. Giacchini, p. parenti, M. Vighi TH020 | Invertebrate community response to water and sediment chemical composition in Mediterranean rivers | núria de castro (Spain) | n. de castro, l. armendariz, J. lopez doval, S. perez, M. petrovic, y. pico, i. Muñoz TH021 | Evaluation of pesticide contamination in the Llobregat River | yolanda pico (University of Valencia, Spain) | y. pico, a. Masia, J. campo

M. canedo-arguelles, n. prat, G. peixoto, B. Kefford, M. Faria, a. Soares, c. Barata TH024 | Sensitivity of microalgae to increased salinity under competition scenarios | isabel lopes (University of aveiro, portugal) | c. Venâncio, e. anselmo, i. lopes, a. Soares TH025 | Sublethal toxicity of chlorpyrifos to salmonid olfaction after hypersaline acclimation | lindley Maryoung (United States) | l. Maryoung, R. lavado, G. Hardiman, R. Sasik, n. agarwal, K. Tierney, d. Schlenk Ecosystem structures and functions and their valuation in Ecological Risk Assessment (P). chaired by: Ralf Bernhard Schäfer, Sabine apitz, Mario Schirmer, angelique F Martinou TH026 | Use of ecosystem services potentially affected by chemicals, for setting protection goals and the needs of risk assessment | lorraine Maltby (The University of Sheffield, United Kingdom) | l. Maltby, S. Marshall, S. nadzialek, c. Schlekat, F. Schnoeder, a. Schnurstein, a. Solga, G. Whale, R. Woods, a. Brown, M. Hamer, M. Galay Burgos TH027 | Exploring the uncertainty of valuation techniques for the freshwater ecosystem services in the Llobregat river basin (NE Spain) | Montserrat Marques (environmental analysis and Management Group, Spain) | l. Boithias, V. acuña, M. Terrado, R. Bangash, G. Ziv, M. Marques, V. Kumar, M. Schuhmacher, S. Sabater TH028 | National screening on selected organic compounds in groundwater | Benjamin lopez (BRGM, France) | B. lopez, p. ollivier, a. Togola, n. Baran, J. Ghestem

What do we know about the effects of multiple stressors and community responses on aquatic ecosystems? (P). chaired by: dàmia Barceló, Helmut Segner, alícia navarro-ortega

TH022 | Low richness, high value: why and how to assess the ecological status of naturally saline streams of the western Mediterranean? | cayetano Gutiérrez-cánovas (Universidad de Murcia, Spain) | c. Gutiérrez-cánovas, p. arribas, l. naselli-Flores, n. Bennas, M. Finocchiaro, a. Millan, J. Velasco

TH029 | Selection of representative arthropod species for risk assessment and field studies for Plant Protection Products | Magnus Wang (WSc Scientific GmbH, Germany) | T. alvarez, M. Wang

TH015 | Cu accumulation and hepatic perturbations in yellow eels (Anguilla anguilla L.) experimentally exposed to multi-parametric stressor: metal (Cu), parasite (An-

TH023 | Effects of acute salinity exposure on invertebrate predation efficiency | Ben Kefford (University of canberra, australia) |

TH030 | Biogeochemical changes, microbial activity, and ecosystem services, in eutrophic wetlands with and without vegetation: a mesocosms experiment focused in the ni-

225


THURSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

trogen cycle | M. nazaret González-alcaraz (Faculty of earth and life Sciences VU University, netherlands) | J. Álvarez-Rogel, M. Tercero, H. conesa, R. Gea, M. arce, M. delgado, M. González-alcaraz TH031 | Occurrence and removal of UV filters in urban groundwater of Barcelona (Spain) | Silvia diaz-cruz (idaeacSic, Spain) | a. Jurado, p. Gago, e. Vazquez-Sune, J. carrera, e. pujades, S. diaz-cruz, d. Barcelo TH032 | An integrated historical & ecological perspective to interpret the evolution of water quality in European metropolitan rivers. | Fabrizio Stefani (national Research council Water Research institute, italy) | F. Stefani, l. lestel, J. Mouchel, M. Meybeck, c. deligne, i. parmentier, K. Winklhoefer, p. Redondi, G. Tartari Mechanistic toxicology of engineered nanomaterials: state of the art and future perspectives (p). chaired by: Francesco dondero, Teresa Fernandes, peter Kille, Stephen Klaine TH033 | The surface-charge dependent cellular apoptosis induced by engineered silver nanoparticles | chengfang pang (Research center for ecoenvironmental Sciences chinese academy of Sciences, china) | c. pang, W. Tao, Q. Hu, S. Zhao TH034 | Comparative study investigating the differences in sensitivities of an array of rainbow trout cell lines to primary hepatocyte cultures following AgNP insult. | José M. navas (inia national institute for agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain) | M. connolly, l. Garcia-olias, a. Quesada, M. Fernandez-cruz, H. Segner, J. navas TH035 | Silver Nanocolloids Have Impacts on Medaka Innate Immune Responses | chisato Kataoka (Toyo University, Japan) | c. Kataoka, a. Tadashi, T. niwa, M. Fujita, S. Kashiwada TH036 | Toxicity screening of silver nanoparticles to Eisenia fetida earthworm through standardized OECD test and in vitro assay with coelomocytes | nerea Garcia (UpVeHU, Spain) | n. Garcia, a. irizar loibide,

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i. Marigomez, M. Soto TH037 | Effects on metallothionein transcription levels and histopathological alterations in mussel gills after in vivo exposure to metal nanoparticles (CuO, Ag, CdS). | Manuel Soto (University of Basque country, Spain) | e. Bilbao castellanos, a. Jimeno-Romero, e. Bilbao, M. Soto TH038 | Trophic Transfer of Silver Nanoparticles from Artemia Nauplii to Marine Medaka | Jian Wang (Hong Kong) | J. Wang, W. Wang TH039 | Comparative toxicity of Nano- and Microscale Copper Oxide Particles in Marine Mussels | Hassien alnashiri (HeriotWatt University, United Kingdom) | H. alnashiri, M. Hartl, T. Fernandes TH040 | Ecotoxicity of nanomaterials in relation to the freshwater blackworm Lumbriculus variegatus | Simon little (Heriot Watt University, United Kingdom) | S. little, J. Kinross, H. Johnston, T. Fernandes TH041 | In vivo effects of zinc oxide nanoparticles to the marine bivalve Venerupis philippinarum | ilaria Marisa (italy) | i. Marisa, V. Matozzo, M. Marin TH042 | Particles toxicity: just a matter of size? | Francesca Garaventa (cnRiSMaR, italy) | F. Garaventa, c. Gambardella, e. costa, V. piazza, M. Faimali TH043 | Identification and avoidance of potential artifacts in nanomaterial ecotoxicity measurements | elijah petersen (national institute of Standards Technology, USa) | e. petersen, T. Henry, J. Zhao, R. Maccuspie, T. Kirschling, M. dobrovolskaia, V. Hackley, B. XinG, J. White TH044 | Contrasting hazard data across a range of species and endpoints - lessons for nanosafety | Teresa Fernandes (HeriotWatt University, United Kingdom) | T. Fernandes TH045 | Nanoparticle ecotoxicity testing in laboratory media and wastewater using a lux-based switch-off Pseudomonas putida

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bioreporter. | Florian Mallevre (School of life Sciences, UK) | F. Mallevre, T. aspray, T. Fernandes TH046 | Toxicity of engineered nanomaterials in an environmental model, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans | pawitrabhorn Samutrtai (HeriotWatt University, UK) | p. Samutrtai, T. Fernandes, e. dyrynda TH047 | The effect of silver nanoparticles on a freshwater alga (Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata) | Jonathan curry (Heriot Watt University, Scotland) | J. curry, J. Kinross, H. Johnston, T. Fernandes Applications of innovative passive sampling and dosing (P). chaired by: annika Jahnke, philipp Mayer, Beate escher TH048 | Development of passive samplers for the simultaneous measurement of inorganic mercury and methylmercury in surface waters | aurelie Magnier (France) | a. Magnier, a. dabrin, G. Grisot, M. coquery TH049 | Monitoring of Cu and Cd in natural aquatic environments by using Diffusive Gradients in Thin Films technique - DGT modified with biopolymer. | paulo Tonello (São paulo State University UneSp, Brazil) | p. Tonello, M. Favero, a. Rosa, l. Morais TH050 | Measuring the free concentration of cationic surfactants - Application and validation of a combined SPE/SPME method and assessing the influence of sorption to glassware, septa, and pipette tips | niels Timmer (Utrecht University, netherlands) | n. Timmer, p. Scherpenisse, J. Hermens, S. droge TH051 | A hydrophobicity parameter for surfactants: Partitioning of linear alkylbenzenesulfonate compounds to SPME fibers | Jort Hammer (University of Utrecht, netherlands) | J. Hammer, J. Hermens, p. de Voogt, J. Haftka TH052 | Partitioning of hydrophobic organic chemicals between silicone polymers and LDPE | dorothea Gilbert (aarhus University Science and Technology Faculty, denmark) | d. Gilbert, G. Witt, F. Smedes, p. Mayer

TH053 | Development and performance testing of a mobile passive sampling concept for screening of organic pollutants in water | Branislav Vrana (Masaryk University Faculty of Science ReceToX, czech Republic) | B. Vrana, F. Smedes, T. Rusina, J. Kohoutek, R. prokes, U. Kim, i. allan TH054 | Spatiotemporal variation of an urban lake chemical quality - interactions between organic matter and organic micropollutants | adèle Bressy (parisest University, France) | a. Bressy, e. caupos, a. Roguet, F. lucas TH055 | Estimation of POCIS field sampling rate values for selected pharmaceuticals | Ganna Fedorova (University of South Bohemia in cB, czech Republic) | G. Fedorova, V. Zlabek, K. Grabicova, T. Randak, R. Grabic TH056 | Use of passive samplers (POCIS and SPMD) for the evaluation of the efficiency of wastewater advanced treatments | Marion-Justine capdeville (irstea lyon, France) | M. capdeville, F. Serveto, H. Budzinski, a. Bruchet, a. Guillon, K. le Menach, n. noyon, M. coquery, c. Miege TH057 | Calibration and field evaluation of passive samplers for monitoring pesticides in water | lutz ahrens (Swedish University of agricultural Sciences SlU, Sweden) | l. ahrens, a. daneshvar, M. Gönczi, J. Kreuger TH058 | International Pellet Watch : Distribution of POPs and emerging chemicals in microplastics | Hideshige Takada (Tokyo University of agriculture and Technology, Japan) | H. Takada, G. yeo, J. Hosoda, M. Saha, y. Saitoh, M. itoh, R. yamashita TH059 | Passive samplers as a means to monitor urban biocide emissions | Michael Bayerle (cRp Henri Tudor, luxembourg) | M. Bayerle, T. Galle, V. Huck, p. denis TH060 | Emerging pollutants detected in passive samplers exposed in middle reaches of the Yangtze River | Vladimir Zlabek (University of South Bohemia ceske Budejovice, czech Republic) | V. Zlabek, T. Randak, G. Fedorova, V. Burkina, S. Sakalli, Z. li, y. li, Z. ni,

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d. chen, R. Grabic TH061 | Concentrations, Fluxes, and Fate of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons of the Yellow River during Water-Sediment Regulation of the Xiaolangdi Reservoir | Jianwei dong (School of environment Beijing normal University, china) | J. dong, X. Xia TH062 | Latin American Atmospheric Passive Sampling Network (LAPAN): First outcomes | Gilberto Fillmann (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Brazil) | G. Fillmann, p. costa, K. Miglioranza, R. Barra, n. Gamboa, B. Johnson-Restrepo, G. eguren-iriarte, R. Fernandez, F. Wania TH063 | Application and calibration of XAD2 passive samplers for the evaluation of the atmospheric contamination by current-used pesticides and their variability | Maurice Millet (University of Strasbourg UdS, France) | c. liaud, H. Wolff, J. Schwartz, M. Millet

France) | S. lardy-Fontan, G. lavison, V. brieudes, p. candido, G. couturier, B. lalere, H. Budzinski

relative bioavailability assays | Matthieu delannoy (URaFpainRa, France) | d. Matthieu, a. Fournier, G. Rychen, K. carlson, c. Feidt

TH069 | Effects of persistent organic pollutants on marine primary production: an experimental approach | Gert everaert (Ghent University, Belgium) | G. everaert, F. de laender, M. claessens, J. Baert, e. Monteyne, p. Roose, p. Goethals, c. Janssen

TH077 | Development of new materials for passive samplers based on porous organogels | catherine claparols (Université paul Sabatier, France) | c. claparols, J. Garrigues, S. Franceschi, e. perez, a. ter Halle

TH084 | Indicators of metal bioavailability for earthworms in the context of lowly and multi-contaminated soils | léa Beaumelle (France) | l. Beaumelle, M. Hedde, i. lamy

TH070 | How do desorption kinetics of lipophilic compounds sorbed to suspended particles affect toxicity? | Kristoffer Forshuvud (University of copenhagen, denmark) | K. Forshuvud, M. Bjergager, n. cedergreen, p. Mayer TH071 | Passive dosing as a tool to derive fugacity capacities of a variety of leaves for semi-volatile persistent organic contaminants. | dämien Bolinius (Sweden) | d. Bolinius, p. Mayer, M. Macleod, M. Mclachlan, a. Jahnke TH072 | Passive dosing improve chemical bioavailability and toxicity assessment of alkylphenols in fish in vitro bioassays | Maria Hultman (norwegian institute for Water Research, norway) | M. Hultman, i. allan, K. Tollefsen

TH065 | Passive Equilibrium Sampling of Hydrophobic Organic Contaminants in Sediment | annika Jahnke (Stockholm University, Sweden) | a. Jahnke, K. Maenpaa, S. Schaefer, p. Mayer

TH073 | Exposure control of hydrophobic compounds in the Microtox® assay: comparing solvent spiking versus passive dosing | yoonah Jeong (Germany) | y. Jeong, c. park, J. Kim, S. Kim, K. Smith

TH066 | Concentration generator: a partition controlled delivery system to continuously solubilise highly hydrophobic, volatile and biodegradable substances for ecotoxicological test. | Frederic Begnaud (Firmenich, Switzerland) | F. Begnaud, U. Keller

TH074 | Passive dosing of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the marine algae test using silicone O-rings | Gesine Witt (HaW Hamburg, Germany) | G. Witt, R. ernst, F. Konopka, S. lang, n. niehus, c. Floeter

TH068 | Can solid-phase microextraction fibers be used to predict the hydrophobicity

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of non-ionic and anionic surfactants? | Joris Haftka (University of Utrecht, netherlands) | J. Haftka, J. Hammer, p. de Voogt, J. Hermens

TH064 | Passive air sampling of POPs across Asia: Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers (PBDEs) | Gi Myung Han (South Korea) | G. Han, S. Hong, U. yim, S. Ha, J. an, W. Shim, S. Murali, c. Bishnoi, Z. li, Z. Zhang, T. Shanthakumar, M. Raza, R. dewi, K. Manalang, n. issaro, V. Mai lan

TH067 | Soil to atmosphere PAH fugacity gradients in an urban lot measured by polyethylene passive samplers | Barbara Beckingham (college of charleston, USa) | B. Beckingham, a. akindutire, p. Grathwohl

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TH193 | Bioaccumulation, transformation and magnification possibility of PBDEs, OHand MeO-BDEs in fresh water | Un-Jung Kim (pusan national University, South Korea) | U. Kim, H. Jo, G. Joo, J. oh Measuring and modelling chemical bioavailability in soils (P). chaired by: david Spurgeon, erik Smolders, elma lahive TH078 | Determination of leaching behavior of Vanadium from masonry | nicole Bandow (Federal institute for Materials Research and Testing, Germany) | n. Bandow, U. Kalbe TH079 | The relationship between bioaccessibility and chemical form of arsenic associated with iron-oxide in soils | Seulki Jeong (South Korea) | S. Jeong, e. Jho, K. nam TH080 | Quantifying bioavailable fractions of PAHs in the Swiss Soil Monitoring Network | nora Bartolome (agroscope ReckenholzTänikon Research Station aRT, Switzerland) | n. Bartolome, i. Hilber, R. Schulin, T. Bucheli TH081 | What’s in our playground? Distribution and bioaccessibility of metals in Canadian urban park soils | Matt dodd (Royal Roads University, canada) | M. dodd, a. dakane, J. dupuis

TH075 | Changes In Gene Expression Under The Controlled Exposure Using Passive Dosing | Ji-yeon Roh (environmental Research institute, Korea, South) | J. Roh, J. Kwon

TH082 | Pilot Study for Relative Bioavailability Study of PAH in Coal Tar Pitch of Clay Target Fragments | Brian Magee (aRcadiS, United States) | B. Magee, G. Hoeger, M. Woudneh, R. Grace

TH076 | From the initial monitoring to the development of a reference method. A case study on pharmaceuticals residues on the Paris area. | Sophie lardy-Fontan (lne,

TH083 | Assessment of the impact of organic mater in ndl-pcbs sequestration in industrially contaminated soils : comparison of an in vitro bioaccessibility and an in vivo

TH085 | Development of Site-Specific Uptake Factors for Metals | Joseph Meyer (aRcadiS, United States) | p. anderson, J. Meyer, M. Beauchemin TH086 | Comparison of batch adsorption and time-dependent sorption parameters of two novel fungicides, penflufen and fluxapyroxad | Roy Kasteel (agroscope, Switzerland) | a. Gulkowska, i. Buerge, R. Kasteel, T. poiger TH087 | From lab to field: Integrating field tissue residues, bioaccessibility extractions and invertebrate exposures into a shooting range case study | Sarah Bowman (The ohio State University, USa) | S. Bowman, J. Bryant, R. lanno Mercury Biogeochemistry and Policy (P). chaired by: nelson o’driscoll, Stefano covelli, davide Vignati, Michael Bank TH088 | Mercury photoreactions in Arctic snow | erin Mann (canada) | e. Mann, M. Mallory, S. Ziegler, n. o’driscoll TH089 | Mercury and methylmercury flux estimation and sediment distribution in an industrialized urban bay | Seam noh (GiST, Korea, South) | S. noh, S. Han, e. Kim TH090 | Factors Affecting Mercury Volatilization from Coastal Wetlands | nelson o’driscoll (acadia University, canada) | n. o’driscoll, G. Mcarthur, J. canario, d. Risk, S. Justino, R. Tordon TH091 | Estimated annual mass-balance of suspended particulate mercury in a contaminated lagoon environment | Stefano covelli (dipmento di Matematica e Geoscienze, italy) | S. covelli, R. piani, a. Turritto, a. acquavita, a. Bezzi, S. pillon, G. Fontolan

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TH092 | Mercury speciation analysis in marine sediment samples: method validation and occurrence data | emiliya Vasileva (iaea, Monaco) | l. carrasko-cabrera, e. Vasileva TH093 | Mercury in wild gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L.) during the first year of life in the Marano and Grado Lagoon (northern Adriatic Sea) | alessandro acquavita (italy) | n. Bettoso, a. Felluga, G. piazza, e. Rancati, G. Mattassi, a. d’aietti, a. acquavita TH094 | Genotoxicity of Mercury in Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens) from a Biological Hotspot in Nova Scotia, Canada | anne-Katrin Mueller (RWTH aachen University, Germany) | a. Mueller, M. Brinkmann, S. Keiter, K. Kidd, H. Holler TH095 | Effects of mercury and UV radiation on the aquatic macrophyte Elodea nuttallii | nicole Regier (University of Geneva, Switzerland) | n. Regier, V. Slaveykova, c. cosio TH096 | Discrimination of two geographically distinct populations of sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax, using stable isotopic signatures of mercury (đ202Hg, 201Hg) | alice cransveld (Ulg, Belgium) | a. cransveld, d. amouroux, S. Berail, e. Koutrakis, c. Feng, J. Barre, J. Schnitzler, K. das TH097 | Effect of mercury on periphyton collected in Romanian reservoirs impacted by industrial activities | perrine dranguet (institut Forel University of Geneva, Switzerland) | p. dranguet, S. le Faucheur, c. cosio, V. Slaveykova TH098 | Presence of surfactants increase mercury toxicity towards Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | Vera Slaveykova (University of Geneva, Switzerland) | S. le Faucheur, c. portilla castillo, V. Slaveykova

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sity of cadiz, Spain) | T. Hernandez, J. perales, e. Rojo-nieto TH101 | Estimation of mercury bioaccessibility in contaminated agricoltural environment | alessandro acquavita (italy) | F. Zoz, M. contin, a. emili, a. acquavita, a. Khakbaz, M. de nobili TH102 | Relations between total mercury, methyl-mercury and selenium in five tissues of Sepia officinalis captured in the South Portuguese Coast | Joana Raimundo (ipMa, portugal) | J. Raimundo, p. pereira, c. Vale, J. canario, M. Gaspar TH103 | Hepatic Bioavailability of Total Mercury (THg) in Cichla sp from Tapajós River Region, Brazilian Amazon | Juliana azevedo (Federal University of Sao paulo, Brazil) | J. azevedo, J. Sarkis, M. Hortellani TH104 | Bioaccumulation and biomagnification in aquatic organisms of the Almaden mining district | Sergi diez (cSicidaea, Spain) | S. diez, e. Garcia, M. lacal, R. Giaggio, M. lominchar izquierdo, J. esbri, J. loredo, R. Millan, p. Higueras TH105 | Identification of present-day and historical sources of mercury in a complex industrial area | Fabrizio Monaci (University of Siena, italy) | F. Monaci, d. Baroni TH106 | Historical variations in the isotopic composition of mercury in sediment cores from northern Adriatic coastal environments | Stefano covelli (dipmento di Matematica e Geoscienze, italy) | S. covelli, c. Baschieri, a. Marchetti, a. acquavita, a. Berni, l. Spizzamiglio

TH099 | Assessment of inorganic and methyl mercury bioaccumulation in two aquatic primary producers | Rebecca Flueck (Switzerland) | R. Flueck, V. Slaveykova, c. cosio

TH107 | Artificial reservoirs downstream the two largest mercury mining areas in the world: source and/or sink of the metal? | efren Garcia (University of oviedo, Spain) | e. Garcia, a. emili, S. covelli, J. esbri, a. acquavita, M. lopez-Berdonces, M. Gosar, p. Higueras, J. loredo

TH100 | Mercury levels in target organs of cetaceans stranded in the Southwest coast of Spain. | elisa Rojo-nieto (cactymarUniver-

TH108 | Mercury environmental quality standards in the European Union | davide Vignati (cnRS, France) | d. Vignati, S. pole-

THURSday poSTeR pReSenTaTionS

sello, M. Bank TH194 | Abiotic Photo-degradation Mechanism of Methylmercury in Seawater | Kyungduk Zoh (Seoul national University, South Korea) | K. Zoh, M. Kim, a. Won Toward sustainability: benchmarks, certification and lca (p). chaired by: Monica lavagna, christian Bauer, Sebastien Humbert

alternative technologies of water filtration | paolo Ragni (Saipem Spa, italy) | S. Bosisio, p. Ragni, p. Schillaci, p. ambrosini, e. Buongarzone, n. Habashi TH116 | LCA as a supporting tool for building certification | Manuela crespi (Facoltà di architettura Sapienza Università di Roma, italy) | M. crespi, G. imbrighi, S. cangiano

TH109 | A benchmark for automotive tailpipe (TTW) emissions | eric Johnson (environmental impact assessment, Switzerland) | e. Johnson

TH117 | More than just a phrase: the benchmarking of sustainability performance for industry and policy-makers | diego iribarren (instituto iMdea energía, Spain) | d. iribarren, M. Martin, T. o’Mahony, J. dufour

TH110 | Best environmental practices for industrial parks based on LCA benchmark | Xavier Gabarrell durany (Universitat autónoma de Barcelona, Spain) | y. Barrera, d. Silva, a. Josa, X. Gabarrell durany, J. Rieradevall, a. ometto

TH118 | Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment (LCSA) and Triple Bottom Line (TBL) in Sustainable Product Design | Rosana Mattioda (ceSQa University of padua, italy) | R. Mattioda, a. Fedele, a. Mazzi, o. canciglieri Junior, a. Scipioni

TH111 | Environmental footprint of retail logistics as benchmark for sustainable commerce / e-commerce | diederik Schowanek (procter Gamble Services company, Belgium) | J. dewaele, p. van loon, l. deketele, a. McKinnon, d. Schowanek

TH119 | Sustainability Evaluation using life cycle assessment: a proposal for decision makings | alejandro padilla (UnaM, Mexico) | a. padilla, l. Guereca

TH112 | Misapplication of generic hazard-classification schemes for versatile, sustainable building materials: Copper as an example | Robert dwyer (international copper association, USa) | R. dwyer, J. Meyer, J. Gorsuch TH113 | Carbon payback times for biofuels on a global scale | Rosalie Van Zelm (Radboud University, netherlands) | p. elshout, M. Huijbregts, M. van der Velde, e. Schmid, J. Balkovic, R. Skalsky, M. obersteiner, R. Van Zelm TH114 | Conduction of five environmental declarations in compliance with EN 15804 standard for insulating materials - A Case Study | etienne lees-perasso (codde, France) | a. Roy, a. lanfranconi, J. orgelet, e. lees-perasso, R. conche TH115 | Development of a sustainable process solution for preliminary selection of

TH120 | The Importance of Uncertainty Analysis in LCA Studies | deidre Wolff (ireland) | d. Wolff, a. duffy, G. Hammond TH121 | ILCD Data Network: an IT infrastructure for quality-assured LCI data sharing | Serenella Sala (Joint Research centre european commission, italy) | M. Recchioni, G. Blengini, S. Fazio, F. Mathieux, S. Sala, d. pennington TH122 | Practical Life Cycle Inventory Databases: Moving from “what” to “how” in the process to democratize life cycle inventories and applications | ana Quiros (eco GloBal alcala, costa Rica) | R. Schenck, a. Quiros TH123 | Reporting quantitative uncertainty for life cycle assessment benchmarks in agricultural sector | carmen Torres (Spain) | c. Torres, a. assumpcio, F. castells TH124 | A methodological approach to improve the reliability and relevance of LCA

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reviews | Valentina Fantin (enea, italy) | V. Fantin, S. Scalbi, G. ottaviano, p. Masoni TH125 | C-Build e-LICCO database: LCI of building products to find in the ILCD data network | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | M. Sié, J. payet TH126 | Conversion of datasets in ILCD format - Case study: development of the French national database for textile | Jerome payet (cycleco, Switzerland) | S. pesnel, c. Roussel, o. Hugonnot, J. TH127 | Proposal for development of a system for the definition of benchmarks for LCA | Raul Berto (italy) | R. Berto, c. Stival, G. cechet TH128 | The renewed LCA Resource Directory: a set of self-managed tools for an improved share of Life Cycle Thinking knowledge | Serenella Sala (Joint Research centre european commission, italy) | S. Fazio, G. Blengini, M. Recchioni, S. Sala, F. Mathieux TH129 | Comparison of an energy demand and CO2-footprint model for the life cycle assessment of individual housing in two municipalities | andreas Froemelt (eTH Zurich, Switzerland) | a. Froemelt, d. Saner, S. Hellweg TH130 | Tradeoff identification in comparative life-cycle assessments | Thomas Seager (arizona State University, USa) | V. prado, T. Seager, l. laurin, M. chester, e. arslan

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bek, W. poganietz TH134 | Engaging consumers on products environmental impact - Assessment of existing options and recommendations from a company perspective | Samuel Vionnet (Quantis) | S. Vionnet, i. Francke Developments in Environmental Quality Standards: bridging the gap between science and practical regulatory implementation (p). chaired by: adam peters, paul Whitehouse TH135 | Suggestions for a quality assessment framework for fine, cohesive sediments using nematode-based lines of evidence | Marvin Brinke (Federal institute of Hydrology, Germany) | M. Brinke, S. Höss, e. claus, c. Moehlenkamp, G. Reifferscheid, W. Traunspurger, p. Heininger TH136 | Derivation of metal sediment quality guidelines for the protection of benthic organisms of the freshwater sediments in Korea | Song-dae Moon (neoenBiz co, Korea (South)) | J. lee, S. Moon, S. kang, c. Sung, c. Kim, c. lee, i. ahn, S. yoo TH137 | Derivation of sediment quality guidelines for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons using indigenous benthic organisms in Korea | Jong-Hyeon lee (neoenBiz co, Korea (South)) | J. lee, c. Sung, c. lee, S. Moon, S. Kang, W. Shim

TH131 | Carbon Performance and Benchmarking of the Printing Industry | Julian Meitanis (Foundation myclimate, Switzerland) | J. Meitanis, d. Kammerer

TH138 | Assessment criteria for contaminant-related biomarker responses in red mullet (Mullus barbatus) from Spanish Mediterranean waters | concepcion Martinez-Gomez (instituto español de oceanografia, Spain) | c. Martinez-Gomez, B. Fernandez, c. navarro, J. Valdes, J. campillo, J. Benedicto

TH132 | Benchmarking of Process Options of Pharmaceutical Reactions | polina yaseneva (University of cambridge, United Kingdom) | p. yaseneva, a. lapkin

TH139 | How effective is the Water Framework Directive in reducing levels of hazardous substances in the Baltic Sea? | anna Sobek (Sweden) | a. Sobek, M. agerstrand

TH133 | Benchmarking Waste-to-Biogas Plants in Germany: Comparison of Survey Results by Means of Life Cycle Assessment | Winfried Bulach (Karlsruhe institute of Technology KiT, Germany) | W. Bulach, l. Sche-

TH140 | Use of macroinvertebrates and fish to determine priority pollutants concentrations in Walloon Rivers. | delphine leroy (iSSep, Belgium) | d. leroy, y. Marneffe, p. libert, c. Joaquim-Justo, J. Thome

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TH141 | Pesticides residues occurrence in Brazilian waters - a review | Gisela Umbuzeiro (Faculty of Technology UnicaMp, Brazil) | a. albuquerque, J. Ribeiro, c. Montagner, F. Kummrow, G. Umbuzeiro TH142 | The implication of climate change upon future concentrations of phosphate in the rivers of the UK Anglian region | John Bagnall (atkins, United Kingdom) | J. Bagnall, R. McSweeney, a. clarke TH143 | Understanding the chemical speciation of silver in aquatic freshwater systems | adam peters (Wca environment ltd, United Kingdom) | a. peters, G. Merrington, p. Simpson, S. Smith, S. lofts, R. van egmond TH144 | Parameterisation of the Nickel Biotic Ligand Model for an Australian Species | adam peters (Wca environment ltd, United Kingdom) | a. peters, G. Merrington, K. de Schamphelaere, c. Schlekat TH145 | Water quality standards for imidacloprid - new values to protect aquatic life | els Smit (RiVM, netherlands) | e. Smit, F. de Jong, c. posthuma TH146 | A systematic comparison of the user-friendly tools used to estimate the bioavailability of Cu, Ni and Zn in the aquatic environment of Europe | Graham Merrington (environment agency, UK) | p. Simpson, F. Verdonck, G. Merrington, i. Vercaigne TH148 | Wrong conclusions from correct results in metal toxicity testing | davide Vignati (cnRS, France) | d. Vignati, V. Gonzalez, i. aharchaou, c. Fortin Endocrine Disruptors: exposure, Hazard & Risk assessment (p). chaired by: lennart Weltje, Thomas Backhaus, Malyka Galay Burgos

biofuels with respect to estrogenic activity | Kerstin Bluhm (institfor environmResearch RWTH aachen Univ, Germany) | K. Bluhm, S. Maletz, S. Hotz, a. Schaeffer, H. Hollert TH151 | Endocrine disrupting activities profiling of monitored French river sites based on in vitro bio-analytical tools | nicolas creusot (ineRiS, France) | n. creusot, e. Maillot Marechal, F. Botta, J. porcher, S. ait-aissa TH152 | Comparative study of in vitro and in vivo methods for the detection of endocrine disruption in aquatic invertebrates | eléna legrand (France) | e. legrand, J. Forget-leray, a. duflot, S. olivier, c. Boulange-lecomte TH153 | Characterization and comparison of transcriptional activities of the retinoid X receptors by various organotin compounds in three prosobranch gastropods | Toshihiro Horiguchi (national institute for environ Studies, Japan) | H. Urushitani, y. Katsu, H. Kagechika, a. Sousa, c. Barroso, y. ohta, H. Shiraishi, T. iguchi, T. Horiguchi TH154 | Reproduction test with a mollusc species under consideration of two different sexual endocrine mode of actions | Matthias Teigeler (Fraunhofer iMe, Germany) | M. Teigeler, M. Brueggemann, c. Schaefers TH155 | Exploring the value of gene expression biomarkers for existing test guidelines to detect endocrine disruption in fish | Matthias Teigeler (Fraunhofer iMe, Germany) | M. Teigeler, M. Fenske, V. Schiller, J. Bachmann, J. Brueckner, S. Konradi, c. Schaefers TH156 | Effects of activated carbon in the removal of 17-ą-ethinylestradiol (EE2): A reproductive approach using Danio rerio | Renata Fracacio (Unesp, Brazil) | a. de oliveira Fermino arine, c. Hitomi Watanabe, V. campos, R. Fracacio

TH149 | Cyanobacteria as natural sources of retinoids in the environment | Klara Hilscherova (Masaryk University Faculty of Science ReceToX, czech Republic) | V. Buranova, K. novakova, M. Smutna, K. Hilscherova

TH157 | Malformation of reproductive tracts in male rats given flutamide in utero | yasuhiko ohta (Tottori University, Japan) | y. ohta, S. Miyagawa, T. iguchi

TH150 | Safety evaluation of three potential

TH158 | Uncertainties in the assessment of environmental effects of chemicals with en-

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docrine activity - a literature study | Karen duis (ecT oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany) | K. duis, J. Scheider, d. Warnecke, a. van der Veen, a. coors, c. Schaefers TH159 | Endocrine Disruption: anthropogenic creativity or a hazard of ecological concern? | Jonathan Burke (TSGe llp, UK) | J. Burke Sustainability of Swiss Chocolate Production (P). chaired by: Joke Van Wensem, lawrence Kapustka TH160 | Developing inventory data for chocolate: Importance to consider impacts of potential deforestation in a consistent way among ingredients (cocoa, sugar and milk) | Sebastien Humbert (Quantis, Switzerland) | S. Humbert, L. Peano

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authors

A

A, S, 302, TU148 A M, Cornelis, TU188 Aamand, Jens, WE080 Abbas, Aennes, MO120 Abbasi, Golnoush, 509 Abdul-Sada, Alaa, 405 Abe, Ryoko, TU001 Abessa, Denis, WE217 Abhishek, Abhishek, TU251, TU272 Abrahart, Robert, 594 Abrantes, Isabel, WE053 Abrantes, Nelson, 183, TU057, WE065 Ackermann, Juliane, WE194 Ackermann, Martin, 228 Acquavita, Alessandro, 545, TH091, TH093, TH101, TH106, TH107 Acuña, Vicenç, TH027 Adam, Iris, TU228 Adam, Veronique, 484 Adam-Guillermin, Christelle, 289 Adamovsky, Ondrej, TU302 Adams, Angela, 218 Adams, Bill, 610 Adams, Carole, WE201 Adams, William, 204 Adediran, Gbotemi, 103 Ademollo, Nicoletta, WE061, MO064 Aderemi, Adeolu, TU067 Adiku, Samuel, WE115 Admiraal, Wim, 10, 125, 425, WE096 Adolfsson-Erici, Margareta, MO072 Adolfsson-Erici, Margaretha, WEPC18 Adrian, Philippe, TU192, TU203, WE304 Aeppli, Christoph, WE081 AFONSO, Eve, 181, TU049 Agarwal, Nisha, TH025 Agerstrand, Marlene, 608, TH139 aggeri, franck, WE276 Aguirre-Macedo, Leopoldina, MO008, MO010 Aguirre-Martinez, Gabriela, 132, TU109 aharchaou, imad, 206, TH148 Ahel, Marijan, WE142

Ahn, In-Ae, TH136 Ahniyaz, Anwar, MO169 Ahrens, Lutz, 592, TH057, TU090, WE137, WE154, MO283 Aira, Manuel, WE028 Aire, Tom, 240 Ait Aissa, Selim, 429 Ait-Aissa, Selim, 70, 233, 277, 366, TU017, WE138, TH151, MO265, TU301 aizawa, hirofumi, 30 Akcha, Farida, 8 Akindutire, Ayokunle, TH067 Akkanen, Jarkko, TUPC09, TU232 Al-korbi, Noof, WE024 Al-Naema, Nayla, TU023 Al-Naemi, Fatima, WE021, WE024 Al-Odaini, Najat Ahmed, WE126 Al-Subiai, Sherain, 584 Alani, Rose, TU190 Alasonati, Enrica, TU100 Alasuvanto, Toni, 110 Albar, Juan Pablo, 590 Albasi, Claire, 70 Albentosa, Marina, 123, WE014, MOPC16, MO039, MO051, MO055 alberdi, jose, WE204, MO290 Alberti, Giulia, WE282 Albuquerque, Anjaina, TH141 Albuquerque, Ruth, 168 Aldenberg, Tom, 387 Alder, Alfredo, 228 Aldrich, Annette, MOPC23, MO243, TU295 Aldridge, John, MO038 Alegretti, Lucas, WE244 Aleksandryan, Anahit, MO198 Aleksic, Milica, MO281 Alert, Henriette, TU014 Alexandrou, Nick, WE292 Alexandrova, Olga, 324 Ali, Shahid, WE266 Alija, Avdulla, TU300 Alix, Anne, 335, 339 Aljassim, Meaad, WE021, WE024 Alkrobi, Noof, WE021 Allan, Ian, 436, TH053, TH072

Allan, Matt, MO301 Allan, Sarah, TU202 Allinson, Graeme, 230 Allinson, Mayumi, 230 Alliot, Fabrice, 138, 366 Allue, Carmen, MO160 AlMazrooey, Hana, MO182 Almeida, Ana, TU027 Almeida, Angela, TU116 Almeida, Armando, WE197 Almeida, Eduardo, WE215 Almeida, Eryka, MO088 Almemark, Mats, MO234 Alnashiri, Hassien, TH039 ALO, BABAJIDE, TU190 Alshaeri, Majed, TU170 Altenburger, Rolf, 365, 481, 513, WE016, TU294 Altin, Dag, WE077, TU177 Altmeyer, Bernd, TU209 Alvarenga, Paula, WE039, MO090, MO252, MO280 Alvarez, Tania, 441, TH029 Álvarez-Rogel, José, TH030 Alvarez-Silva, Carlos, TU056 Alves, Arminda, MO107, MO133 Alves Ignácio, Áurea Regina, 548 Amalfitano, Stefano, MO064 Amano, Masao, TU045 Amaro, Antonio, WE001, WE052 Ambrosini, Paolo, TH115 Ame, María, TU060 Amezquita, Alejandro, 247 Amid, Callis, MO001, MO015, MO025 Amilhat, Elsa, TH015 Amiot, Caroline, TU038 Amman, Adrian, MO079 Ammann, Adrian, WE015 Amor, Ben, WEPC08, MO226 Amores Barrero, Maria Jose, MO221 Amorim, Monica, 341, 467, WE044, TU161 Amouroux, David, 366, 556, TU085, TH096 Amr, Mohamed, MO181, MO182 Amyot, Marc, 546 An, Jinsung, WE111, WE112 An, Joon Geon, TH064 An, Youn-Joo, WE043, TU156, TU163, TU166

235


authors

Ana, Cabrerizo, 590 Anand, Satheesh, WE167 Ancona, Valeria, WE092 Andersen, Martin Solhøi, 118 Anderson, Julie, 506 Anderson, Kim, TU202 Anderson, Paul, TH085 Andersson, Hanna, 371 Andersson, Maria, WE056 Andersson, Sofia, MO234 Andjelkovic, Milorad, MO116 Andrade, Thayres, TU002, TU026, TU131 Andre, Chantale, TU109 Andreï, Jennifer, 76, 79 Andres, Maria, WE120 ANDRES, Sandrine, 366, 556, WE257 Andreu, Vicente, WE120 Angelier, Frederic, 120 Ankley, Gerald, 33, 86, 512 Annesi-Maesano, Isabella, MO189 Anselmo, Eduardo, TH024 Antczak, Philipp, 90, 389, MO211 Antczak, Phillip, 31, 566 Anthonissen, Tim, MO201 Anton, Assumpcio, TU248 Antoni, Catherine, 587 Antunes, Filipe, MO238 ANYASI, RAYMOND ORIEBE, WE109 Aoustin, Emmanuelle, 502 Aparicio, Alberto Martin, 110 Apitz, Sabine, 523 Arana, Alejandro, MO054 Arapis, G., MO271 Araujo, Antonio, TU269 Araújo, Cristiano, MO239 Arbault, Damien, WEPC05 Arblaster, Jennifer, 440 Arce, Maria Isabel, TH030 Arcese, Gabriella, MOPC12 Arcoleo, Angela, WE282 Ardestani, Masoud, 207, TU183 Arellano, Lourdes, WE129 Arey, Samuel, WE081, TU096, WE228 Argese, Emanuele, MO062 Arias, Maria, 1, 2, 3, MO022 Arijs, Katrien, TU191 Arine, Ana, MO018 Arini, Adeline, 131 Ariyarathna, Thivanka,

236

authors

MO048, MO049, MO050, WE107 Arizono, Koji, MO138 Arkoosh, Mary, WE013 Arlt, Volker, 584 Armendariz, Laura, TH020 Armengaud, Jean, 402 Armitage, James Michael, 210, TU194, TU195 Arnold, Kathryn, 295, TH014 Arnot, Jon, 165, 382, WEPC14, WEPC18, MO185 Arques, Eva, MO060 Arrhenius, Asa, 75, 127, 416, WE056, MO084 Arribas, Paula, TH022 Arrivabene, Hiulana, TU007 Arroja, Luis, WEPC06, TU247, WE262, TU269 Arslan, Erdem, TH130 Artal, Mariana, MO067 Arts, Gertie, MO269 Arukwe, Augustine, 7, 240, 277, WE168, TU301 Askem, Clara, 614 Asllani, Fisnik, TU300 Aslund Troger, Rikard, WE137 Asplund, Lillemor, 174 Aspray, Thomas, TH045 Asselman, Jana, WE012 Assumpcio, Anton, TH123 Astrup, Thomas, TU234, TU257 Atagana, Harrison, WE109 Athanasiadou, Despina, MO101 Atorf, Cornelia, WE102, WE103 Aubin, Joël, 525, TU243 Aubry, Emilie, 218 Auffan, Mélanie, 76 Augusiak, Jacqueline, WEPC19, WE242 aus der Beek, Tim, 190 Aust, Nannett, 221 Austin, Thomas, 510, WE070, WE201 Auteri, Domenica, 166 Autret, Armelle, 129 Awgie, Walid, WE046 Ayuba, Victoria Azapagic, Adisa, 194, 603 Azevedo, Juliana, MO040, MO046, TH103, MO103 Azimonti, Giovanna, MO256

B

Babin, Patrick, MO213 Babut, Marc, 309, 373, WE160, WE170 Bach, Alexander, 148 Bach, Martin, 319, 320 Bach, Vanessa, 272, 552 Bachmann, Jean, TH155 Bachmann, Till, 150, MO216, MO225 Bachtin, Krystyna, MO236 Backeljau, Thierry, WE028 Backhaus, Thomas, 53, 75, 127, 247, 416, WE056, MO084, WE270, WE284, MO306 Bade, Stephanie, 151 Badiei, Hamid, 255 Bado-Nilles, Anne, 74, 277, TU107, TU301 Badot, Pierre-Marie, MO104 Baek, Kine, 436 Baek, Sunhyung, 26 Baensch-Baltruschat, Beate, WE151 Baerlocher, Loic, 463 Baert, Jan, TH069 Bagci, Ifakat, 460 Bagnall, John, TH142 Bahlmann, Arnold, 245, WE133 Baier, Hans-Ulrich, TU094 Bainy, Afonso Celso Dias, MO094 Bajaj, Sanjeevan, WE283 Bajema, Bernard, TU068 Bajra, Teuta, TU300 Bajraktari, Ismet, TU300 Bakas, Ioannis, TU257 Baker, David, TU079 Bakir, Adil, 12, TU138 Bakir, Sahib, TU031 Bakre, Prakash, WE110 Balakrishnan, Vimal, MO137 Balaskas, Christos, 44 Balbi, Teresa, 583 Baldassin, Paula, TU043, TU044 Baldon, Jade, WE175 Balkovic, Juraj, TH113 Ballentine, Mark, MO048, MO049, MO050, WE107 Ballestero, Daniel, 1 Ballesteros Gomez, Ana Maria, WE128

Balouktsi, Maria, 551 Balzamo, Stefania, 277, TU301 Bandow, Nicole, TH078, TU288, TU289 Bangash, Rubab F, TH027 Bank, Michael, 601, TH108 Banta, Gary, MO175 Baquero, David, MO081 Baraban, Larysa, MO165 Baran, Nicole, TH028, TU083 Baranovskaya, Natalia, TU239 Baranzelli, Claudia, TUPC13 Barata, Carlos, 343, 370, TH023, TU133 Barausse, Alberto, 444 Barbassa, Ademir, 93 Barber, Jon, 589 Barbizzi, Sabrina, 277, TU301 Barbosa, Daniela, WE090 Barbosa, Isabel, MO252 Barcellos da Costa, Mercia, WE298 Barcelo, Damia, 16, 140, 297, 298, 316, 365, 369, 515, 518, TUPC22, TH031, MO141, WE156, TU168, MO213, TU214, MO252 Baresel, Christian, MO234 Barlow, Todd, TU276 Baron, Alexandra, TU112 Barón, Enrique, MO213 Baron, Matthew, 570, TH001 Baroni, Davide, TH105 Barra, Ricardo, TH062 Barra Caracciolo, Anna, WE061, WE078, WE092, WE093 Barral, Laura, MO076 Barral, Maria, MO077, MO078 Barranco, Ricardo, TUPC13 Barranger, Audrey, 8 Barre, Julien, TH096 Barreiro, Juliana, TU135 Barrera, Yovana, TH110 Barresi, Enzo, WE292 Barron, Leon, TU074, TU075 Barroso, Carlos, 67, WE005, MO057, TH153 Barry, Andrew, 18 Barsi, Alpar, 390 Barsiene, Janina, 63, 124, MO047 Bartel-Steinbach, Martina, MO190

Barthel, Mark, 549 BARTHEL, Yves, TU230 Bartkow, Michael, 619 Bartlett, Adrienne, MO137 Bartolome, Nora, TH080, TU152 Bartzis, John, MO189 Baschieri, Carlo, TH106 Bascoul, Ganael, 502 Basili, Danilo, MO211 Basseres, Anne, 537, WE057, WE062, MO083 Bastos, Ana, WE052, WE065 Basu, Nil, 131 Batt, Angela, 298 Battaglia, Eric, 206 Batterman, Stuart, MO197 Baude, Regina, 124 Baudo, R., MO271 Bauer, Angela, 363 Bauer, Christian, 398, WEPC03 Bauer, Johannes, WE031 Bauer, Paula, MO129 Bauerlein, Patrick, 258, TU143, TU151 Baumann, Manuel, 97 Baumberger, Daniela, MO115 Baumgartner, John, 230 Baun, Anders, 277, 431, MO166, TU175, WE176, TU301 BAURAND, Pierre-Emmanuel, 468 baveco, hans, 442, WE247, MO299 Baxter, Helen, 449 Baxter, Leilan, MOPC22 Bayerle, Michael, TH059 Bayne, Chris, WE013 Bayona, Yannick, WE057, WE062, MO083 Bazargan, Samad, 255 Bean, Tom, 295, TH014 Beauchemin, Melissa, TH085 Beaudoin, Remy, TU107 Beaumelle, Léa, TH084 Bebianno, Maria, WE006, MO029, TU153, MO162 Bebianno, Maria Joao, 160, 377 Bebon, Rebecca, MO245 Becaert, Valérie, 626 Becker, Anne, 417 Becker, Beatrix, MO235 Becker, Dennis, TU114 Becker, Richard, 29

Beckingham, Barbara, TH067 Bednar, Anthony, 256 Bednarska, Agnieszka, WE221, WE236 Beekhuijzen, Manon, TH010 Beer, Rita, 134 Beggio, Marta, MO232 Begnaud, Frederic, 489, TH066 Behra, Renata, 144, 346, 379, 381, MO074, MO160, MO293 Beiras, Ricardo, 67 Beisner, Beatrix, 546 Beitel, Shawn, 87, 568, MO214 Beketov, Mikhail, WE059, MO125, MO126, MO250 Belanger, Scott, 31 Belboom, Sandra, WE266 Belevich, Olga, MO126 Belgers, Dick, MO299 Belgers, J Dick, MO269 Belkin, Shimshon, 277, TU301 Belknap, Andrew, 212 Bellas, Juan, 123, MOPC16, MO051, MO055 Belli, Maria, 277, TU301 Bellin, Alberto, 515 Bellon-Maurel, Veronique, 36, TU244 Beloussova, Alina, 606 Belpaire, Claude, 558 Beltran, Eulalia, WE163 Beltrán, Eulalia, MO122, WE162, WE163 Beltran, Eulalia, WE162 Belzunces, Luc, TU078 Benabdelmouna, Abdellah, 8 Bendall, J, WE019 Bendall, Julie, 98 Bending, Gary, WE087 Benedetto, Graziella, MOPC08, MOPC11 Benedicto, Jose, MO039, TH138 Benetto, Enrico, 96, 334, 504, 606, WEPC04, WEPC05, MO224, TU245, WE261 Benavides, Rosario, 1 Benfenati, Emilio, 508, WE161 Bengoa, Xavier, TU254 Bengtson Nash, Susan, 115, 116, MO026, MO071, WE131, MO183

237


authors

Bengtsson-Palme, Johan, 130 benholtz, jesica, MO290 Benisek, Martin, 72, 277, MO119, TU301 Bennas, Nard, TH022 Bennet-Chambers, Marilyn, WE220 Bennett, Deborah, 165 Bennett, Tom, 41 Benstead, Rachel, 614 Berail, Sylvain, TH096 Beretta, Claudio, WE274 Berg, Andre, TU068 Berg, Hakan, 6, MO013, MO023 Berg, Kristin, 300 Berg, Vivian, MO206 Berger, Gert, MOPC19 Berger, Markus, 272, 552 Berger, Urs, 371 Berghahn, Ruediger, MO085, WE207 Berglind, Rune, 63 Berglund, Olof, TU120 Bergman, Ake, 174 Bergmann, Axel, 190, MO187 Bergtold, Matthias, 98, 521, WE019 Beriro, Darren, 594 Berkner, Silvia, 193, WE102, WE103 Bernal, Cristina, WE014 Bernard, Clement, 443 Bernard, Nadine, 357 Berni, Alex, TH106 Berninger, Jason, 131 Berny, Philippe, TU038 Berrojalbiz, Naiara, WE082 Berthet, Brigitte, 80 Berthod, Laurence, TU221 Bertin, Delphine, 373, WE160, WE170 Berto, Raul, TH127 Bertram, Michael, 230 Bertrand, Carole, 76, MO163 Bertrand, Lidwina, TU060 Bervoets, Lieven, 59, 237, 558, MO089, TU292 Besseling, Ellen, 305, TU145, TU147 Besser, John, 156 Bester, Kai, WE088, WE094, WE099, MO118, TU310 Betoulle, Stephane, 173, TU107

238

authors

Bettinetti, Roberta, 374, TU009 Bettiol, Cinzia, MO062 Bettoso, Nicola, TH093 Beutel, Marc, 547 Beyene, Yared, 182 Beylot, Antoine, 447, TU240 BEZELGUES COURTADE, Sophie, TU240 Bezuidenhout, Carlos, 469 Bezzi, Annelore, TH091 Bi, Yonghong, MO187 Biagianti-Risbourg, Sylvie, TH015 Bicchi, Carlo, 17 Bicego, Marcia, MO094 Bicherel, Pascal, 511, TH009, WE232 Bichet, Coraline, 181 Bicho, Carina, 467 Bickmeyer, Ulf, 63 Biegel-Engler, Annegret, 508 Bielasik-Rosinska, Magdalena, TU279 Bielmyer, Gretchen, TU181 Bierman, Stijn, WE206 Biermans, G., 453 Bigalke, Moritz, 61 Bighiu, Maria, MO037 Bigot-Clivot, Aurelie, TU112 Bilbao, Eider, TH037 Bilbao Castellanos, Eider, 581, TH037 Billet, David, 46 Billson, Bryony, 100 Bindler, Richard, WE054 Binet, Francoise, 347, WE023 Binning, Philip, 353 Birkedal, Renie, TU175 Birkved, Morten, 330, MOPC06, TU254 Birzle, Christoph, TUPC21 Bisaillon, Veronique, WEPC08 Bisesi, Joseph, 317, 529 Bishnoi, Chetak, TH064 Bishop, Lee, 454 Bisinger, Ed, 418 Biskos, George, MO148 Bitsch, Annette, 24 Bittermann, Kai, 435, WE195 Bizarro, Cristina, 9 Bizzotto, Elisa, 599, TU225, MO241, MO242 Bjerg, Poul, 353 Bjergager, Maj-Britt, TH070

Bjerregaard, Poul, 562, MO042, TU065 Bjorn, Anders, 215, 219, 330, TU235, TU259, WE270 Black, Kenneth, MO034, MO035, MO247 Blaha, Ludek, 73, 162, 277, MO119, TU301 Blahova, Jana, TU022 Blaine, Andrea, 105 Blair, David, 119 Blanc, Gerard, MO043 Blanc, Isabelle, 38, TU240 Blanchfield, Paul, 618 Blanck, Hans, 130, MO084 Blanco, Ramon, TU268 Blanco Montoya, Victor, MO170 Blasco, Julian, 222, 377, 516, MO056, WE217 Blaudez, Damien, WE035 Blengini, Gian Andrea, TH121, TH128 Bley, Lisa-Marie, 128 Bloch, Robert, MO194 Blockwell, Stephen, 619 Blot, Aurore, 275 Bluhm, Kerstin, TH150 Blum, Arlene, WE130 Blüm, Werner, 577 Blumenschein, Raquel, TU241 Blust, Ronny, 33, 59, 172, 203, 260, 262, 439, 460, 512, 558, WE216, TU292 Blutke, Andreas, TUPC21 Bo, Li, WE064 Boatti, Lara, 580 Bocoum, Ibrahima, 152 Bocquet, Virginie, 309 Bodewein, Lambert, 229 Bodineau, Luc, WE267 Boegi, Christian, MO305 Boehling, Stella, WE102 Boehm, Leonard, WE115, MO135, TU224 Boehmer, Thomas, MO113 Boenne, Wesley, 321 Boer, Ronald, WE119 Boeri, Marta, 349 Boesten, Jos, 267, MO299 Boethling, Robert, MO145 Bogdal, Christian, 81, 209, WE229 Bohlen, Marie-Leonie, MO195 Bohlin, Pernilla, TU093 Böhme, Steffi, 257

Boisseaux, Paul, WE180 Boithias, Laurie, TH027 Boivin, Arnaud, 267, 322 Bojaxhi, Ekramije, TU300 Bojic, Clement, WE113 Bolinius, Dämien, TH071 Bollmann, Ulla, TU310 Bolsunovsky, Alexander, MO294 Boltes, Karina, 329 Bonath, Inga, TU216 Bond, Georgia, TH016 Bonnard, Isabelle, TU062 Bonnard, Marc, TUPC24, TU062 Bonnard, Roseline, TU214 Bonnineau, Chloé, TH013, MO075 Bonnomet, Vincent, WE289 Bonomi, Antonio, MOPC04, TU253, WE258 Bonomo, Marina, TU007 Bonzongo, Jean-Claude, 430 Booij, Petra, 10, 125 Boost, Maureen, MO058 Booth, Andy, WE100, MO169, TU176, TU177 Borga, Katrine, 382, 436, 437, 498, WE091 Bori, Jaume, WE026, WE027 Bormans, Myriam, WE004 Bornhöft, Nikolaus, WE188 Borowska, Ewa, TU087 Borras, Joaquin, TU134 Borsotti, Andrea, 184 Bosch, Ronny, TU068 Boschung, Alain, WE071 Bosisio, Simone, TH115 Bossi, Rossana, 115, 352, MO026 Bossus, Maryline, TU121 Bossuyt, Bart, WE202 Botta, Clarice M R, MO011 Botta, Fabrizio, 138, 366, 556, TH151, WE155 Bouaicha, Noureddine, 409 Boualam, Marc, TU230 Bouillon, Steven, 59 Boulange-Lecomte, celine, MO070, TH152 bour, agathe, MO158 Bourdineaud, Jean-Paul, 175 Bourgin, Marc, TU087 bourgine, gaelle, TU017 Boutonnet, Jean-Charles, TU171

Bouvy, Alain, WE070, WE202 Bowes, Dylan, MO278 Bowman, Sarah, 440, 453, TH087 Boxall, Alistair, 191, 295, 380, TH014, WE284 Bozich, Jared, 454, MO146 Brack, Werner, 85, 243, 245, 365, 385, 481, 573, WE008, TU073, WE117, WE118, WE133, WE140, WE146, MO194, TU299 Bradshaw, Clare, 414, WE066 Braese, Stefan, TU127 Braibant, C., TU191 Brain, Richard, MOPC22 Brakstad, Odd Gunnar, WE100 Bramaz, Nadine, TH004 Bramke, Irene, WE076 Brandao, Miguel, 149 Brande-Lavridsen, Nanna, MO042 Brander, Susanne, 177, 231, 494 Brandsma, Sicco, 306, TU173, WE293 Brandt, Jorgen, 211 Brandt, Kristian, 247, WE036 Brandt, Marc, 508 Brant, Jan, 589 Brauch, Heinz-Juergen, WE098 Braunbeck, Thomas, TU020 Braungardt, Charlotte, 224 Braunschweig, Arthur, TU263 Braunschweiler, Hannu, 52 Bravin, Matthieu, 540 Bravo, Claudia, WE013 Breda, Silvia, MO062 Breitholtz, Magnus, 65, 66, MO059 Breivik, Knut, MO131, MO185, TU194, TU195 Brenes, Carlos, 1 Brennan, Aoife, 327 Brenner, Matthias, 63, 124, MO047 Bresgen, Nikolaus, TU300 Bressling, Jana, MO101 Bressy, Adèle, 537, TH054 Breton, Audrey, 136 Brettell, Nathan, TU278

Breuer, Friederike, WE060 Breugelmans, Karin, WE028 Briand, Sarah, 323 Briard, Vincent, MO229 Brice, Ken, WE292 Briede, Jacco, 470 Brieudes, Vincent, TH076, TU077 Brillet, Francois, 359 Brindle, Ian, TU098 Brinke, Marvin, 159, TH135 Brinkmann, Markus, 569, TH094, WE116, MO244 Brion, Francois, TU017, WE138 Brion, François, 366 Brion, Francois, 233, 277, TU016, TU301 Brisse, Annabelle, MO225 Brizard, Raphael, 8 Brkic, Dragica, MO266 Bro, elisabeth, 178 Brock, Theo C.M., 42, WE233 Brockmeier, Erica, 344, 453 Brodin, Tomas, 251, 299 Broeder, Kathrin, 477 Broeg, Katja, 124 Bronders, Jan, 321 Brones, Fabien, MOPC07 Bronner, Guido, WE231 Brooks, Bryan, TUPC15, MO264 Brouns, Madeleine, 567 Brown, Andrew Ross, 391, TH026 Brown, Becky, TU075, TU126, WE290 Brown, Donald, 354 Brown, Rebecca, 195, 614 Brown, Trevor, WEPC15 Bruce, Peter, 4 Bruchet, Auguste, TH056 Brueckner, Jasmin, TH155 Brueggemann, Maria, TH154 Bruehl, Carsten, MOPC19, MOPC24 Brule, Nelly, 76, MO163 Brumbaugh, Bill, 156 Brumbaugh, William, 595 Brun, Nadja, 531 Brunetti, Gianluca, 253 Bruno, Cristina, WE058 Brunot, Aymeric, WE265 Bruns, Eric, TU035 Bryant, Christie, MO129 Bryant, Joshua, TH087

239


authors

Bu, Qingwei Bucheli, Thomas, TH080, TU152, TU157 Buchetti, Monica, 277, TU301 Buchholz, Daniel, 514 Buchinger, Sebastian, 477, 569, WE009, WE116 Buck, Robert, WE153, WE166, WE167 Buckova, Martina, MO292 Budgen, Nigel, TU117 Budzinski, Helene, 70, 117, 120, 293, 309, 366, 373, 429, 537, 556, TH056, TH076, TU077, WE155, WE160, WE170 Buehler, Lukas, 340 Bueno, Odair, WE177 Buerge, Ignaz, WE083, TH086 Buesser, Sybille, 452 Buesser Knoepfel, Sybille, TU263 Buesser Knoepfel, Sybille, TU263 Buettiker, Nicole, 531 Buffet, Pierre-Emmanuel, 80 B端hler, C., MO087 Bui, Thuy, 569, TU088 Bulach, Winfried, TH133 Bulete, Audrey, 189, TU078 Bulle, Cecile, 92, 325, MO218, TU265 Buncic, Ruza, MO286 Bundschuh, Mirco, 78, 358, 474, 573, 574, MO098, MO172, MO177 Bunge, Michael, TU224 Bunke, Dirk, 221, 365, 481 Buongarzone, Euro, TH115 Buranova, Veronika, TU032, TH149 Buratti, Sara, 249 Burauel, Peter, WE090 Burdon, Frank, 228 Burek, Peter, 515 Burgeot, Thierry, 8, MO039 Burger, Udo, TU079 Burkard, Michael, MO071 Burkart, Corinna, 75, 127, MO165 Burke, Jonathan, TH159 Burkhardt, Michael, 278, TU288 Burkina, Viktoriia, TH060, TU132

240

authors

Burns, Mitchell, 323 Burton, G. Allen, 157, 522 Bury, Nic, 277 Bury, Nicolas, 572, TU075, TU301 Busch, Wibke, WE016 Buser, Andreas, WE229 Busetti, Francesco, MO100 Bustamante, Paco, 117, 120 Bustnes, Jan Ove, 120 Butterfield, Dan, TU211 Byers, Harry, WE117, WE118

C

C D Bainy, Afonso, WE006 Cabal, Helena, MO230 Caballero, Gemma, 590 Caballero Guzman, Alejandro, WE190 Cachot, Jerome, 11, 135, 293 Caillat, Amelie, 542 Cailleaud, Kevin, 537, WE057, WE062, MO083 Cairns, Warren, WE224 Cajaraville, Miren P, 581 Calabretta, Elisa, 277, TU301 Caldas, Eloisa, TU297 Caldwell, Daniel, TUPC20 Caley, Jane, WE289 Calhoa, Carla Filipa, 196 Calisto, Vania, TU116 Camarero, Pablo, TU039, TU048 Cameron, Allyson, 514 Campana, Olivia, WE217 Campbell, Dan, TU276 Campbell, Peter, 170, MO300 Campiche, Sophie, 278, WE022 Campillo, Juan, MO039, TH138 Campillo, Juan Antonio, 123, WE014, MOPC16, MO051, MO055 campion, jean-florent, TU270 Campion, Jean-Florent, TU270 Campo, Julian, TH021, WE156 Campos, Valquiria, MO018, TH156 Campton, Christopher, TU037 Camusso, Marina, 597 Canario, Joao, TH090,

TH102, WE197 Canciglieri Junior, Osiris, TH118 Candido, Patrick, TH076, TU077 Canedo-Arguelles, Miguel, TH023 Canepa, Sara, MO031, MO045 Canesi, Laura, 583 Cangiano, Stefano, TH116 Canhoto, Cristina, 144 Canovas, Manuel, WE014 Cantos, Manuel, TU226 Cao, Lei, TU267 CAPDEVILLE, Marion-Justine, TH056 Capelli, Nicolas, 468 Capellini, Luciana, WE215 Cappelini, Luciana, WE125 Cappelli, Claudia, 508 Caquet, Thierry, WE057, WE062, MO083 carafa, roberta, 439, WE209, TU294 Carboni, Andrea, MO170 Cardellicchio, Nicola, 545 Cardoso, Catia, MO029, MO162 Cardoso, Diogo, WE052, TU296 Cardoso, Olivier, 74 Carere, mario, WE134 Carlson, Kent, 594, TH083 Carlu, Elieta, WE259 Carmichael, Catherine, WE081 Carmo, Talita, WE175 Carrasko-Cabrera, Luis, TH092 carravieri, alice, 117 Carrera, Jesus, TH031 Carver, Les, TU276 Casabianca, Herve, 189, TU078 Casado, Marta, 62, 343, 370 Casado-Martinez, M. Carmen, MO245 casalegno, carlotta, MO277 Casas, Josefina, TU133 Casas, Monica, MO118 Casas, Stellio, 71, MO117, WE249 Casellas, Claude, 535 Casellas, Maria, 518 Caselles, Susana, TU144

Cass, Quezia, TU135 Cassani, Giorgio, WE070 Cassani, Stefano, 487, MO144, WE152, WE287, WE302 Cassiani, Giorgio, 515 Casteel, Ken, 418 Castella, Emmanuel, 578 Castells, Francesc, TH123 Castiglioni, Sara, 184, 473 Castillo, Blake, 317 Castillo, Luisa, 3, MO022, MO024 Castillo, Luisa E., 1, MO016 Castillo, Luisa Eugenia, 2 Castillo Martinez, Luisa, MO014 Castro, Italo, WE298 Caudrelier, Dimitri, 502 caulier, morgane, TU016 Caupos, Emilie, TH054 Caupos, Fanny, MO009 Causanilles, Ana, TU080 Cavalett, Otavio, MOPC04, TU253, WE258 Cavalheiro, Joana, TU085 Cavallin, Jenna, 131 Cavicchioli Azevedo, Vinicius, TU135, WE175 Cavill, Rachel, 470 Cazevieille, Patrick, 540 Cechet, Giovanni, TH127 Cedergreen, Nina, 392, TH070, TU092, WE240 Cenijn, Peter, 174, 567 Cerabolini, Bruno, MO275 Ceriani, Lidia, MO145, MO256 Chadili, Edith, 74, TU016 Chae, Doohyun, TU149, TU199 Chagas, Mateus, WE258 Chalon, Carole, MO091 Chan, Leo L, 462 Chang, Lia, TU197 Chang, Ya-Ju, 214 Chang-Hoon, Lee, MO063 Chappert, Benoit, WE259, WE267 Charles, Sandrine, 443, 495, 497, 614 Charrois, Jeffrey, MO100 Chary, Killian, 525 Chastel, Olivier, 117, 120 Chatel, Amelie, 80 Chatterjee, Nivedita, 579 Chaudry, Amjad, 510

chaumot, arnaud, 285, 402, TU006 Chelinho, Sonia, 407, WE039, WE053 Cheloni, Giulia, TH017 Chemello, Giulia, TU104 Chen, Bo-Ching, MO184 Chen, Chen, MO114 Chen, Chuanlei, 310 Chen, Daqing, TH060 Chen, Fangfang, WE200 Chen, Feng, 139 Chen, Guangquan, 470 Chen, Hao, MO187 Chen, Sha, TU267 Chen, Sunmao, TU276 Chen, Wei-Yu, TU105, WE235 Chen, Yi, WE196 Chen, Yingxin, TU267 Chen, Zhi-Feng, 139 Cheneble, Jean-Charles, TU230, TU270 Chenel Cebro, Sergio, TU236 Cheng, Yi-Hsien, WE252 Cherel, Yves, 117 Chernyak, Sergei, MO197 Cherrie, John, 28, MO189 Cherubini, Francesco, 273 Chester, Mikhail, TH130 Chetelat, John, 546 Chevalier, Julie, 135 Chevassus-Rosset, Claire, 540 Chevreuil, M, 556 Chevreuil, Marc, 138, 366 Chiesa, Stefania, MO062 Chigozie, Moses-Charles, 108 Chipman, Kevin, 90, MO208 Chipman, Richard, MO203 Chirico, Nicola, 487 Cho, Kijong, WE025, TU158 Choi, Dae-Jin, WE123 Choi, Eun-mi, MO272 Choi, Gyuyeon, 26, MO193 Choi, Hee-Gu, TU091, WE122 Choi, Hoon, MO066, MO272, MO273 Choi, Jinhee, 579, WE010, WE173, WE306 Choi, Kyoungho, 26 Choi, Kyungho, 616, MO193, MO200 Choi, Minkyu, TU091, WE122 Choi, Sooran, MO193 Choi, Suran, 26 Chon, Tae-Soo, WE010

Choueri, Rodrigo, MO124 Choukr-Allah, Redouane, 515 Chowdhury, Mohammed, 205, 539, TU178, TU179 Christensen, Guttorm, MO131 Christensen, Jan, 368, 422, WE036, WE079, WE080, TU092 Christensen, Jesper, 211, 437 Christiansen, Sofie, 562 Christl, Heino, 98 Chu, Yeonhee, 26 Ciacci, Caterina, 583 Cicero, Anna Maria, MO031, MO045 Cichocka, Danuta, 419 Ciffroy, Philippe, 542, TU214, WE257 Cipolato, giacomo, MO065, WE224 Claessens, Michiel, 304, TH069, WE290, MO305 Claeys, Lieve, TU293 Claparols, Catherine, TH077 Clark, Robert, WE227 Clarke, Adam, TH142 Clarke, Emma, MO168 Classen, Silke, 439 Claus, Evelyn, 159, 587, TH135, WE151 Clerandeau, Christelle, 293 Clouzot, Ludiwine, 618 Coeurdassier, Michael, 181, TU036, TU038 Coghlin, Paul, WE105, TU129 Coke, Maira, 614 Colaco, Ana, MO029 Cole, Bryan, 231 Coleman, Claire, TU117 Coleman, Heather, 619 Coleman, Jessica, 256 Collard, France, TU146 Collier, Tracy, WE013 Colling, John, WE202 Colman, Benjamin, WE179 Colman, Benjamin P, WE179 Colombo, Fabio, 599, TU225, MO241, MO242 Colombo, Ilaria, WE290 Colombo, Valentina, 288 Comber, Michael, TU283 Comber, Mike, 54, TU282, TU284, TU285, TU286 Comber, Sean, 224, MO112 Company, Rui, WE006 Companys, Encarna, TU189

241


authors

Comploi, Kewin, 218 Conche, Roger, TH114 Conder, Jason, 440, 599, TU225 Conesa, Hector M, TH030 Connolly, Mona, TH034 Connon, Richard, 177, 231 Connors, Kristin, MO264 Conrad, Andre, MO190 conrad, arnaud, 322 Constantine, Lisa, 561 Conti, Daniela, 277, TU301 Contijoch, Andreu, 18 Contin, Marco, TH101 Cooper, Christopher, MO050, WE107 Cooper, Ruth, 234 Coors, Anja, 106, 247, 348, MO120, MO121, MO143, WE151, TH158 Cop, Nathalie, TU019 Coquery, Marina, TH048, TH056 Corbel, Sylvain, 409 Corcoll, Natàlia, 518 Cordero, Chiara, 17 Cornel, Peter, MO120 Cornelio Ferreira Nocelli, Roberta, MO296 Cornelis, Geert, 254 Cornelissen, Emile, TU143 Cornelissen, Gerard, 588 Correia, Antonio, TU155 Correia, Barbara, TU110 Corry, Thomas, WE201 Corsolini, Simonetta, WE159 Corson, Michael, TU243 Corvini, Philippe, 419, 420, 426 Cory, Wendy, TU106 Cosio, Claudia, 51, 463, 544, TH095, TH097, TH099 Cosme, Nuno, 274, MOPC06, WEPC10, TU259, TU260 Costa, Elisa, TH042 Costa, Nuno, MO238 Costa, Patricia, TH062 Costa, Raquel, TU057, TU061 Costa, Sara, MOPC21 Costello, David, 157 Cotelle, Sylvie, WE035 Couee, Ivan, 403 Coulon, Fred, 423 Coulson, Mike, 98, 170, WE019 Cousin, Xavier, 293

242

authors

Cousins, Ian, 307, 365, 371, 375 TU088, TU200 Coutinho, Joao, 491, TU233 Couture, Jean-Michel, 154 Couturier, Guillaume, TH076, TU077 Covaci, Adrian, 59, WE128, MO201, WE212 Covelli, Stefano, 545, TH091, TH106, TH107 Coveney, Peter, WE041 Cowan, David, TU074 Craig, Peter, MO285 Crane, Mark, TH006, MO240 Cransveld, Alice, TH096 Crawford, Sarah, 555, WE218 Creer, Simon, WE250 Cren, C, 556 Cren, Cecile, 71, 366 Crespi, Manuela, TH116 Cresswell, James, TH016 Creusot, Nicolas, 70, 233, 277, 366, 429, WE138, TH151, MO265, TU301 Crini, Gregorio, MO104 Crini, Nadia, TU038 Cristobal, Susana, 342, WE007 Critto, Andrea, 483, MOPC13, TU214, WE257 Croce, Valeria, MO277 Crocker, Joe, MO253 Cronin, Mark, 34, WEPC16, WE203 Cropp, Roger, 115, MO026 Crosse, John, 559 Cruanas, Robert, WE042 Crum, Steven, 472, MO269 Cruz, Andreia, TU296 Cruz-Gonzalez, Sara, 263 Csiszar, Susan, 142, 165 Cuadrado, Mariano, TU048 Cumming, Rob, 570 Cunha, Luis, WE001 Cunha, Marcelo, WE258 Cuniberti, Gianaurelio, MO165 Cuny, Laure, TU127 curieses, silvana, TU164 Currier, Heidi, TU047 Curry, Jonathan, TH047 Curtis, Lawrence, WE013 Custodio, Marco, TU051 Cuthberson, Alan, MO173 Cuthbert, Simon, TU287 Cyphus, Paul, TU170

Czaplicka, Katarzyna, TU086, TU113 Czaplicka, Krystyna, MO228

D

D’Aietti, Alessandro, TH093 D’Annibale, Alessandra, 352 Da Ponte, Gabriella, MO232 da Silva, Daniele, WE215 da Silva, M Fatima, WE177 Daam, Michiel, WE054 Dabrin, Aymeric, TH018, TH048 Dachs, Jordi, 62, 308, 590, WEPC23, WE082 daCostaFulgencio, AC, TU228 Daehne, Dagmar, TU204 Daffe, Guillemine, 293 Dahdal, Rula, MO237 Dahdal, Rula, MO237 Dahlberg, Anna-Karin, 174 Dahlgren, Lena, MO234 Dahlgren Strååt, Kim, TU201 Dai, Lina, MO175 Dakane, Abdul, TH081 Dalhoff, Kristoffer, 392 dalla Bona, Mirco, 277, TU301 Dallas, Lorna, 224 dalle luche, greta, WE131 Dallinger, Reinhard, 286, 468 Damgaard, Christian, WE050 Dammeijer, Louise, TU252 Dandres, Thomas, 92, MO237 Daneshvar, Atlasi, TH057 Dang, Viet, TU043, TU072 Daniel, Otto, 340, WE049, MO243, TU280, TU295 Daniels, Benjamin, 270 Daniels, Kit, 354 Danielsson, Gabriela, WE007 Dardenne, Freddy, 33, 512 Darras, Veerle, 460 Das, Krishna, TU053, TH096, TU146 Datta, Archana, WE283 Davenport, Russell, 328, 360, WE020, MO199 David, Arthur, 405 David, Calin, 263 David, Elise, 173, TU112 Davidson, Todd, TUPC20 Davies, Joanna, MO270 Davis, Clay, TU099

Davis, Mikaela, TU040 Dawick, James, 362 Day, Mark, WE087 de Baan, Laura, 271, TU280 De Baets, Bernard, WE012 de Boer, Jacob, WE295 De Boer, Tjalf, 345, 470 De Bruille, Vincent, 92 de Carvalho Benta Santos Oliveira, Isabel Maria, 67, WE005, MO057 de Castro, Julio, MO205 De Castro, Núria, 297, TH020 de Haro, Sergio, TUPC11 de Hoop, Lisette, TUPC16 De Jong, Frank, TH145 De Jonge, Maarten, 558, TU292 de Junet, Alexis, 46 de Klein, Jeroen, 22 de Knecht, Joop, 30 de Koning, Coco, TH010 De la Hera, Cristina, MO081 De la rua, Cristina, MOPC02 de la Torre, A, WE163 De Laender, Frederik, 64, 442, 475, 517, TUPC16, WE054, WE055, WE063, TH069, WE234, WE247 de Leon, Fe, 509 de Lima Nascimento Sirio, Daniel, 93 De Meester, Luc, 287 De Nobili, Maria, TH101 de Oliveira Fermino Arine, Ana Lucia, TH156 de Pablo, Hilda, MO053 de Peyster, Ann, 564 De Polo, Anna, 202 De Rijcke, Maarten, 121, TU070 De Rosa, Michele, MOPC01 de Schamphelaere, K, TH144 De Schamphelaere, Karel A.C., 203, 205, 259, 260, 262, 287, 517, TUPC08, WE012, TU179, TU180, WE241 de Senerpont Domis, Lisette, TU120 de Snoo, G.R., 412, 434 De Souza Filho, Jose, TU172, WE186, TU297 De Troch, Marleen, 475 de Voogt, Pim, 10, 21, 258, 425, TH051, TH068, TU080, TU089, WE096, TU143,

TU151, MO170 de Vries-Buitenweg, Selinda, TH010 De Wilde, Tineke, TU214 de Wit, Cynthia, TU088 De Zwart, Dick, 480, 522, WE150, TU309 De-Bastos, Eliane, TU008 Deacon, Samantha, TUPC17, MO241 Dean, Robin, MO301 Deb, Nandita, TU023 Debier, Cathy, TH013, WE205 Decelles, Susanna, 354 DeCourten, Bethany, 231 Dedourge-Geffard, Odile, 173, TU112 DeFerrer, Juanantonio, WE070 DEFFONTIS, Stephanie, 136 DeForest, David, 204 Degan, Raffaella, 17 Degrez, Marc, MOPC09 DeGroot, Breanna, 231 Deketele, Lieven, TH111 Del Arco, Ana, 472 del Moral, Fernando, TUPC11 Del Valls Casillas, Tomas Angel, 248, TU122 Delahaut, Laurence, TH015, TUPC24, TU062 Delannoy, Matthieu, TH083 Delay, Markus, TU127 Delbeke, Katrien, TU191 Deleebeeck, Nele, MO204 Delgado, Maria Jose, TH030 Deligne, Chloe, TH032, 497 Delignette-Muller, Marie Laure, 495 Della-Vedova, Claire, 289 Dellisanti, Walter, MO064 Delov, Vera, 229, TU109 DelValls, Tomas Angel, 132, 514 Demeneix, Barbara, 232 Demertzi, Martha, WE262, TU285, TU286 Den Haan, Klaas, TU284 den Haan, Klaas, 54, TU283 Den Haan, Klaas, TU282 den Haan, Klaas, TU282 Denadrai, Marina, TU135, WE147, WE209 Denis, Pittois, TH059 Denison, Michael, TU141

Denoyelle, Marieva, 510, 317, 344, 529, 530, TU043, TU072, MO208, MO211, MO265 Denslow, Nancy, 91 Derksen, Anja, TU103 Deruytter, David, 203 Dervaux, Antoine, TU036 Deschenes, Louise, 325 Deschryver, An, 605 Desmet, Nele, 321 DeStefano, Lizanne, 454 Deutschmann, Björn, TU299 deVaufleury, Annette, 468 Devesa-Rey, Rosa, MO077, 429 Devier, Marie Helene, 366 Devillers, James, 178, MO163 Devin, Simon, 76 Dewaele, Joost, TH111 Dewi, Ratnaningsih, TH064 DHYEVRE, Adrien, WE035 Di, Yanan, 584, WE063, TU193, MO275 Di Guardo, Antonio, 269, WE092 Di Lenola, Martina, WE078 Di Lorenzo, Tiziana, TU298, WE204, MO290, MO291, TU298 Di Marzio, Walter, TU164, WE140 Di Paolo, Carolina, WE139, 330, 509, WE130, WE270 Diamond, Miriam, 25, MO233, TU247, WE262, TU269 Dias, Ana, WEPC06 Dias, June, MO040, MO159 Diaz, Cecilia, WE075, 140, TH031, MO141 Diaz-Cruz, Silvia, 16 Diaz-Fierros, Francisco, MO077 Dick, Deborah, WE090 Diderich, Robert, 30, MO016, MO269 Diepens, Noel, 158, TU288 Dietschweiler, Conrad, 278 Dietz, Rune, 119 Dieudonne, Musibono, 59, 548, TH104 Diez, Sergi, 370 Diez Ortiz, Maria, TU162 Diez-Ortiz, Maria, 197 Digilio, Giuseppe, 349

243


authors

Dijk, Rianne, 89 Dijkman, Teunis, MOPC06, 155 DILHAC, Benoit, 110 Dimitriou-Christidis, Petros, WE228 Dimitrov, Mauricio, 5 Dimitrov, Sabcho, 365 Dimitrova, Katya, 207 Dimzon, Ian Ken, TU089, WE215 Diniz, Lia Gracy Rocha, WE125 Dinkel, Anke, TU036, 500 Dinkel, Fredy, 399, WE019 Dinter, Axel, 98 DIRTU, Alin, MO201, WE301 Disley, Helen, TU207 Dittrich, Ralf, 44 djae, tanalou, 540 Dmowska, Ewa, 355 Do, Son Huu, TU223 Doan Nhu, Hai, MO025 Dobrovolskaia, Marina, TH043 Dobsikova, Radka, TU022 Dodd, Matt, TH081 Dodd, Nicholas, TH005 Dodelec, Sylvain, 515 Doelsch, Emmanuel, 540 Doeren, Laszlo, WE060 Doering, Janine, 169, 568, MO214 Doering, Jonathon, 87 Doernen, Raphael, TUPC03, WE296 Dohmen, Peter, MOPC20 Dolciotti, Ida, 417 Dolera, Juan Ignacio, MO081 Dollard, Marie Andre, 76 Dollinger, Margit, MO270 Dom, Nathalie, 172, WE108, WE161, MO259 Domingo, Jose, 516, TU002, TU026, TU027, TU028, TU131, TU132, MO136 Domingues, Ines, 5 Dominguez, Jorge, WE028 Dondero, Francesco, 580 Done, Hansa, 187 Dong, Jianwei, TH061, MOPC15, TU260 Dong, Yan, 332 Donnachie, Rachel, TU102, 465, WE181 Donner, Erica, 253

244

authors

Dos Reis, Adriana, TU050 dos Santos Franco, Teresa Cristina, WE298 Dotelli, Giovanni, TU237 Dott, W., WEPC22 Doucette, William, 107 Dousset, Sylvie, 46 Dr. Schnoeder, Frank, TH026 DRAKE, PILAR, 222 Dranguet, Perrine, TH097 Dreier, David, MO264 Dreyer, Marion, 458, TH004 Drieschner, Carolin, TH003 Dringen, Ralf, WE174, WE196 droge, steven, TH050 DROHMANN, Dieter, WE304, MO121, WE194, WE285 Drost, Wiebke, 440 DROUET, Lourent, WE261 Drouillard, Ken, TU047 Drury, David, 547 Du Pasquier, David, 514 Duarte, Armando, MO099 Duarte, Claudia, MO238 Duarte, Ian, TU007 Duarte, Iola, WE001 Dubois, Carole, 218 Duboisset, Arnaud, 322 Dubus, Helene, 323 Dubus, Igor, 323, 614 Ducrot, Virginie, 390 Dudzina, Tatsiana, 81 Duering, Rolf Alexander, WE103, WE105, WE115, TU129, TU130, MO135, TU224 Duering, Rolf-Alexander, WE104 Duffy, Aidan, TH120, TH152 Duflot, Aurelie, MO070 Dufour, Javier, TH117, WE219 Dufour, Marine, 129 Duinmeijer, Kim, TU290, WE151, TH158, TU167 Duis, Karen, 513, 366 Dulio, Valeria, 138, TH001 Dummett, Ciaran, 428 Duong, Thi Hanh, 185 Dupuis, Alain, 618 Dupuis, Julia, TH081 Duquesne, Sabine, 417, MO236 Dura, Hanna, 97 Durand, Marie-Jose, 359, 438, MO113, MO127 Durham, Jeremy, 383 Duroudier, Nerea, 581

Duru, Loveth, MO279 Duvil, Ricardi, 547 Dwyer, Robert, TH112 Dyer, Scott, 522 Dyrynda, Elizabeth, TH046 Dyson, Jeremy, 336 D’Aco, Vincent, TUPC20, 510, WE070, WE201, WE202, TU282, TU283, TU284, TU285, TU286

E

Eadsforth, Charles, 54 Ebeling, Markus, MO254, 193, 300 Ebert, Ina, 190 Ebke, Klaus Peter, WE060, MO022 Echeverria Saenz, Silvia, 3 Eck, Gero, TU304 Eckenstein, Helene, MO287 Eckhardt, Alex, MO186 Eckhardt, Alexander, MO263 Eckl, Peter, TU300 Edebeli, Jacinta, TUPC14 Edge, Anthony, TU074 Edwards, Mark, 348, WE212 Eens, Marcel, 237 Effertz, Christoph, MO140 Egeler, Philipp, 614, 284, MO293 Eggen, Rik, 228, WE168 Eggen, Trine, 171 Eggesbo, Merete, 84 Egli, Norbert, TU263, 267 Egsmose, Mark, 265 Eguren-Iriarte, Gabriela Virginia, TH062 Ehni, Markus, 24, WE116 Eichbaum, kathrin, 569 Eide, Marta, 9, WE068 Eisner, Gottfried, 410 Eisner, Stephanie, 272 Ekang, Iniobong, 603, 122, MO036, MO037 Eklund, Britta, 49 Eklund, David, MO036 El Zakhem, Henri, MO237, MO213 Eljarrat, Ethel, TU168 Ellingsen, Staale, TU030, 440, TU040, TU047 Elliott, John, 239 Elliott, Kyle, TU040, MO178 Ellis, Laura-Jayne, 532

Ellor, Brian, MO112 Elmoznino, Joanne, WE157 Elosegi, Arturo, 515 Elshout, Pieter, TH113, WE047 Elwerfalli, Heba, WE046 Embry, Michelle, WE290, TH101, TH107 Emili, Andrea, 545, TU080, TU151 Emke, Erik, 258 Emmen, Harry, TH010, 312, 488, 585, WE230, WE231 Endo, Satoshi, 43 Endrizzi, Sonia, WE058 Eng, Margaret, 239 Engel, Marion, MO085 Engelbrekt, Christian, 431 Engelen, Guy, 365 Engelmann, Peter, 527 Enghild, Jan, 527 Englert, Dominic, 358, TU141 Engwall, Magnus, WE136 Enrici, Marie-Hélène, WE202, WE010 Eom, Hyunjeong, 579 Erdinger, Lothar, 294 Eriksson, Eva, TU310, 416, MO084 Eriksson, Martin, 130 Eriksson Wiklund, Ann-Kristin, MO037 Erjavec, Bostjan, 69, 99, 406, WE019 Ernst, Gregor, 98 Ernst, Robin, TH074, 165 Ernstoff, Alexi, 142 Ersekova, Anita, 162 Esbri, Jose, TH107 Esbri, Jose Maria, TH104, MO213 Escalon, Lynn, MO212, 161, 280, TH011, TUPC14, MO100, WE135 Escher, Beate, 147 Espinasse, Benjamin, WE179, MO011, MO239 Espindola, Evaldo, MO007 Espinosa, Nieves, 39 Espinoza, Sebastian, WEPC01 Espinoza-Orias, Namy, 628, TU301 Essig, Yona, 277 Esteve Nunez, Abraham, 329 Esteves, Valdemar, TU116

Eulaers, Igor, WE212 Evans, Amy, WE255 Evans, Sian, 186 Evensen, Oystein, 34, MO131 Evenset, Anita, 437, TH069 Everaert, Gert, 64 Evon, Bastien, WE263 Eytcheson, Stephanie, TUPC15

F

F. Astudillo, Miguel, 553 Fabbri, Barbara, TU100, TU118 Fabbri, Elena, 249 Fabbri, Rita, 583 Faber, Daniel, TU035 Faber, Jack, WE018 Fabrega, Francesc, WE161 Fabrias, Gemma, TU133, WE219 Fabure, Juliette, 71 Faggio, Gilles, TU038 Faimali, Marco, TH042 Fairbrother, Anne, WEPC13 Fait, gabriela, TU214, 34, 90, 389, 566, MO211, WE250 Falciani, Francesco, 31 Faliex, Elisabeth, TH015 Faltermann, susanne, TU033 Fan, Juntao, MOPC13, 231 Fangue, Nann, 177 Fankhauser, Peter, 489 Fantin, Valentina, TH124, 165, 333, TU254, MO288 Fantke, Peter, 142 Farama, Emilie, 322 Faraz, Shumaila, 416 Faria, Melissa, TH023 Farinelli, Laurent, 463 Farley, Kevin, TU187 Farmahin, Reza, 87, TH011 Farre, Maria, 280 Farre, Maria Jose, TH011, WE156 Farre, Marinella, 316 Farrelly, Eamonn, WE060, MO280 Farto, Marcia, MO090 Fasola, Emanuele, TU005 Fatoki, OS, WE300, WE284 Faust, Michael, 365 Fava, James, 549 Favero, Mariana, TH049 Favrot, Elsa, 275, TH128

Fazio, Simone, TH121 Febbo, Eric, TU023, WE219, WE225 Fechner, Lise, 129 Feckler, Alexander, 78 Fedele, Andrea, TH118, WE073 Federle, Thomas, WE069 Federle, Tom, 418, TH060, TU132 Fedorova, Ganna, TH055, WE207 Feibicke, Michael, TU204, WE226 Feidt, Cyril, TH083 Feijoo, Gumersindo, TU268 Feijoo Costa, Gumersindo, TU236 Feiler, Ute, WE009 Fellin, Phil, WE292 Felluga, Alessandro, TH093 Felperlaan, Amarens, 620, 79, MO163 Felten, Vincent, 76 Feng, Caiyan, TH096 Fennell, Sheena, TU139, 364, 421, WE074, WE075 Fenner, Kathrin, 363, 294, TH155 Fenske, Martina, 229, TU033 Fent, Karl, 531 Ferain, Aline, TH013 Feray, Christine, 366, 529, TU082 Ferguson, Lee, 317, WE164 Ferling, Hermann, TUPC21, 617 Fernandes, Denise, 160, WE177 Fernandes, Joao, MO020, MO020, TU135, WE175, WE177 Fernandes, Marisa, TU007, 532, TH039, TH040, TH044, TH045, TH046, TH047, MO173, MO178 Fernandes, Teresa, 19 Fernandez, Asuncion, 377, TH138 Fernandez, Beatriz, MO039, WE162, WE163 Fernandez, Carlos, MO122 Fernández, Diego, 574 Fernandez, Marcos Antonio, WE298 Fernandez, Pilar, WE129

245


authors

Fernandez, Raiza, TH062 Fernandez, Rianne, TU291 Fernandez Freire, Paloma, 381 Fernandez OndonoONO, Emilia, WE029 Fernandez-Cruz, Maria Luisa, TU018 Fernandez-Cruz, Maria-Luisa, TH034, 430 Fernandez-Piñas, Francisca, 378, WEPC23 Fernandez-Pinos, Maria-Carmen, 62 Fernqvist, Margit, WE094, WE170 Ferrari, Benoit, WE022, WE160 Ferrari, Benoit JD, 373 Ferrari, Federico, 515 Ferreira, Claudia, TU050 Ferreira, Fabio, TU050, WE001, WE032, WE037, WE038 Ferreira, Nuno, 223, WE102 Ferreira, Pedro, WE074 Ferreira Chagas, Mateus, MOPC04, WE061, TU301 Ferrero, Valentina, 277 Fetter, Eva, TU032 Fettig, Ina, TU100 Fick, Jerker, 299 Fieu, Maeva, 189, TU110, TU116 Figueira, Etelvina, MO062 Fihlman, Viktor, MO084 Filby, Amy, 172 Filipovska, Julija, 30, WE298 Fillmann, Gilberto, TH062 Filser, Juliane, 406 Findei?, Matthias, TU186, MO140 Fink, Patrick, 141, 272, 552, WE279 Finkbeiner, Matthias, 214 Finocchiaro, Marta, TH022 Fischer, Beat, MO293 Fischer, Ferdinand, WE101 Fischer, Matthias, 37 Fischer, Stellan, WE150 Fischer, Stephan, 134 Fisher, Tom, 589 Fisicaro, Paola, TU100, TU231, WE301, TU306 Fisk, Peter Richard, TU207 Fitzgerald, Jennifer, TH016

246

authors

Fjeld, Eirik, 498 Flach, Felicitas, TU288 Flahaut, Emmanuel, TU171, TU301 Flander-Putrle, Vesna, 277, TU129, TU130 Floate, Kevin, WE105, WE064 Floehr, Tilman, 413 Floeter, Carolin, TH074 Flores Nunes, Fabricio, WE006, TH099 Flueck, Rebecca, 51 Flynn, Maurea Nicoletti, TU004 Focant, Jeff, WE295, 442, WE233, WE234, WE247, MO299 Focks, Andreas, 388, TU145 Foekema, Edwin, 90, TU277 Fogg, Lindsay, TU213 Foit, Kaarina, 417 Fong, Peter, 252 Fontolan, Giorgio, TH091 Forbes, Stuart, WE201, MO175 Forbes, Valery, 456, TU121, WE251 Ford, Alex, 252, MO070, TH152 Forget-Leray, Joelle, TU066 Forim, Moacir, WE177 Fornara, Andrea, MO169 Forrester, Sean, 595 Forshuvud, Kristoffer, TH070 Fortin, Claude, TH148, MO254, MO271 Foudoulakis, Manousos, 44 Foulet, Amandine, WEPC09 Foulquier, Arnaud, TH018, TU038 Fourel, Isabelle, TU036, WE226 Fournier, Agnès, TH083 Fournier, Michel, TU174 Fox, James, MO180 Foy, Carole, WE061, TH156 Fracacio, Renata, MO018 Frackiewicz, Robert, WE227 Franceschi, Sophie, TH077 Franchi, Leonardo, TU172 Francke, Ines, TH134 Franco, Angeles, MO051 Franco, Antonio, 444 Franco, Samuel, TU189 Franco, Teresa Cristina

Rodrigues dos Santos, WE125 Francois, Adeline, TU006 Francois, Guerold, 79 Franklin, James, WE290 Franzellitti, Silvia, 249 Frazer, Suzanne, TU141 Fredricks, Timothy, MO254 Frei, Roberto, MO115, TU110, TU116, MO161 Freitas, Rosa, MO062 Frelat, Marion, WE209 Frelon, Sandrine, 188 Frey, Manfred, 300 Fricke, Nicolai, 124, TU209 Frische, Tobias, 102, TU263 Frischknecht, Rolf, 452, 237, TU038 Fritsch, Clémentine, 181 Frkova, Zuzana, WE088 Froberg, Henric, WE007 Froehner, Sandro, WE213 Froemelt, Andreas, TH129, MO242 Fuchsman, Phyllis, 599 Fuerle, Constance, TU204 Fuglei, Eva, 118 Fujita, Misato, TH035 Fukuwaka, Masa-aki, TU140, TU009 Fumagalli, Alessio, 374 Funke, Elisabeth, WE028 Furgal, Karolina, WE099, TU301 Fürhacker, Maria, 277 Furlan, Larissa, TU007 Furlong, Edward, WE122 Furuhagen, Sara, 65 Fushimi, Akihiro, 242 Futter, Martyn, TU211 Fux, Christian, MO115, 95, WEPC06, TH110, MO233

G

Gabarrell Durany, Xavier, 93 Gabbert, Silke Gerda Margaret, 507, TU061 Gabriel, Rita, TU057, 437 Gabrielsen, Geir Wing, 120 Gabsi, Faten, 393 Gachet-Aquillon, Caroline, MO245 Gaddaleta, Domenico, 508, MO069, WE294 Gadelha, Juliana, MO054

Gademann, Karl, TU033 Gagne, Francois, TU109, TH031 Gago, Pablo, 140 Gahou, Josiane, TH018 Gaillard, Jean-Charles, 402 Gaillet, Veronique, TU112, TU064 Gaivao, Isabel, TU051 Galas, Simon, 289 Galassi, Diana, TU298, WE067, MO305, MO307 Galay Burgos, Malyka, TH026, TU189 Galceran, Josep, 263 Galea, Karen, 28, TU095, WE125, WE215 Galinaro, Carlos Alexandre, TU076, TH059, WE147, WE209, TU294 Galle, Tom, 439 Gallego-Urrea, Julian, 77 gallert, Claudia, 73 Gallice, Aurélie, 94 Gallo, Gabriella, 583 gallo, hugo, TU044 Galloway, Tamara, TU138 Galvan, Cristina, WE026 Gamain, Perrine, 11 Gambardella, Chiara, TH042 Gamboa, Nadia, TH062 Gamfeldt, Lars, WE056 Gandolfi-Wetter, Michela, MOPC23 Ganser, Barbara, MO098 Gantner, Johannes, 37 Gao, Bei, 310 Gao, Chuan, 259 Gao, Xu, MO187 Garau, Maria Antonia, WE042, 79, MO163 Garaud, Mael, 76 Garaventa, Francesca, TH042 Garbi, Carlos, WE061 Garbini, Gian Luigi, WE092, TH107 Garcia, Efren, TH104 Garcia, Ines, TUPC11, TU242 Garcia, Jade, 149 Garcia, Lucas, MO289 Garcia, Nerea, TH036 Garcia Bravo, Andrea, 544 Garcia Fernandez, Ines, TUPC10 Garcia Hidalgo, Elena, 81

Garcia-Berthou, Emili, MO076 Garcia-Gusano, Diego, MO230 Garcia-Negrete, Carlos, 377 Garcia-Olias, Luis, TH034 Garcia-Ordiales, Efrén, 50 Garcia-Sanchez, Susana, 342 Gardetrom, Johanna, 415 Gardia Parege, Caroline, 429, MO110, MO112 Gardner, Mike, MO106 Gari, Merce, 83, WE019 Garlej, Barbara, 98, TU184, MO305 Garman, Emily, 156 Garnier, Jean-Maris, 542, TUPC04, MO219, MO230 Garrain, Daniel, MOPC02, 373, WE160 Garric, Jeanne, 71 Garrido, Adrian, TU196 Garrido, Claudia, 339 Garrido-Perez, Maria Carmen, 248 Garrigue, Philippe, WEPC20 Garrigues, Jean Christophe, TH077 Garriques, Philippe, WEPC09 Garsjo, Maren, 372, TU289 Gartiser, Stefan, TU288 Gasnier, Camille, 153 Gasol, Carles, 95 Gaspar, Miguel, TH102, TU295 Gauch, Roger, MOPC23 Gaudreault, Caroline, 92, TU171 Gauthier, Laury, MO158 Gaviria, Camila, TU212 Gavoille, Sophie, MO104, WE134 Gawlik, Bernd, 365 Gaze, William, TU126 Gea, Rosa M, TH030 Gebhardt, Wilhelm, MO101 Geels, Camilla, 211, TUPC24, TU062, TU107, TU112 Geffard, Alain, 173, 402, TU006, WE223, WE225 Geffard, Olivier, 285 Gehrmann, Linda, MO258 Geiger, Franz, 454 Geilen, Alexandra, WE009 Geiss, Cornelia, 614 Gemechu, Eskinder Demisse,

396 Gensemer, Robert, 204 Geppert, Mark, 376 Gerald, Thouand, 359 Gerber, Peter, TU263 Gerbinet, Saïcha, MO229 Gerhards, Reinhard, MO113, MO086, MO087, MO105 Gerhardt, Almut, MO030 Gerke, Christoph, TU018 Gerlich, Michael, 244 Germer, Sabine, WE285, MO160 Gessner, Mark O, 144 Gfeller, Hans, WEPC17, TU083 Ghestem, Jean-Philippe, TH028, WE058 Giacchini, Roberto, TH019, TH104 Giaggio, Riccardo, 370, 79, WE113, MO163 Giamberini, Laure, 76 Giani, Alessandra, MO020 Giebutowcz, Joanna, TU084 Giersberg, Martin, MO258, 506, MO214 Giesy, John, 87 Gignac, Michelle, WE179, WE102 Gilberg, Daniel, WE074, TH052 Gilbert, Dorothea, WE036, WE284 Gildemeister, Daniela, MO121 Gillespie, Brenda, MO288 Gillgard, Philip, 371 Gilli, Giorgio, 17, 581 Gilliland, Douglas, 80 Gimenez, L, MO056 Ginebreda, Antonio, 369 Giner, Beatriz, TU054 Giner, Enrique, TU134 Giovanoulis, Georgios, TU088 Giove, Silvio, WE257 Giraudel, Jean Luc, WE155 Giraudoux, Patrick, TU036 Giri, Anirudha, 389 Girling, Andrew, TU306 Giron Delgado, Cristina, 431, TU078 Giroud, Barbara, 189 Gismondi, Eric, TU055 Gissi, Andrea, 110, TU214 Giubilato, Elisa, MOPC13,

247


authors

WE023 Givaudan, Nicolas, 347 Glavin, Stephen, MO205 Glennon, Yohanna, 176, TU177 Glomstad, Berit, TU176, WE229 Glüge, Juliane, 209 Glynn, Anders, WE137 Gobas, Frank, WE192 Gobat, Jean-Michel, 355 Gobbo, Lorena, MO062 Gobert, Sylvie, MO027 Gocht, Tilman, 457 Godoi, Ana Flavia Locateli, WE298 Goedkoop, Willem, 415 Goeen, Thomas, MO190 Goerlitz, Gerhard, 48, TH069 Goethals, Peter, 64 Gogolin, Mathias, WE174, TU157 Gogos, Alexander, TU152 Goksoyr, Anders, 9, MO182 Goktepe, Ipek, MO181, MO010 Gold-Bouchot, Gerardo, MO008 Goldade, David, 179 Golding, Lisa, 288 Golla, Burkhard, 339, TU254 Golsteijn, Laura, TUPC05 Gomes, João, TU057 Gomes, Newton, TU027, MO069, WE294 Gomes, Paula, MO054 Gomes, Pedro, 223 Gomes, Rafaela, MO094, 467 Gomes, Susana, 341, WE006, MO029, TU153, MO162 Gomes, Tânia, 377 Gomez, Diego, MO168 Gomez, Elena, 535 Gomez, Manuel, TU134 Gomis, Melissa Ines, 375, TU233 Goncalves, Ana, 491, 491, TU057, TU061, MO099, TU233 Goncalves, Fernando, 183 Goncalves, Sandra, MO147, TH057 Gönczi, Mikaela, 337 Gong, Zhiyuan, WE200, MO268 Gonsior, Guido, MO267

248

authors

Gonzalez, Alejandro, TU134, 293 Gonzalez, Patrice, 11 Gonzalez, Susana, MO081, WE113, TH148 Gonzalez, Veronica, TUPC11, TU188 González-Alcaraz, M. Nazaret, TH030 Gonzalez-Doncel, Miguel, WE162, WE014, MOPC16, MO051, MO055 González-Fernández, Carmen, 123, WEPC23, WE082 Gonzalez-Gaya, Belen, 308, MO056 Gonzalez-Ortegon, Enrique, 222, 430 Gonzalo, Soledad, 378 Goodhead, Andrew, 360 Goosey, Emma, 509 Gorga, Marina, 297, MO072 Gorokhova, Elena, 65, TH112 Gorsuch, Joseph, 204 Gosar, Mateja, TH107, WE094 Gosewinkel, Ulrich, WE088, 312, 435, 488, 585, WEPC15, WE195, WE230, WE231 Goss, Kai-Uwe, 43 Goss Laird, Jennifer, MO212 Gottardi, Michele, 392 Gottardo, Stefania, 505, MO289 Gottesbueren, Bernhard, TU208, TUPC01 Gotti, Alberto, 28 Gottschalk, Fadri, MO166 Gouesbet, Gwenola, 403 Gouin, Todd, MO205 Gourmelon, Anne, 30 Goussen, Adeline, 289 Goussen, Benoit, 289 Goutte, Aurelie, 120 Governa, Daniela, 349, TH060 Grabic, Roman, TH055 Grabicova, Katerina, TH055 Grace, Richard, TH082 Gracia Lor, Emma, 184, WE102 Graef, Werner, WE074 Graf, Nadin, WE028, MO144, MO145, WE152, WE287, WE302

Gramatica, Paola, 487 Grand, Emilie, WE022 Grand-Perret, Benjamin, 323 Grandas, Liliana, 2 Grandison, Clare, MO095 Grant, Helen, 236, TH067, MO111, TU205 Grathwohl, Peter, 515 Graveaud, Fabiola, WE259 Gray, Evan, 256, WE253, WE254 Green, John, 493 Green, Jon, 234 Green, Richard, 563 Grehn, Alexander, MO084, WE078, WE092, WE093 Grenni, Paola, WE061 Griffiths, Bryan, WE018, TU301 Grillari, Regina, 277 Grima, Tania, TU189, WE129 Grimalt, Joan, 83 Grimbhuler, Sonia, 153 Grimm, Volker, WEPC19 Grimmer, Andrea, WE141, WE186, TU297 Grisolia, Cesar, TU172 Grisot, Ghislaine, TH048 Groenenberg, Bert-Jan, 593 Groenewald, Herman, 240, 134, 290, 401, WE005, MO057, MO208 Groh, Ksenia, 29, TU096, WE228 Gros, Jonas, WE081 Groslambert, Sylvie, WE272, 47 Gross, Elisabeth, 46 Gross, Melanie, MO240 Gross, Rita, 221 Grosse-Sommer, Anahi P., MO222, 320 Grossmann, Dietlinde, 319 Grossmith, Agathe, 218 Grosso, Mario, 448, 542, 573 Grote, Matthias, 135 Gruber, Max, 148 Gruettner, Gregor, 190, MO192 Grujic, Zorica, MO191, MO263 Grummt, Tamara, MO186 Grundler, Verena, TU033 Grzebisz, Erika, MO302 Gu, Jianqian, 420 Guan, Miao, WE002, 518, MO075, MO076

Guasch, Helena, 126, WE145 Guedes-Alonso, Rayco, MO132 Guelfo, Jennifer, 311, WE264 Guereca, Leonor, TH119, 320 Guerniche, Djamal, 319 Guerold, Francois, 76 Guerts, Marc, WE202 Guevel, Blandine, WE004 Guibbolini, Marielle, 80 Guignard, Cecile, 605 guiguen, yann, TU016, TU064, WE197 Guilherme, Sofia, MO053 Guilizzoni, Piero, 597 Guillaumin, Marion, WE023, TU205 Guillet, Gaelle, MO111 Guillon, Amelie, TH056, TU137 Guillon, Emmanuel, TUPC24 Guimaraes, Jean Remy, 548, 606 Guiton, Mélanie, 504 Gulde, Rebekka, 421 Guler, Yasmin, TU121 Gulkowska, Anna, TH086 Gunn, John, 546, 2, 3, 4, MO001, MO005, MO014, MO015, MO016, MO017, MO022, MO023, MO024, MO025 Gunnarsson, Jonas, 1 Guo, Hongyan, 420 Guo, Jiahua, 191 Gupta, sohini, WE283 Guruge, Keerthi, WE158 Gustafsson, Jon Petter, TU179, WE066 Gustafsson, Kerstin, 414 Gustavsson, Jakob, TU090 Gustavsson, Mikael, MO306 Gutierrez Rojas, Lorena, 93 Gutiérrez-Cánovas, Cayetano, TH022 Gutsell, Steve, 31, 201 Guyonnet, Julien, 200 Guzzella, Licia, 597 Gyalpo, Tenzing, MO196 Gylyte, Brigita, MO164

H

Ha, Na young, MO200, TH064 Ha, Sung Yong, MO063

Haaf, Sonja, MO297 Habashi, Nahal, TH115 Habekost, Maike, WE296 Haberland, Nara, MOPC07 Habib, Tanwir, MO212 Habibi, Hamid, 404 Hackley, Vincent, TH043, WE046, WE047 Haeba, Maher, WE045, TH068 Haftka, Joris, TH051, 460, TU019, MO089 Hagenaars, An, 172 Hager, Claus-Dierk, WE070, WE194, WE285 Hahn, Stefan, 24 Haigh, David, MO081 Haigis, Ann-Cathrin, MO177 Haili, Virve, 264 Haimi, Jari, TU010 Hajibabaei, Mehrdad, WE028, 187, TU072 Halden, Rolf, 13, TH006, MO208 Halder, Marlies, 29 Haldorsen, Anne-Katrine, 277 Halley, Duncan, WE212 Hamer, Mick J., TH026 Hamer, Paul, 100 Hamers, Robert, MO146 Hamers, Robert, 454, TU169 Hamers, Timo, 89, TU008 Hamilton, Patrick, 234, 213 Hammel, Klaus, 98, TH068 Hammer, Jort, TH051, 350, WE086 Hammers-Wirtz, Monika, 42 Hammerschmidt, Chad, 157 Hammesfahr, Ute, WE034 Hammond, Geoff, TH120, 377, 516, MO056 Hampel, Miriam, 222 Hamre, Kristin, TU030, 302, TH064, WE126, TU148 Han, Gi Myung, 301 Han, Seunghee, TH089, MO272, MO273 Han, Taejun, MO066 Hanafiah, Marliah, TU258 Hand, Laurence, WE087, TUPC01 Handakas, Evaggelos, 28, MO068, MO180 Handy, Richard, 19 Hansen, Joakim, 414

Hansen, Kaj, 211 Hansen, Steffen, MO166, 520, MOPC22 Hanson, Mark, 32 Hanssen, Kaj, 437 Harajli, Hassan, MO237 Harbourt, Chris, TU276 Hardiman, Gary, TH025 Hardisty, Jerry, TU012, MO179 Haring, Herman, 354 Harkema, Jack, 482 Harmsen, Joop, 326 Harnanan, Curtis, 549 Harrad, Stuart, 25 Harris, Sarah, WE201 Harrison, Anna, 157, TU170 Hartl, Mark, TH039, MO166 Hartmann, Nanna, 505 Hartmann, Sarah, 614 Harzl, Viktoria, WE288 Hasegawa, Kouichi, TU271, TU096, TU097 Hashimoto, Shunji, 242 Hass, Ulla, 562 Hassellov, Martin, 254 Hassink, Jan, WE296, 417 Hassold, Enken, 221 Hatfield, Hatfield, 12, TUPC05, TU252 Hauck, Mara, 217, TU235, TU257 Hauschild, Michael, 332, 39, 215, 274, 330, MOPC15, TU249, TU260, WE271 Hauschild, Michael Z., 35 Havie, Barbra, 103, MO026 Hawker, Darryl, 115 Hayashi, Yuya, 527 Haynes, Christy, 454 Haynes, Heather, MO173 Hazlerigg, Charles, WE246, 538, TU182 He, Erkai, 207 He, Guochun, TU141 He, xiuting, TU128 Heal, Kate, 103 Heavilin, Justin, 107 Heberer, Thomas, 247 Hecht-Rost, Sabine, MO297, 568, WE008, MO214 Hecker, Markus, 87 Hedde, Mickael, TH084 Hedgespeth, Melanie, TU120 Heger, Sebastian, WE139 Heiaas, Harald, WE017

249


authors

Heid, Petra, 624 Heidmann, Ilona, 455 Heier, Lene, WE011 Heijlen, Marjolein, 460 Heijungs, Reinout, TU245 Heimann, Wilko, MO244, 193 Hein, Arne, 190 Heine, Simon, 48, 587, TH135 Heininger, Peter, 159 Heinze, Rita, MO186 Heiss, Christiane, 560, TU289 Heisterkamp, Ines, TU288 Helbig, Christoph, 396 Helbling, Damian, 421 Hélène, Fenet, 535 Helgen, Henry, 86 Hellman, Bjorn, WE137 Hellmueller, Pino, 452 Hellstern, Jutta, TU123 Hellstrom, Micaela, MO025, 331, TH129, MO227, TU234, TU251, TU272, WE274 Hellweg, Stefanie, 271, 534, TU098 Helm, Paul, 241 Helmus, Rick, WE096, 466 Hendershot, William, 198 Henderson, Andrew, TUPC02, TUPC16 Hendriks, Jan, 593 Hendry, Stephen, MO207 Hengsberger, Anja, 614, WE074, WE075, WE102, WE103 Hennecke, Dieter, 363, TU222 Hennig, Bernhard, 276 Henning, Miranda, 599 Henny, Nicole, 294 Henriques, Isabel, TU155, TU026 Henriques, Jorge, TU002, 428, TH001, TH043, MO173 Henry, Theodore, 12 Henry-Bonnard, Isabelle, TU112 Herborn, Katherine, 295, TH051, TH068, WE196 Hermens, Joop, TH050 Hernandez, Manuel, MO284 Hernandez, Tania, TH100, MO221 Hernandez Sancho, Francesc, MO220 Hernando, Maria Dolores, TU018

250

authors

Herr, Romeo, TU216, WE103 Herrchen, Monika, WE102 Herregods, Nathalie, 262 Herrera, Fernando, WE026 Herrera, Israel, MO230, TU151 Herrero, Pol, 258 Herrmann, Isabelle, MO254 Herrmann, Jan, 147 Herzke, Dorte, 372 Hetzel-Naviliat, Geoffrey, TU230 Heugens, Evelyn, WE269, WE102 Heusner, Elena, WE074 Heyen, Georges, WE266 Heynen, Martina, 299, MO013 Hguyen, Cong, 6, WE284 Hickmann, Silke, 190 Hicks, A, 453 Hidasi, Anita, 290 Hidding, Bjorn, WE290 Hielard, Gaelle, MO009, 256, 311 Higgins, Christopher, 105, TH107 Higueras, Pablo, TH104, TH080 Hilber, Isabel, 507 Hildesheimer, Gabi, TU263 Hill, Elizabeth, 405 Hill, Jonathan, MO137, TU032, TH149, TU302 Hilscherova, Klara, 162 Hilty, Lorenz, WE188 Himmelstein, Matthew, WE166 Hince, Greg, 423, TU016, TU017 hinfray, nathalie, 233 Hirakawa, Ikumi, 514 Hird, Simon, TU079 Hischier, Roland, 501 Hitomi Watanabe, Claudia, TH156 Hjorth, Rune, 119 Hma Salah, nasih, MO068 Ho, Kevin, 464 Hobbie, Kevin, TU202 Hobby, Ralph, MO187, WE241 Hochmuth, Jennifer, 287, 400 Höckner, Martina, 286 Hodges, Geoff, WE202 Hodges, Geoffrey, 31 Hodson, Mark, 441 Hoeger, Birgit, TU123

Hoeger, Glenn, TH082 Hoeger, Johanna, MO177, WE068, MO249, MO287 Hoeger, Stefan, 410 Hoehn, Eduard, 577 Hoek-Nieuwenhuizen, Marion, WE208 Hoellrigl-Rosta, Andreas, MO285 Hoerold, Claudia, TU212 Hofer, M., MO087 Hoffmann, Ary, 288 Hofman, Jan, TUPC19, WE191 Hofmann, Thilo, 318, WE017 Hogaasen, Tore, 34 Hogfeldt, Andreas, WEPC16, 572, TU301 Hogstrand, Christer, 277 Höher, Nicole, 63 Hohndorf, Lars, WE182 Hojrup, Peter, TU065, WE167 Hoke, Robert, WE153 Holbach, Andreas, WE064, 614, TU063, TU065 Holbech, Henrik, 562 Holdt, Gabriele, TU217, 244, 365, 367, 536, TU082, WE146, WE210 Hollender, Juliane, 15 Holler, Henner, TH094, 148, 229, 294, 413, 569, WE008, TU014, MO061, WE064, WE116, WE139, WE140, MO143, TH150, MO244, MO262, MO263, MO265, TU299 Hollert, Henner, 101 Holliger, Christof, 18 Holmes, Christopher, 522 Holmstrup, Martin, WE050 Holoubek, Ivan, WE270 Holthenrich, Dagmar, 24 Homazava, Nadja, MO245, MO265 Homazava, Nadzeya, MO098, MO133 Homem, Vera, MO107, 319, 320, 350, 406, WE246 Hommen, Udo, 42 Honda, Masato, MO028, 302, TH064, WE126, TU148 Hong, Sang Hee, 301 Honti, Mark, 364 Hoogenboom, Ron, WE208, TU301 Hopkins, Chris, 277

Hopkins, Evan, MO255 Hoque, Ehsanul, 534, TU037, TU071, MO203 Horak, Katherine, 179, WE216, WE240 Horemans, nele, 490, TH153 Horiguchi, Toshihiro, MO044 Horn, Harald, TU127 Hornek, Romana, WE288 Hortellani, Marcos, TH103 Horvath, Arpad, WE260 Hosken, David, 391 Hosmer, Alan, 32 Hosoda, Junki, TH058, TH135 Höss, Sebastian, 159 Hostovsky, Martin, TU022, MO263 Hotz, Simone, TH150 Hou, Junli, 413 Houtman, Corine, TU081, WE282 Hristozov, Danail, 483 Hu, Qin, TH033 Hua, Jing, 433 Huck, Sabine, TU281 Huck, Viola, TH059 Hueffer, Thorsten, 318 Huerta, Belinda, 518, 298 Huerta Buitrago, Belinda, 297 Huertas Lopes, David, 372 Hüffer, Thorsten, 315 Hug, Alexandra, 14, WE133 Hug, Christine, WE008 Hug Peter, Dorothea, 578 Huggett, David, MO305 Hughes, Christopher, MO305 Hughes, Dave, 559 Hughes, Greg, TU278 Hughes, Gregory, TU210, TU255, TU256, TU262 Hugonnot, Odilon, TH126, 522, TUPC05, TUPC16, TH113, TU252, TU258 Huijbregts, Mark A.J., 217 Huizer, Daan, TUPC05, 614, WE017, TH072 Hultman, Maria, 459 Hultman, Maria Therese, WEPC16, 605, 629, 631, TH160, MO218, TU254, WE259, TU265, WE267 Humbert, Sebastien, 218 Huncik, Kevin, TU099, MO159, WE182, WE183 Hund-Rinke, Kerstin, 199

Hung, Hayley, WE292, 81, 146, 209, 307, 386, 486, MO150, MO196, WE229 Hungerbuehler, Konrad, 27 Hungerbuhler, Konrad, 58 Hunka, Agnieszka, 456 Hunter, Colin, TU067 Huntscha, Sebastian, WE083 Hurd, Kate, 176, TU287 Hursthouse, Andrew, MO207 Hutchinson, Kathryn, TU117 Hutchinson, Tom, 614 Hwang, Yu, TU154 Hyland, Katherine, 105 Hyldbakk, Astrid, WE100

I

Iaccino, Federica, TU191 Ian, Snape, 423 ibrahim, lara, WE246 Ibrom, Andreas, TU249 Ieromina, Oleksandra, 412, WE261 Igos, Elorri, 504, 34, 234, 514, TH153, TH157 Iguchi, Taisen, 29 Ii, Ryota, TU264 Ikenaka, Yoshinori, 182 Ikezawa, Mitsutaka, WE158 Illing, Rico, MO165 Ilvonen, Outi, TU288 Imbert, Gilles, 402 Imbrighi, Giampaolo, TH116, TU142 Imhof, Hannes, 303 Impellitteri, Christopher, 354 INABA, Atsushi, WE279 Incisivo, Maria, 508 Ingersoll, Chris, 156 Ingvordsen, Cathrine, 35, MO201 Ionas, Alin, WE128, 464 Ip, Chi Ho, 462, WE058, MO256 Ippolito, Alessio, TH019, TH117 Iribarren, Diego, 607 Irizar Loibide, Amaia, TH036 Isaacson, Carl, MO079 Ishizuka, Mayumi, 182, WE257 Isigonis, Panagiotis, TU214 Ismail, Ahmad, 60, TU045 Isobe, Tomohiko, 296 Issaro, Nongrat, TH064

Itoh, Maki, TH058, WE069, WE073 Itrich, Nina, 418, TU264, TU271 Itsubo, Norihiro, MO217 Itten, Rene, 452 Ittner, Lukas, 609, TU142 Ivleva, Natalia, 303 Izurieta, Francisco, WEPC01, TU078

J

Jabot, Claire, 189 Jackson, Greg, TUPC14 Jackson, Petra, TU175 Jackson, Roy, TU213, TH005 Jackson, Simon, 570 Jacob, Cynthia, MO295 Jacobi, Sylvia, WE290 Jacobsen, Nicklas, TU175 Jacquot, Marion, TU036 Jagals, Paul, TUPC14, WE240 Jager, Tjalling, 390 Jagodzinski, Lucas, MO092, TH071, MO130 Jahnke, Annika, TH065 Jakimska, Anna, 297 Jameson, Hannah, TH016 Jamting, Asa, 147, 302, WE126, TU148 Jang, Mi, 301 Jang, Min-Hee, TU154, TU021 Jang, Sol, 615 Janik, Les, 595 Jankovic, Sasa, MO192 Jänsch, Stephan, WE031 Jansen, Marcel, MO092 Jansky, Nadine, TU238, 121, 203, 260, 287, 304, 475, 517, TUPC08, TUPC16, WE054, WE055, WE063, TH069, TU070, TU180, TU184, WE247 Janssen, Colin, 64, WE293 Janssen, Martien, 306 Janssens, Thierry, 345 Janz, Philipp, WE060 Jarosova, Barbora, 162 Jaspers, Veerle, WE212 Jav?rek, Jakub, TU302, MO265 Jayasinghe, Sumith, 91 Jean-Francois, Poinsaint, 79 Jedele, Klaus, 73, 231

251


authors

Jeffries, Ken, 177 Jeker, Lukas, MO298 Jeltsch, Florian, MOPC14 Jene, Bernard, WE296 Jenkins, Carole, MO255 Jenkins, David, MO068 Jenkins, Richard, MO255 Jenner, Karen, WEPC17 Jensen, John, 352 Jensen, Keld, TU175 Jenssen, Bjorn, WE077 Jeon, Junho, WE210, TU229 Jeong, Jong-Shin, WE095, TH079 Jeong, Seulki, 591, TU229 Jeong, Seung-Woo, WE095 Jeong, Tae-yong, TU136 Jeong, Yeonhun, TU229 Jeong, Yoon Ah, 533 Jeong, Yoonah, TH073 Jeong, Yunsun, MO200 Jeschke, S., WEPC22 Jesenska, Sona, WE016, WE236 Jevtic, Dragan, 453, 570, 584, TH001, TH005 Jha, Awadhesh, 224, TH079 Jho, Eun Hea, 591, TU021 Ji, Kyunghee, 615 Ji, Rong, 420 Jiang, Bingqi, 420 Jiang, Yishan, WE091, WEPC23, WE082 Jimenez, Begona, 308 Jimenez Moreno, Maria, TU042 Jimenez Sanchez, Celia, TU226, TU196 Jimenez-Guerrero, Pedro, 104 Jimeno-Romero, Alba, TH037 Jin, Ling, WE135 Jo, A-Yeong, MO093 Jo, Hyunbin, TH193, MO272, MO273 Jo, Sung-Bin, MO066, TU107, TU112 joachim, sandrine, TUPC24 Joaquim-Justo, Celia, TH140, TU008 Jobling, Susan, 202, TU098 Jobst, Karl, 241 Jochum, Mara, MO289 Joehncke, Ulrich, WE194, WE088

252

authors

Johansen, Anders, 352 Johansen, Erik, 339, MO084 Johansson, Henrik, WE056 Johansson, Lisen, 122, 602 Johns, Annie, 496, WE079, WE080 Johnsen, Anders, 422, 565, TU102 Johnson, Andrew, 559 Johnson, Brent, 354 Johnson, Eric, TH109 Johnson, Mark, 440 Johnson-Restrepo, Boris, TH062 Johnston, Alice, 441, TH047, MO173 Johnston, Helinor, TH040 Johnston, John, MO203 Johnstone, Christopher, 230, 473 Jokela, Jukka, 228, 142, 165, 333, 482, TUPC02, MO218, TU265, MO288 Jolliet, Olivier, 92, TU032, TU301 Jonas, Adam, 277 Jones, Bernt, MO195 Jones, Colin, 515 Jones, Kate, 28, WE091, TU194 Jones, Kevin C., 559 Jones, Vera, MO112, WE293 Jonkers, Niels, 306 Jonsson, Christina, 371 Jonsson, Karin, TU310 Jonsson, Micael, 299 Jonsson, Per, 588 Joo, Gea-Jae, TH193 Jooste, Antoinette, 59 Jordan, Julia, 404 Jordão, Rita, TU133 Jorgensen, Rikke, 35 Josa, Alejandro, TH110, TU090, WE154, MO283 Josefsson, Sarah, 592, MO115 Joss, Adriano, 228 Jovanovic, Slobodan, MO282, MO282 Jovanovic, Vladimir, MO281 Joyce, Fiona, MO251, 559 Juergens, Monika, 254, MO121, WE285 Juffernholz, Tanja, 221, TU301 Jug, Bogdan, 277 Juknys, Romualdas, MO097 Junek, Ralf, MO186

Jung, Ja Eun, TU197 Jung, Jinho, MO093 Jung, Joeun, MO200 Jungbluth, Niels, 621, 367, 609, MO293 Junghans, Marion, 278, 127, 300, MO165 Jungmann, Dirk, 75, WE074, WE075, WE102, WE103 Junker, Thomas, 363 Junqueira, Tassia, MOPC04 Jurado, Anna, TH031, WEPC23 Jurado, Elena, 308, MO288 Juraske, Ronnie, 331 Jurgens, Sharona, WE096 Jurjanz, Stefan, WE226 Jurkoniene, Sigita, MO164 Juselius, Jonas, WE054 Justino, Sara, TH090

K

Kaberi, Eleni, MO154, 521, WE019 Kabouw, Patrick, 98 Kadokami, Kiwao, 185 Kaegi, Ralf, 143, TU228 Kaestner, Matthias, 596 Kagechika, Hiroyuki, TH153 Kägi, Thomas, 500, WE191 Kah, Melanie, 318, TU016 Kah, Olivier, 233 Kaisarevic, Sonja, TU299, 320 Kaiser, Mirjam, 319, MO035, MO247 Kalantzi, Ioanna, MO034 Kalantzi, Olga-Ioanna, MO148 Kalanzi, Ioanna, MO154 Kalbe, Ute, TH078 Kalberlah, Fritz, 221 Kalbitz, Karsten, MO170 Kallenborn, Roland, 372 Kaltenberg, Eliza, TU058 Kammann, Ulrike, MO052 Kammerer, Daniel, TH131 Kamo, Masashi, WE286, 294 Kampe, Sebastian, 229, TU169 Kamstra, Jorke, 89 Kanevski, Mikhail, 334, TH136, TH137 kang, Sin-kil, MO063 Kanor, Sophie, MO009, 114,

155 Kapanen, Anu, 57 Kaplan, Renata, 69 Kapo, Katherine, 522 Kappler, Kelly, TUPC20 Kapustka, Lawrence, 623 Karaga, Antonio, 175, MO035, MO247 Karakassis, Ioannis, MO034, TUPC01 Karakitsios, Spyros, 28 Karamertzanis, Panagiotis, 110 Karimi, Battle, 357 Karitonas, Rolandas, MO097 Karjalainen, Anne-Mari, 155 Karl, Sabine, TU273 Karrman, Anna, TU046, WE134 Kase, Robert, 608 Kashiwada, Shosaku, TH035 Kasprzyk-Hordern, Barbara, 186 Kasteel, Roy, TH086 Kataoka, Chisato, TH035 Kati, Vaya, MO148, TH016 Katsiadaki, Ioanna, 90 Katsu, Yoshinao, TH153, 446, MO250 Kattwinkel, Mira, 417 Kauppila, Tommi, TUPC09 Kawaguchi, Hiroaki, WE158, TH023, MO125 Kefford, Ben, 519, TH094, WE140 Keiter, Steffen, TU014 Keizer, Jan, 183 Keller, Martin, WE151 Keller, Urs, TH066, MO276 Kelly, Barry, WE200, MO212 Kennedy, Alan, 256, 87 Kennedy, Sean, 29 Ker Rault, Philippe, 515 Kerambrun, Elodie, TU112 Kerkez, Djurdja, MO286, MO221 Kersting, Teresa, MO220 Kesteren, Ronald, 89 Khachatryan, A., MO198 Khakbaz, Ali, TH101 Khaksar, Maryam, 253 Khalaf Al Mohammed, Hana, MO181 Khamzina, Viktoira, 239, MO155, MO178 Khan, Farhan, 532

Khan, Stuart, 619 Kharcheva, Anastasiia, MO274 Khudaibergenova, Bermet, WE114 Khurana, Kanupriya, WE181, TH094 Kidd, Karen, 618, MO098, MO115, MO265 Kienle, Cornelia, 278, 111, TH006 Kienzler, Aude, 31, MO130, WE297 Kierkegaard, Amelie, MO128, WE251 Kille, Peter, WE001 Kilpi-Koski, Johanna, 264 Kim, Bo-Moon, WE010 Kim, Bongguk, TU199, WE299 Kim, Chan-Kook, TH136 Kim, Eunhee, TH089 Kim, Hai-joong, MO193 Kim, Haijoong, 26 Kim, Heeseok, TU197 Kim, Hungsoo, WE010, WE165 Kim, Hyun Young, TU136, TU199 Kim, In Sung, TU149, TU229 Kim, Jaisoo, WE095 Kim, Jinho, 26, TH073 Kim, Jongwoon, 533 Kim, Junbeum, TU239, MO200 Kim, Kitae, MO171, MO272, MO273 Kim, Mi-Sung, MO066 Kim, Moon-Kyung, TH194 Kim, MyeongSeob, WE025, WE165 Kim, Sang Don, TU136, TH073 Kim, Sanghun, 533, TU199 Kim, Seung-Kyu, TU149 Kim, Shin Woong, TU166 Kim, Su Young, MO193, MO200 Kim, Sujin, 616, MO193 Kim, Sungjoo, 26, MO200 Kim, Sungkyoon, MO193 Kim, Sungkyun, 26, MO200 Kim, Sunmi, MO193 Kim, Suyoung, 26 Kim, Tae Hun, WE165 Kim, Tae-Hun, TU136, TH193

Kim, Un-Jung, TH053, MO257 Kim, Yang-Hoon, WE003 Kim, Ye-Jung, TU091, TU158 Kim, Yongeun, WE025 Kim, Yoon-Kwan, TU199, MO272, MO273 Kim, Youn-Jung, MO066 Kind, Barbara, TU274 King, Catherine, 115 Kinnberg, K. K., TU065 Kinnberg, Karin Lund, 614 Kinraide, Tom, WE243, TH047 Kinross, John, TH040, MO073 Kirby, Mark, MO038 kirkham, sara, TU192 Kirschling, Teresa, TH043 Kitamura, Rodrigo, WE177 Kjolholt, Jesper, MO166 Klaine, Stephen, 19 Klaminder, Jonatan, 299 Klanova, Jana, TU093 Klaper, Rebecca, MO146 Klaper, Rebecca, 454 Klaric, Marko, MO266 Klaschka, Ursula, WEPC21 Klasmeier, Joerg, 324, 319, 320, 350, TU217 Klein, Michael, 267 Klein, Olaf, WE019, WE009 Klein, Roland, 557 Klein, Sylvan, 471 Kleywegt, Sonya, 534 Kloas, Werner, 32 Klobucar, Goran, 175 Klockner, Andrea, TU129 Kloet, Koen, TU291 Klüver, Nils, TH007, MO303 Knaebe, Silvio, MO296, 33, 172, 460, 512, TU019, MO089, WE216 Knapen, Dries, 31, TU275 Knauer, Katja, TU157 Knepper, Thomas, TU089, MO286 Knezevic, Varja, MO266 KNIGHT, Derek, 113, WE059, MO126 Knillmann, Saskia, 417, TH012 Knöbel, Melanie, 571 Knopf, Burkhard, 598 Knopp, Gregor, MO120 Knott, Emily, TU010 Knowles, Susan, 179

253


authors

Kobayashi, Keiji, MO113 Kobler, Carsten, WE176 Koçba?, Fatma, WE239 Koch, Josef, 413, WE182 Koch, Wolfgang, 24 Koch-Jugl, Juliane, 190 Kocic Tanackov, Suncica, MO191 Kock Schulmeyer, Marianne, MO252 Koekkoek, Jacco, 84, 158, 305, 313, 326, TU145, TU147, MO151 Koelmans, Albert, 22 Koene, Joris, TU169 Koenig, Maria, TH007 Koenig, Max, 118, TU209, TU217, TU273 Koenig, Wolfram, 350 Koerner, Katrin, MOPC14 Koerner, Oliver, MO297 Koers, Marjorie, MO204 Koeser, Jan, WE174 Kohler, Hans-Peter, 419, MO102 Köhler, Heinz, 133 Kohler, Shanelle, TU121 Kohler, Stephan, WE137, TU203 Kohli, Johan, TU192 Kohlschmid, Eva, WE049, TH053, TU302 Kohoutek, Ji?í, TU032 Kok, Kasper, 515 Kokkali, Varvara, TU068 Kolb Ayre, Kim, 602 Kolesnikovas, Cristiane, TU044, MO308 Kolkman, Annemieke, 258 Kolossa-Gehring, Marike, MO190, 420 Kolvenbach, Boris, 419 Komatsu, Shoji, WE214 Kon Kam King, Guillaume, 497 Kondzielski, Igor, TU279 Kong, Deguo, TU200 Konopka, Friedrich, TH074, TH155 Konradi, Sabine, WE102 Kool, Jeroen, TU159, TU143, MO308 Kools, Stefan, TUPC19 Kopf, Martin, MO115 Kopp, Renate, 286 Koprivica, Sanja, WE142

254

authors

Kordatos, Konstantinos, MO154, MO293 Korkaric, Muris, 608 Korpela, Anna, 68 Korsgaard, Bodil, MO042 Kortenkamp, Andreas, 365 Korver, Ruud, TU290 Koschorreck, Jan, 560 Kostanica, Valmira, TU300 Kostecka, Alicja, 355, WE208 kotterman, michiel, WE206 Kotze, A., TU191 Koundouri, Phoebe, 515, TUPC02 Kounina, Anna, 605 Koutrakis, Emmanuil, TH096 Kouvaris, Pantelis, MO147, MO145 kovarich, simona, 487, MO032, WE096, TU290, TU291 Kraak, Michiel, 425, WE150 Kramer, Kees, 480, 243, 245, TU073, WE117, WE118, WE133, WE146, MO194, TU299 Krauss, Martin, 85 Krebs, Frederik, 39 Krejci, Jan, MO292 Krenn, Margit, TU300, TU092 Kretschmann, Andreas, 392, 415, TH057 Kreuger, Jenny, 337 Kreuning, Jippe, TU291 Kriehuber, Ralf, 229 Kristensen, Mette, WE079 Kristiansson, Erik, 130 Kroder, Stefan, MO298 Krogh, Paul Henning, 352, MO185 Krogseth, Ingjerd Sunde, MO131 Krol, Anna, WE130, 127, MO074 Kroll, Alexandra, 75, TU072 Kroll, Kevin, 91 Kronvang, Brian, 353 Krough, Martin, 519 Krueger, Henry, TU013 Krug, Harald, WE185 Krumbiegel, Marie Luise, 128 Ku, Peijia, MO019, 320 Kubiak, Roland, 319 Kublik, Susanne, MO085 Kuburic, Marina, 144

Kuch, B., MO087, MO111 Kuch, Bertram, 73 Kuckelkorn, Jochen, MO263 Kucklick, John, TU099 Kudoh, Tetsuhiro, 234 Kudryasheva, Nadezhda, 164, WE182 Kuehnen, Ute, MO121 Kuehnert, Agnes, 513, WE284 Kuester, Anette, 190, WE194 Kühne, Ralph, 387, TU175, WE184, WE185 Kühnel, Dana, 257 Kukkonen, Jussi, TU232 Kukucka, Petr, TU093 Kullik, Sigrun, 212 Kumar, Bhishm, TU101 Kumar, C P, TU101, WE161 Kumar, Vikas, TH027 KUMARAN, MUTHU, MO021, TU119, TU124 Kümmerer, Klaus, 279, TH141 Kummrow, Fábio, 478 Kunast, Christoph, 521 Kunkel, Uwe, 575 Kuntic, Marin, MO116, TU301 Kunz, Petra, MO265 Kunze, Gotthard, MO258, WE199 Kuo, Dave, 384, TU281 Kuppe, Konstantin, TU216 Kupryianchyk, Darya, 326 Kupsco, Allison, 292 Kuriyama, Koichi, MO217 Kurppa, Sirpa, MO248 Kurth, Denise, 385 Kurth, Markus, TU169 Kuruvilla, Jacob, WE007 Kusakabe, Takahiro, WE214 Kuzmanovic, Maja, 369 Kwadijk, Christiaan, 313, TU163, TU166 Kwak, JinIl, TU156 Kwiatkowska, Katarzyna, 527, TU021 Kwon, Ba-Reum, 615, TH075, TU150, MO188 Kwon, Jung-Hwan, 586, WE187 Kydralieva, Kamila, WE114

L

La Notte, Alessandra, 524, 21, 125

Laane, Remi, 10, 120, 309, 366, 373, WE155, WE160, WE170 Labadie, Pierre, 117 Labhart, Walter, 577, 146, MO150 Labille, Jerome, 145 Lacal, Margarita, TH104 Lacasse, K., TU191 Lacorte, Silvia, 370 Laera, Giuseppe, 253 Lafontaine, Anne, TU066, TU142 Laforsch, Christian, 303, 614, MO009, WE057, WE062, MO083 Lagadic, Laurent, 390 Lagarrigue, Celine, MO104, TU162 Lahive, Elma, 197, WE105, TU129, TU130 Lahr, Joost, TU103 Lahti, Marja, MO108 Lai, Hung-Yu, MO184 Lai, Lok Shun, WE127, TU077 Lalere, Beatrice, TH076 Lallias, Delphine, WE250 LaLone, Carlie, 86, MO058 Lam, James Chung Wah, 424 Lam, Paul K S, 462, 424 Lam, Paul Kwan Sing, 137 Lam, Sing, WE132 Lam, Wah, WE132 Lamardo, Eliete, WE298 Lambert, Anne-Sophie, TH018 Lammel, Tobias, WE180 Lamonica, dominique, 443, 84, TU081, WE144, MO195 Lamoree, Margaretha, 10 Lampi, Mark, MO305 Lamy, Isabelle, TH084 Lanceleur, Laurent, MO043, 602 Landis, Wayne, 496 Landwehrkamp, Lukas, MO187, TH014 Lane, Julie, 295 Lanfranconi, Arnaud, TH114 Lang, Susan, TH074 Lang, Susann-Cathrin, MO061 Lang, Thomas, 124 Langa, Elisa, TU111 Langan, Laura, TH005, 465

Langdon, Kate, 408, 405 Lange, Anke, 234 Langford, Katherine, 34 Langone, Leonardo, MO064, TH087 Lanno, Roman, 539 Lanz, Klaus, 225 Lanzellotto, Elisa, 483 Lapczynski, Aurelia, MO142 Lapen, David, 348 Lapkin, Alexei, TH132 Larcinese, Jean-Paul, 489, TU077 Lardy-Fontan, Sophie, TH076 Larisch, Wolfgang, WEPC15 Larondelle, Yvan, TH013 Larramendi, Ramon, 590 Larras, Floriane, 497 Larssen, Thorjorn, TU211, TU141 Larsson, Maria, WE136 Larsson, Martin, 337, WE221 Laskowski, Ryszard, WE048 Lastel, Marie-Laure, WE226 Lategan, Kim, MO260 Laue, Heike, WEPC17, 482, TU235, WE271 Laurent, Alexis, 39 Laurin, Lise, TH130 Lautenschlaeger, Petra, 148, MO243, TU295 Lautenschlager, Karin, MOPC23, TH025, TU301 Lavado, Ramon, 277 Lavalle, Carlo, TUPC13, 529, 530 Lavelle, Candice, 317, TU077 Lavison, Gwenaelle, TH076 Lawless, Michael, WE227, 559, TU041 Lawlor, Alan, 197 Lawniczak, Stephanie, 484 Lawrence, Alan, MO253 Lawrence, John, 247 Lawton, Elizabeth, 566, MO149 Laycock, Adam, 20 Lazaro, Wilkinson, 548 Lazarus, Rebecca, 179 Lazic, Aleksandra, MO234, 298, 354, TUPC15, MO179 Lazorchak, James, 247, MO001 Le, Van Anh, 4 Le, Vu Quynh Anh, WE003,

WE243 Le, Yen, 593 Le Bihanic, Florane, 293 Le Bot, Barbara, 347 Le Boulch, Denis, 38, TH098 Le Faucheur, Séverine, TH097 Le Floch, Stephane, TU203 Le Hoai, Huong, MO015, MO025 Le Lan, Huong, MO015, TH056 LE MENACH, Karyn, 293 Le Mouel, Chantal, MOPC05, 614 Le Page, Gareth, 195 Le Van Lan, Huong, MO001 Lead, Jamie, 584, WE225 Lebrun, Jérémie, WE223, MO219, MO230 Lechon, Yolanda, MOPC02 Lecomte-Pradines, Catherine, 289 Leder, Christoph, 279 Ledo, Lidia, MO252 LeDreau, M, 535 Lee, Adam, WE227, TH137 Lee, Chang-Hoon, TH136 Lee, Dong Soo, TU197 Lee, Hwang, TU150, WE112 Lee, Hyun A, WE111, WE122 LEE, In-Seok, TU091 Lee, Jaeman, WE214 Lee, Jeong Jae, MO193 Lee, Jeongjae, 26 Lee, Ji-Hye, MO063, TH136, TH137, MO188, WE299 Lee, Jong-Hyeon, MO063, WE112 Lee, Junseok, WE111 Lee, Okhyun, 234 Lee, Si-won, WE173, WE306 Lee, si-won, WE173 Lee, Sung-Kyu, MO188 Lee, Yong-Ju, TU154, TU158 Lee, Yun-sik, WE025 Lee, Yunah, TU197, TH114 Lees-perasso, Etienne, 216, 430 Leganes, Francisco, 378 legler, J, 567, 174, 345 Legler, Juliette, 84 Leglise, Pascal, 218, 567 Legradi, Jessica, 174, TH152 Legrand, Eléna, MO070 Lehmann, Annekatrin, 552,

255


authors

124, MO047 Lehtonen, Kari, 68 Leite, Eduarda, WE197 Leleu, Mathilde, 232 Lemaire, Philippe, TU203 Lemal, Laure, 540 Lemenach, Karyn, 537, 514 Lemkine, Gregory, 232 Lemos, Diogo, WEPC06 Lemos, Marco, TU133 Lengger, Sabine, 428 Lenhardt, Patrick, MOPC19, 426 Lenz, Markus, 419, MO060, TU144 Leon, Victor, MO039 Leon, Victor Manuel, WE014, TU284, TU285, WE290 Leon Paumen, Miriam, TU283, TU286 Leon-Paumen, Miriam, TU282, WE266, WE272 Leonard, Angelique, MO229 Leonard, Marc, 513, 89, 306, 371, 567, WE128, TU169, TU173, WE293 Leonards, Pim, 10 Lepage, Jim, 418 Lepoint, Gilles, WE212 Lepom, Peter, 560 Leppanen, Matti, TU232 Lepper, Peter, WE289 Lerch, Sylvain, WE226 Lermen, Dominik, MO190 Leroy, Delphine, TH140 Lesage, Nicolas, 537, WE293 Leslie, Heather, 306 Lessa, Guilherme, TU004 Lestel, Laurence, TH032, 366, WE155 Lestremau, Francois, 138, 119 Letcher, Robert, 7 Letendre, Julie, MO162, 277, WE061, MO209, TU301 Lettieri, teresa, 29 Leu, Christian, 226 Leuenberger, Michael, 334 Leung, Ho Wing, 137 Leung, Kenneth, 464 Leung, Kenneth M Y, 462 Leung, Priscilla, 464 Leung, Priscilla T Y, 462, 344, 619, TUPC14 Leusch, Frederic, 161 Leuven, Rob, TU258 Levasseur, Annie, 273

256

authors

LeVay, L, MO056 Levine, Steven, 169 Leyval, Corinne, WE113, TU270 Lharidon, Jacques, TU230 Li, Fangjie, 420 Li, Jun, WE091 Li, Xiaomei, 379 Li, Yipei, TU267 Li, Yunfeng, TH060 Li, Zhe, WE084 LI, Zhihua, TH060 Li, Zhou, TH064 Liagkouridis, Ioannis, TU200, WE235, WE252 Liao, Chung-Min, TU105 Liao, Yawen, WE249 Liaud, Celine, TH063, WE218 Liber, Karsten, 555 Libert, Pierre-Nicolas, TH140, MO152 Libralato, Giovanni, MO065 Licbinsky, Roman, MO292 Liddle, Corin, MO173 Lidzba, Annegret, 513 Lie Ugaya, Cassia Maria, MOPC07 Liedtke, Anja, MO287, WE059, MO125, MO126, MO250 Liess, Matthias, 417 Lieten, Shakti, 576 Liewenborg, Birgitta, MO072 Liiri, Mira, 356, 382, WE203 Lillicrap, Adam, 34 Lim, Richard, 619, WE238 Lima, Maria, WE237 Lin, Bin-Le, WE286 Lin, Daohui, 432 linden, lukas, WE230 Lindner, Jan Paul, 37 Lindstrom, Bodil, 337 Linington, Susannah, 54 Linkov, Igor, WE282 Lisovitskaya, Olga, WE187 Lissemore, Linda, 520 Little, Simon, TH040 Liu, Cheng-Wei, MO184 Liu, Jie, 420 Liu, Wei, 310 Liu, Wenhua, 137 Liu, Xiang, WE091 Liu, Xin, WE091 Liu, Yang, 541 Liu, Zunwen, TU267 Llaneza, Veronica, 430

Llopis, Stephanie, 347 Llorca, Julio, MO081 Lobinski, Ryszard, 188 Lobry, Jeremy, 309 Lochen, Tina, TU073 Locher, Marcel, 550 Locher, Wolfgang, MO115 Loerks, Julia, MO061 LOESEL, JENS, TU231 Lofts, S, TH143 Lofts, Stephen, 197 Loftus, Neil, TU079 Lohmann, Nina, WE198 Lohmann, Rainer, WE270 Lohse, Sam, MO146 Loizou, George, 28 Lomba, Laura, TU054 Lombardi, Ana Teresa, MO124 Lombardi, Julio, TU050 Lombardo, Andrea, 444 Lombardo, Anna, 508, 465, WE181 Lombi, Enzo, 253, TH104 Lominchar Izquierdo, Miguel, 50 Long, Zhifeng, 432 Longree, Philipp, TU082 Loos, Robert, TU301 Lopes, Christelle, 443, TU005, MOPC21, TH024, WE053, MO099, MO238, MO239 Lopes, Isabel, 407, MO174 Lopes, Rafael, MO147, TU083 Lopez, benjamin, TH028 Lopez, Jacqueline, WE012 Lopez de Alda, Mirien, MO252 Lopez Doval, Julio, TH020 Lopez Herraez, David, 365 López Perea, Jhon Jairo, TU039 Lopez-Berdonces, Miguel, TH107 Lopez-Roldan, Ramon, MO081, TH104, TH107 Loredo, Jorge, 50, 614 Lorenz, Pascale, 348 Lorenzo, Yago, TU236 Lorgeoux, Catherine, 537 Loricourt, Pascaline, MO009 Loste, Natalia, TU134 Lothmann, Ricarda, 148 Lotufo, Leticia, WE217, TU244

Loubet, Philippe, 36 Louis, Caroline, WE205, 196, 223, WE001, TU027, WE032, WE037, WE038, WE052, WE065, TU115, MO147, TU155, TU159, TU160, MO161, MO174, WE237, WE238, TU296 Loureiro, Susana, 77 Lourenco, Clara, MO295 Lourenco, Joana, TU296 Lozano, Ana Belen, WE014 Lucas, Francoise, TH054 Lucchetti, Maria Claudia, MOPC12 Luckenbach, Till, 385 Ludwig, Ralf, 515 Lueckmann, Johannes, MO297 Luedekke, Frauke, 73 Luetzkendorf, Thomas, 551 Lugo Ladewig, Jessica Cristina, TU131 Luisa, Patrolecco, WE061, TU129, TU130 Lumaret, Jean-Pierre, WE105 Luna-Martinez, Lluvia Aline, MO012 Lundebye, Anne-Katrine, TU301, MO283 Lundstedt, Staffan, 592 Lundström Belleza, Elin, 66 Lusher, Amy, TU139 Luttikhuizen, Cees, WE293 lutze, Holger, MO187 Lynn, Abby, TU276 Lyons, Hester, TU210 Lythgo, Christopher, 267

M

Ma, Yi-Bing, 139, TU165 Maboeta, Mark, 469 MacCuspie, Robert, TH043 MacDougall-Shackleton, Scott, 239 Macherey, Melanie, 229 Maciaszek, Danuta, TU279 Mack, Pierre, MO303 Mackay, Cameron, MO205, WEPC13 Mackay, Donald, 506 Macke, Dana, 354, 614, MO149 Macken, Ailbhe, 20 MacKensie, Susan, WE166

WEPC14, WEPC18, TH071, MO128, MO130, WE148, WE297 MacLeod, Matthew, 307, 153 Macombe, Catherine, 152 Maddalena, Umberto, 489, WE203 Madden, Judith, WEPC16 Madekurozwa, Mary-Catherine, 240 Madsen, Steffen, TU065, TU232 Maenpaa, Kimmo, TH065 Maes, Hanna, 148 Maes, Virginie, 173 Maffiotti, Alberto, 349 Magar, Victor, 599, TU303 Magee, Brian, TH082 Magellan, Kit, MO076 maggi, chiara, WE134 Magner, Jorgen, TU088 magnier, aurelie, TH048, TU062 Magniez, Gabrielle, TUPC24 Magnusson, Ulf, TU046 Mai Lan, Vi Thi, TH064 Maier, Diana, 72 Maier, Kurt, TU308 Maier, Michael, 575 Mailahn, Wolfgang, WE207, TU256, TU262 Maillard, Emmanuel, TU255, TH151 Maillot Marechal, Emmanuelle, 70 Maillot-Marechal, Emmanuelle, WE138 Maino, James, WE236 Maiolini, Bruno, WE058 Maitrejean, Andre, WE249 Majewsky, Marius, TU127 Makama, Sunday, MO157 Makara, Manami, TU045 Makinen, Jari, TUPC09 Malaj, Egina, 573, MO296 Malaspina, Osmar, MO295 Malecot, Melodie, WE004, MO244, MO265 Maletz, Sibylle, TH150 Malherbe, Wynand, MO006 Mallevre, Florian, TH045, TH088 Mallory, Mark, 543, WE080 Malmquist, Linus, 368 Maltby, Lorraine, TH026 Manalang, Kristine O, TH064

Mancini, Lucia, 395 Mancino, Palmina, MO064 Mandrillon, Anne-Lise, MO305, WE143, WE224 Manente, Sabrina, MO065, MO045 Manfra, Loredana, MO031 Manganaro, Alberto, 508 Mangse, George, 328 Manier, Nicolas, 70, TH088 Mann, Erin, 543 Manneh, Rima, MO237, MO045 Mannozzi, Michela, MO031 Manodori, Laura, MO152 Manosa, Santi, TU039 Manova, Eva, 27 Manson, Philip, 169, MO164 Manusadzianas, Levonas, MO097 Manzardo, Alessandro, WEPC02 Mao, Liang, 314 Maraldo, Kristina, 352 Maranho, Andrea, TU044, TU122 Maranho, Luciane, 248 Marcellan, Elvia, 275 marchal, geoffrey, TU223 Marchand, Mathilde, TU240 Marchetti, Andrea, TH106 Marchetto, Flavio, MO256 Marchi, Mary Rosa, WE298, MOPC13, WE257, WE282 Marcomini, Antonio, 483 Marfil-Vega, Ruth, 131 Marger, Jean-Luc, 540 Margiotta-Casaluci, Luigi, 192, TUPC02, MO218, TU265 Margni, Manuele, 626 Margot, Jonas, 18 Mari, Montse, WE108 Mari, Montserrat, MO259 Mari Rivero, Ines, TUPC13 Maria, Vera, WE044 Marigomez, Ionan, TH036, MO221 Marin, Desiree, 93, TU104 Marin, Maria, TH041 Marinakos, Stella, WE179 Marini, Camille, 38 marisa, ilaria, TH041 Mariussen, Espen, WE011 Mariyadas, Jennifer, TU161 Markus, Arjen, 21 Marley, Sinéad, TU294,

257


authors

TH140 Marneffe, Yves, MO091 MARQUAND, Aline, TU240 Marquardt, Clarissa, WE185 Marques, Ana, TU051 Marques, Eliane, TU135 Marques, Montse, WE108 Marques, Montserrat, TH027 Marques, Sérgio, 183 Marschall, Samantha, WE076 Marsden, Peter, TU210 Marshall, Samantha, WE087, WE067 Marshall, Stuart, TH026 Marszalek, Ryszard, TU086, MO259 Marti, Esther, WE042 Martin, Caroline, 70 Martin, Margarita, WE061 Martin, Mario, TH117, MO059 Martin, Reutgard, 65 Martin, Tim, 360, TUPC10, WE029 Martin Peinado, Francisco, 411, 248, TU109, TU122 Martin-Diaz, Maria Laura, 132, WE106 Martin-Laurent, Fabrice, 409 Martineau, Barbara, WE023 Martinez, MA, WE163, MO291 martinez, santiago, MO290 Martínez Blanco, Julia, 214 Martinez Bueno, M.J, 535 Martinez Garzon, F Javier, 411 Martínez-Blanco, Julia, WE279, MO060, TH138, TU144 Martinez-Gomez, Concepcion, MO039 Martinez-Guitarte, Jose-Luis, MO139, TU042 Martinez-Haro, Monica, TU039 Martínez-Jerónimo, Felipe Fernando, MO012 Martini, Gisela, MO103 Martinou, Angelique F, 526, TU074 Martins, Claudia, 184, 201 Martins, Jean, 200 Martins, Roberto, MO161, TU301 Martone, Cristina, 277 Martuccio, Giacomo, MO045 Martyniuk, Christopher, MO211

258

authors

Martz, Patricia, TU270 Marvasi, Luigi, MO277, 334, WEPC05, MO224 Marvuglia, Antonino, 96 Maryoung, Lindley, TH025, 597, TU009, WE171 Marziali, Laura, 374 Masfaraud, Jean Francois, 47, WE156 Masia, Ana, TH021, TU301 Masner, Petr, 277, 604, TH124 Masoni, Paolo, 218, WE093 Massacci, Angelo, WE092 Massarin, Sandrine, 439, WE117, WE118 Massei, Riccardo, TH007 Massey, Andy, 267, 237, 238, TU039, TU042, TU048 Mateo, Rafael, 180 Matezki, Steffen, TU281 Mathe, Syndhia, 525 Mathes, Bjoern, WE185 Mathews, Molly, 418 Mathies, Helena, TU289, TH121, TH128 Mathieux, Fabrice, 604 Mathur, Nupur, WE110 Matisoff, Gerald, TU058 Matorin, Dmitriy, WE187, TU104 Matozzo, Valerio, TH041 Matsumoto, Silvia, TU007 Matsunaga, Satoshi, MO028 Mattassi, Giorgio, TH093 Matthies, Michael, 324 Matthiessen, Peter, 614 Mattioda, Rosana, TH118 Mattos, Jaco, MO094 Matturro, Bruna, WE078 Matzke, Marianne, 75, 127, 197, WE056, MO156 Maul, Armand, 359 Maunder, Richard, 195 Maurer-Troxler, Claudia, WE022 Maurouard, Elise, 8 Maus, Christian, 167 May, Martin, WE285 Mayer, Philipp, 587, WE036, WE050, TH052, TH065, TH070, TH071 Mayes, William, 449 Maynard, Samuel, 168, TU013 Mazzi, Anna, TH118 Mazzoni, Michela, TU069, WE159, WE171

McArdell, Christa, 14, TU087 McArthur, Gordon, TH090 McBride, Mary, 31 McCall, Peter, TU058 McCrindle, Robert, 241 McDonald, James, 619 McDonough, Kathleen, 418, WE069, WE073 McEnnis, Suzy, MO221, TU236 McGahan, Claire, TH013 McGowan, Thomas, MO038, MO073 McGrath, Nina, WE290 McKee, Moira, 406 McKenzie, Erica, 311 McKinnon, Alan, TH111 McKnight, Ursula, 353 McKone, Thomas, 333, WE260 McLachlan, Michael, WEPC18, TH071, WE297 McLaughlin, Louise, TU306 McLaughlin, Michael, 595 McLaughlin, Mike, 408, 465 McLeaf, Philip, WE137 McMillan, Claire, TU198 McNeill, Laurie, 107 McShane, Heather, 198, 466 McSweeney, Robert, TH142 McWatters, Rebecca, 423 Mead, Chris, 362, WE072 Meador, Jim, WE013 Medlin, Linda, WE061 Medvedeva, Marina, MO294 Meesters, Joris, MO151 Mei Po Mirabelle, Tsui, 137 Meillere, Alizee, 117 Meinecke, Stefan, WE207 Meisenbach, Carmela, TU079, TU094 Meissner, Tobias, TU167 Meister-Werner, Anja, 148 Meitanis, Julian, TH131 Melao, Maria da Graca, MO124 Melby, Nicolas, MO213 Melia, Paco, TU237 Melian, Carlos, WE054 Melo Junior, Willian, TU297 Melymuk, Lisa, TU093 Memije, Martín, WE294 Memmert, Ulrich, TH008 Mena, Freylan, MO022 Mena Torres, Freylan, 1, 3 Mena-Torres, Freylan, 2

Mendenhall, Scout, 107 Mendez, Annelle, 58 Mendez, Maria, WE026 Mendo, Sonia, TU296 Meng, Ke, 310 Meng, Wei, MOPC13 Mengs, Gerardo, WE061 Menon, Ravinder, 361 Mensens, Christoph, 475 Menz, Jakob, 279, TU119, TU124 Menzies, Jennifer, 418 Mercado, Bertha, MO284 Merckel, Dan, WE067 Merrington, Graham, 408, TH143, TH144, TH146 Mertens, Jan, 275 Meshchankin, Andrey, MO274 Mesquita, Sofia, 343 Mestres, Jordi, MO213 Metais, Isabelle, 80, TU060 Metcalfe, Chris, 534 Metzelder, Florian, 315 Meybeck, Michel, TH032 Meyer, Caroline, 357 Meyer, Joseph, 204, 261, TUPC07, TH085, TH112, TU187 Meyer, Rikke, WE099 Meylan, Grégoire, WE275 Meynet, Paola, 328, WE020, MO199 Michailidis, Nikolaos, MO147 Michelangeli, Francesco, 389 Michiels, Ellen, MO089 Miclaus, Teodora, 527 Miege, Cecile, TH056 Miglioranza, Karina, TH062 Mignolet, Eric, WE205 Miguelao, Talita, MO094 Mihaich, Ellen, 564 Mihailovic, Nevena, MO282 Mihajlovic, Ivana, WE124, MO191, MO192 Mikac, Iva, WE142 Mikolaczyk, Mathilde, MO043 Mila i Canals, Llorenc, 394 Milacic, Radmila, 515 Milanez, Camilla, TU007 Milanovic, Maja, WE124 Milde, Jutta, 455 Miles, Benedict, TU219 Miles, Mark, 339 Milic, Natasa, WE124

Millan, Andres, TH022 Millan, Rocio, 50, TH104 Miller, Dennis, WE202 Miller, Jan, 519 Miller, Katia, TU241 Miller, Thomas, TU075 Millet, Maurice, TH063 Millot, Florian, 178 Mills, Graham, TU221 Mills, Marc, 131 Miltner, A, TU228 Miltner, Anja, 596 Min, Jiho, WE003, MO257 Minello, Fabiola, MO062 Minetto, Diego, MO065 Minghetti, Matteo, 528, TH004 Mingoia, Robert, WE166 Minh Ha, Pham Thi, MO258 Minogiannis, Panagiotis, MO148 Mintram, Kate, 570 Mionnet, Aymeric, TU038 Miranda, Ana, TU003 Mirande Bret, Cecile, 537 Miserocchi, Stefano, MO064 Misljenovic, Tomica, MO281, MO282 Mitrano, Denise, 23, MO152 Miyagawa, Shinichi, TH157 Miyata, Chiyoko, WE290 Mizukawa, Kaoruko, TU140 Mizuno, Satoshi, MO044 Mo, Hyoung-ho, WE025, TU158 Modig, Carina, 277, TU301 Modra, Helena, TU022 Modrzynski, Jakub, WE036 Moe, Borge, 120 Moehlenkamp, Christel, 159, 587, TH135 Moermond, CTA, 608 Moffat, Lorna, TU094 Mohamed, Ahmad Fariz, WE273 Mohamed, Ali, WE045 Mohr, Silvia, MO085 Molander, Sverker, 219, WE270 Molendijk, Jeffrey, 280, WE135 Molhave, Kristian, WE176 Molina Lopez, Rafael A, TU039 Moliner, Enrique, TUPC04 Molinos Senante, Maria,

MO221 Molinos-senante, Maria, MO220 Molins Delgado, Daniel, 140 Molins-Delgado, Daniel, 16, MO141 Moll, Janine, TU157 Molnar, Jelena, MO286 Monaci, Fabrizio, TH105 Mondy, Cedric, 445 Monferran, Magdalena, TU007, TU060 Monperrus, Mathilde, 366, TU085 Monroe Pereira, Andrigo, MO295, MO296 Montagner, Cassiana, TH141 Montanari, Daniel, 151 Montano, Manuel, 255 Monteiro, Marta, TH002 Montero, Andres, WEPC01 Montes, Melanie, 540 Montesdeoca, Sarah, MO132, WE145 Monteyne, Els, TH069 Montone, Rosalinda, TU043, TU044 Montrejaud-Vignoles, Mireille, 136 Moody, A, 584 Moon, Hyo-Bang, 26, MO193, MO200 Moon, Seong-Dae, MO063, TH137 Moon, Song-Dae, TH136 Mora Castillo, Julio, 61 Moraga, Geannina, 1 Morais, Edvaldo, MOPC04 Morais, Leandro, TH049 Morais, Paula, MOPC21 Morales, Daniel, 478 Morales Torres, Jorge, MO003, MO004 Morcillo, Gloria, MO139 Moreira, Maria, TU268 Moreira Vilar, Maria Teresa, TU236 Moreira-Santos, Matilde, MO239 Morel, stephane, WE276 Moreman, John, 234 Moreno, Ignacio, 516 Morgado, Fernando, MO054, MO069, WE294 Morgado, Rui, 223, WE001, WE032, WE052

259


authors

Morgan, A John, WE001 Morgenroth, Eberhard, 143 Morin, Anne, 366 Morin, Benedicte, 11, 293 Morin, Christophe, TU038 Morin, Soizic, TH018 Moritz, Susanne, 481 Morozesk, Mariana, TU007 Morris, Ceri, WE001 Morrison, Calum, MO207 Morselli, Melissa, 269, WE063, TU193 Morth, Carl-Magnus, TU201 Morthorst, Jane Ebsen, MO042, TU065 Mortimer, Monika, TU152 Moschet, Christoph, 367, 536, MO098 Mosselmans, Fred, 103 Mothre, Sophie, 514 Mouchel, Jean-Marie, TH032 Mouchet, Florence, MO158, TU171 Mougeot, Francois, 238 Mougin, Christian, 409 Mouneyrac, Catherine, 80, TU060 Mounicou, Sandra, 188 Moura, Monica, TU028 Mourinha, Clarisse, MO090, MO280 Mrani, Othman, MO231 Mrozik, Wojciech, MO199 Muddiman, Kirsty-Jo, WE041, WE255, MO302 Mueller, Alexandra, 319, 320, TU273 Mueller, Anne-Katrin, TH094 Mueller, Emanuel, WEPC07 Mueller, Erik, WE146 Mueller, Jochen MO196 Mueller, Josef, 557 Mueller, Yvonne, WE140 Muensterkoetter, Martin, 463 Muhammed Bello, Umar, 240 Muir, Derek, 440, WE193 Mulder, Christian, 522 Muller, Serge, WE035 Müller, Stephan, 281 Munari, Marco, TU104 Munaron, D, 535 Munasinghe, Helani, 90 Muniz, Selene, MO082 Munoz, Gabriel, 309, WE155, WE170 Muñoz, Isabel, 297, 515,

260

authors

TH020 Munro, Kelly, TU074 Munthe, John, 365, 481 Munz, Nicole, 226 Murakami, Kayo, MO217 Murali, Sri, TH064 Murfitt, Roger, MO254 Murk, A.J., 90 Murphy, Catherine, 454 Murphy, Cathy, MO146 Murphy, Cheryl, MO208 Murphy, Lisa, MO203 Murphy, Margaret, 137, MO058 Murray, Aimee, TU126 Murray-Smith, Richard, TUPC20, TU117 Muscalu, Alina, TU098 Mustafa, Albulena, TU300 Musters, Kees, 412 Mustonen, Marina, TU010 Mutel, Christopher, MO227 Muth-Koehne, Elke, 229, 294 Muz, Melis, 243

N

N. Carvalho, Raquel, 277, MO208, TU301 Nabi, Deedar, WE228 Nadal, Marti, 516, WE108, WE161, MO259 Nadzialek, Stephanie, TH026 Nagashima, Tatsuya, TU271 Nagel, Peter, WE051 Naito, Wataru, WE286 Nakamura, Aiko, WE214 Nakayama, Shouta, 182 Nalecz-Jawecki, Grzegorz, TU084, TU086, TU113 Nam, Kyoungphile, 591, TH079 Nam, Seung-woo, WE123 Nam, Sun-Hwa, WE043 Naselli-Flores, Luigi, TH022 Naslund, Johan, 414 Nastold, Peter, 420 Natal da Luz, Tiago, 351, 440, WE039, WE040 Nathan, Pelletier, TUPC13 Nathanail, Paul, 594 Nathani, Carsten, 452 Natsch, Andreas, WEPC17 Nau, Katja, WE185 Navarrete Gutierrez, Tomas, 96, WEPC05

Navarro, Cristobal, MO039, MO060, TH138 Navarro, Enrique, MO082, TU111 Navarro, I, WE163 Navarro-Ortega, Alícia, 515 Navas, José M., TH034, WE180 Navas, Jose Maria, TU018 Naveaux, Elise, WE265 Ndungu, Kuria, 20, MO149 Neale, Peta, 147, 161, WE135 Neels, Hugo, MO201 Nehls, Angelika, TU216 Nekvapilova, Alena, 277, TU301 Nelson, Robert, WE081 Nendza, Monika, 387, WE194 Neri, Maria Chiara, MO277 Nerland, Inger Lise, 20, WEPC16, MO149 Nessi, Simone, 448 Nestler, Holger, 346 Netzer, Roman, WE077 Netzeva, Tatiana, 110 Neugebauer, Frank, WE198 Neugebauer, Sabrina, 214 Neumann, Larissa, TU224 Neumann, Paul, 99 Neumann, Steffen, 244, 479, WE146 Nevejan, Nancy, 121 Newcombe, Andy, 100 Newsome, Bradley, TU222 Ng, Carla, 58, 386, WE159 Nguetseng Ngueguim, Regine, 598 Nguyen, Hang, 6 Nguyen, Hanh, MO025 Nguyen, Lien, 156, TU184 Nguyen, Minh, WE154 Nguyen, Ngoc Tu, MO257 Nguyen Thanh, Tam, 6, MO013, MO023 Nguyen Thi Tuyet, Lan, 4 Ngwenya, Bryne, 103 Ni, Zhaohui, TH060 Nice, Helen, 619 Nichols, Carol, WE087 Nichols, John, WEPC17 Nichols, Peter, MO183 Nickel, Carmen, WE184 Nickisch, Dirk, TU215 Nicol, Elizabeth, TU008 Nicolette, Joseph, TUPC17 Nicoletti Flynn, Maurea,

WE244 Nie, Xiangping, MO019, TU128 Nieboer, Evert, MO206 Niederwanger, Michael, 286, 468 Niehus, Nora, MO061, TH074 Nielsen, Sidsel Marie, TU223 Niero, Monia, 35 Nietch, Christopher, 354, TUPC15 Nieto, Elena, 222, 516, MO056 Nihei, Yoshito, WE146 Nijssen, Philip, WE295 Niketic, Marjan, MO282 Nilsson, Henrik, 130 Nishio, Masahiro, TU264 Nishioka, Kazuhiko, WE146 Nishioka, Takaaki, WE146 Nitschelm, Laure, TU243 Niwa, Takuto, TH035 Nizzetto, Luca, 473, WE091, TU211 Nocelli, Roberta, MO295 Noest, Therese, MO206 Noguchi, Michiko, WE158 Nogueira, Antonio, TU024, TU028, TU131, MO136 Nogueira, Veronica, MO099 Noh, Seam, TH089 Noirot Le Borgne, Isabelle, WE265 Nomiyama, Kei, 296, TU045 Nonaka, Shohei, WE214 Norman, Steve, 44, 169 Norrgran, Jessica, MO195 Noskov, Yury, WE059, MO126 Notter, Dominic, 485 Novais, Sara, TH002 Novakova, Katerina, TU032, TH149, TU302 Novo, Marta, WE001 Nowack, Bernd, 23, 485, WE188, WE190 Nowak, Jens, 557 Nowak, Karolina, 596 Noyon, Naike, TH056 Nuesser, Leonie, WE008, MO262 Nuevo-Ordonez, Yoana, TU099 Nugegoda, Dayanthi, 619, TU003, MO095 Nunes, Bruno, TU057, TU110

Nunes, Fabricio, MO094 Nunes Cardoso, Diogo Filipe, 223, WE001, WE032, WE037, WE038, TU115, WE237 Núñez, Montse, TU248 Nuttens, Andreina, 46, 47 Nuutinen, Jari, 68 Nybom, Inna, TU232 Nygard, Torgeir, WE212 Nys, Charlotte, 205, 260, TUPC08, TU179

O

O Rourke, Anastasia, 550 O’Connor, Ian, TU139 O’Driscoll, Nelson, TH088 O’Halloran, John, MO092 O’Mahony, Tadhg, TH117 Obersteiner, Michael, TH113 Obert-Rauser, Patrick, 75, 127 Ochiai, Mari, TU045 Oda, Shigeto, TU001 Odenmarck, Sven, 171 Odland, Jon, MO206 Oehlmann, Jörg, 73, 300, 614, TU114 Oemisch, Luise, 585 Oetken, Matthias, 300 Oetter, Guenter, WE202 Oezel, Birge, 14 Officer, Rick, TU139 Ogikami, Reiko, WE286 Oh, Han-Bin, MO188 Oh, Jeong-Eun, TH193 Oh, Jina, MO304 Ohara, Toshimasa, MO044, TU271 Ohta, Yasuhiko, TH153, TH157 Oikari, Aimo, MO108 Okamoto, Akira, TU185 Okeme, Joseph, 25 Olatunji, Olatunde, WE300 Oldenkamp, Rik, TU309 Oliva, Milagrosa, TU052 Oliveira, Eva, 343 Oliveira, Jacinta, TU155 Oliveira, Miguel, TU115 Oliveira, Rhaul, 5, TU028, TU131, TU132, MO136, WE186 Oliveira, Thiessa, WE125 Oliveri, Laura, 349 Olivier, Stephanie, TH152 Ollivier, Patrick, 145, 146, TH028, TU083, MO150

Olorunfemi, Daniel, 108, MO279 Olorunfemi, Oyime, 108 Olsen, Anders, WE077 Olsen, Stig, WEPC10 Olsson, Per-Erik, 277, TU301 Olstedt, Marie, MO001, MO015, MO025 Oltmanns, Jan, 221 Olufsen, Marianne, 7 Ometto, Aldo, TH110, MO233 Oorts, Koen, 55, 539, TU191, TU293 Opeolu, Beatrice, WE300 Opyd, Marta, WE221 Oral, Rahime, WE239 Orellana, Gabriel, TU070 Orellana, Guillermo, MO081 Orgelet, Julie, 216, TH114 Orr, Galya, 454 Orsted, Michael, MO261 Ort, Christoph, 228 Ortega, Lina, WE026 Ortega-Calvo, Jose-Julio, MO080, TU226, TU227 Ortiz, Xavier, TU098 Ortiz Bernad, Irene, TUPC10 Ortiz Santaliestra, Manuel, 237, MOPC24 Ortiz-Santaliestra, Manuel, 238 Ortiz-Zarragoitia, Maren, 9 Ortmann, Julia, 513, TH007 Oshima, Yuji, MO028, WE214 Oskarsson, Agneta, WE137 Osorio, Victoria, 297 Osorio Torrens, Victoria, TUPC22 Osset, Philippe, 149, TU242 Osterauer, Raphaela, MO119 Osterwald, Anne, TU217 Ostin, Anders, 63 Ostman, Conny, TU088 Oteri, Federico, MO031, MO045 Otero, Marta, TU268 Ott, Walter, 151 Ottaviano, Giuseppe, TH124 Ottermanns, Richard, 15, WE064 Otto, Mathias, WE031 Ou, Ruikang, MO019 Owen, Stewart, 192, 391, 570, 572, TH005, TU075 Owen, Stweart, TU117 Owsianiak, Mikolaj, TU235

261


authors

Ozaez, Irene, MO139 O’Connell, Steven, TU202 O’Driscoll, Nelson, 543, TH090 O’Malley, Elissa, 147

P

Pablos, MV, WE162 Pacheco, Mario, TU051, MO053, TU064, WE197 Padey, Pierryves, 38 Padilla, Alejandro, TH119 Paepke, Olaf, WE198 Pagnout, Chritophe, 76 Pagotto, Christelle, MO117 Pahl, Ole, TU067 Pahri, Siti Dina, WE273 Paik, Min-Kyong, MO304 Pain-Devin, Sandrine, 76, 79 Paiva, Gabriel, MOPC21 Paiva, Teresa, MO088, MO096 Pakdel, Farzad, TU017 Pallois, Frederique, 347 Palluel, Olivier, 74, 173 Palm Cousins, Anna, TU088, TU200 Palma, Patricia, MO090, MO252, MO280 Palmqvist, Annemette, 456 Panagopoulos, Dimitri, MO130 Pandard, Pascal, 70, 135 Pang, Chengfang, TH033 Paniconi, Claudio, 515 Panina, Larissa, MO068 Pant, Rana, 604 Panter, Grace, 176, 192, TU117 Paolucci, Gino, WE143 Papa, Ester, 487, MO145 Papachlimitzou, Alex, 589 Papadaki, Krystalia, 28 Papageorgiou, Nafsika, MO034, MO035, MO247 Papin, Arnaud, 556 Parent, Julie, 154 Parenti, Paolo, TH019 Paris, Séverine, 74, 173, TH015, TU112 Park, Areum, MO066, MO272, MO273 Park, Chang Beom, 533, TH073 Park, Eunjin, MO066, MO272, MO273

262

authors

Park, Jeongim, 26, MO193, MO200 Park, Jihae, MO066, MO272, MO273 Park, Jung-Hyun, WE299 Park, Kun-Ho, WE299 Park, Kyung-Hun, MO304 Park, Sujung, 380 Park, Sun-Young, WE173, WE306 Park, Ye Lim, 26 Park, Yong-Kwon, MO093 Parkerton, Thomas, TU282, TU283, TU284, TU285, TU286 Parmentier, Anne-Laure, TU036 Parmentier, Eric, TU146 Parmentier, Isabelle, TH032 Parpal, Luis, TU039 Parrott, Joanne, MO137 Parry, Sam, 100 Parsons, John, 21, 425, WE096, MO170 Pasteris, Andrea, TU118 Pastoret, Ester, 16 Pastorinho, Ramiro, 261, TUPC07 Patel, Akshay, WE269 Patel, Alpa, 176, 192 Patel, Pratikumar, TU181 Paterson, Mike, 618 Patey, Geraldine, TH015 Pati, Alessandra, 277, TU301 Patlewicz, Grace, MO210 Patrolecco, Luisa, MO064, WE291 Patterson, Sarah, 568, WE008, MO214 Patyk, Andreas, MO225 Paul, Kai, 532, MO178 Paul, Whaley, WE303 Paulino, Marcelo, MO020 Paulussen, Sabine, MO232 Paumen, Miriam, 54 Paunovic, Momir, 515 Payen, Luc, WE267 Payet, Jerome, 219, 447, TH125, TH126, TU255, TU256, TU262, WE263, WE281 Peano, Laura, TH160 Pearson, Holly, 224 Pedersen, Aashild, 118 Pedersen, Joel, 454 Pedersen, Knud L., TU063, TU065

Pedersen, Sindre, 7 Pedrazzini, Simone, 218 Pedrini-Martha, Veronika, 286, 468 Peijnenburg, Willie, 412, 433, 434, 538, 541, WE030 Peither, Armin, MO249 Peixoto, Gabriela, TH023 Peixoto, Talita, MO020 Pekar, Heidi, WE137 Pellat, Marie, MO226 Pellerin, Hugues, TU006 Pellizzato, Francesca, 155 Peltola-Thies, Johanna, WE289 Pena, Miren, 241 Penglase, Sam, TU030 Penna, Miren, TU098 Pennington, David, TH121 Penttinen, Olli-Pekka, 264 Pepper, Tim, TU210, TU277, TU278 Perales, Eduardo, TU054 Perales, Jose Antonio, TU052, TH100, MO246 Perceval, Olivier, WE170 Pereira, Carla, 407, WE053 Pereira, Cecicilia, 287 Pereira, Cristian, MO135 Pereira, Eduarda, MO280 Pereira, Erlon, MO096 Pereira, Joana, 491 Pereira, Joana Luisa, TU057, TU061, TU233 Pereira, Lucas, TU253 Pereira, M., 236, TU041 Pereira, Maressa, MO007 Pereira, Patrícia, MO053, TH102, WE197 Pereira, Ruth, 183, MO099 Pereira, Susana, MO136 Perez, Emile, TH077 Pérez, Francisca, WE156 Perez, Sandra, TH020, TUPC22 Perez, Sara, 297 Perez de Vargas, Ana, TU048 Perez-Albaladejo, Elisabet, 160 Perez-Losada, Marcos, WE028 Pergantis, Spiros, MO034, MO035, MO154, MO247 Peric, Brezana, WE042 Peric, Ljubica, MO116

Perkins, Edward, 29, 31, 34, MO212, MO213 Perrault, Annie, MO158, TU171 Perrein-Ettajani, Hanane, 80 Perron, Tania, 546 Persoone, Guido, MO271 Persson, Linn, WE270 Persson, Sara, TU046 Pery, Alexandre, TU017, TUPC24, TU107, TU112, WE138, WE257 Pesce, Stephane, TH018 Pesnel, Sandrine, TH126 Pessatti, Tomas, MO094 Peters, Adam, 610, 613, TH143, TH144 Peters, Gregory, 371 Peters, K, 573, 574 Peters, Tom, TU291 Petersen, Camilla, TU310 Petersen, Elijah, 314, TH043 Petersen, Karina, 34, 220, WE017 Petiot, Charlotte, TU242 Petit-Boix, Anna, 93 Petoumenou, Maria, 508 Petriello, Michael, 276, TU222 Petrovic, Mira, 297, 369, TH020 Petters, Charlotte, WE174 Petti, Luigia, MOPC11 Pettigrove, Vincent, 288, 619, TU003 Petto, Ralf, 148 Pfefferli, Hildegard, 536 Pfennig, Sascha, MO016 Pfenninger, Markus, WE028 Pfister, Stephan, TU248 Pfitzner, Daniel, MO165 Pfrender, Michael, WE012 Pham, Van, WE095 Phan Thi Bich, Tuyen, MO013 Philipp, Rosemarie, TU100 Philippe, Rousselle, 79 Philippe, Wagner, 79 Phrakonkham, Pascal, WE289 Piani, Raffaella, TH091 Piazza, Gabriele, TH093 Piazza, Veronica, TH042 Piazzoli, Alessandro, 367 Pic-Taylor, Aline, TU297 Piccini, Benjamin, TU016, TU017, WE138 Pickl, Christina, TU216, TU217, TU273

Pico, Yolanda, TH020, TH021, WE120, WE156 Piechotta, Christian, TU100 Pieper, Silvia, 350, TU281 Pierloot, Marine, TH013 Pietravalle, Stephane, 295, TH014 Pietsch, Constanze, 291 Pigne, Yoann, WEPC05, MO224 Pigozzo, Andrea, MO152 Pijnappels, Martijn, WE121 Pillai, Smitha, 277, 346, 379, 381, TU301 Pilling, Ed, 170 Pillon, Simone, TH091 Pimentel, Tania, TU027 Pina, Benjamin, 62, 343 Pineau, Charles, WE004 Pineau, Pierre-Olivier, MO226 Pineiro, Veronica, MO077, MO078 Pinelli, Eric, MO158, TU171 Pinheiro, Jose, TU153 Pinheiro, Paula, MO147 Pinnekamp, Johannes, MO101 Pino, Mª Rosa, MO082, TU111, TU134 Pintar, Albin, 69, TU059 Pinto, Tiago, WE125 Pinto Grande, Joaquin, WE061 Pinxten, Rianne, 237, WE212 Pipa, Marek, 277 Pipal, Marek, TU301 Piram, A, 535 Pires, Jose, 323 Pitta, Paraskevi, MO154 Pivato, Alberto, 444 Pizzo, Fabiola, 508 Pizzol, Massimo, 149, 499 Plahuta, Maja, TU059 Planojevic, Ivana, 614 Plassmann, Merle, 85, MO194 Plosnik, Alja, 492 Pocurull, Eva, 258, TU151 Poganietz, Witold-Roger, TH133 Poiger, Thomas, WE083, TH086, MO243 Poinsaint, Jean Francois, 76 poirier, laurence, 80 Poisbleau, Maud, 237 Poivet, Romain, 218 Polak, Natasa, 277, TU301

Polder, Anuschka, 118 Polek, Martina, 355 Polesello, Stefano, 374, TU009, TU069, TH108, WE159, WE171, WE291 Poletika, Nicholas, 506 Poletika, Nick, 44 Pomaro Casali Pereira, Maressa, MO011 Pomati, Francesco, 473 Pommier, Thomas, 201 Ponce de Leon, Claudia, MO284 Ponce Velez, Guadalupe, MO002 Ponsati, Lidia, 297 Pontes, Joao, WE040 Pool, Edmund, MO260 Porcel, MA, MO122, WE163 Porcher, Jean Marc, 74, 233, TU017, WE138 Porcher, Jean-Marc, 70, TU016, TUPC24, TU107, TU112, TH151 Poromov, Artem, MO041 Porsch, Lucas, WE284 Porta, Pier Luigi, 604 Porte, Cinta, 160, 617 Portilla Castillo, Carlos Enrique, TH098 Portner, Christoph, 246, MO109, MO258 Porto, Pablo, WE028 Posner, Stefan, 371 Possberg, Claudia, 101, 350, WE085, WE086, TU186 Posthuma, Connie, TH145 Posthuma, Leo, 219, 365, 480, 481, 522, WE150, WE269, TU309 Potalivo, Monica, 277, TU301 Potter, Elaine, 236, TU041 Poulsen, Veronique, 335 Poulsen, Véronique, 322 Powell, David, 383, 438, WEPC13, MO113, MO127, WE192, WE193 Poynton, Helen, MO179 Pradier, Celine, 540 Prado, Valentina, TH130 Praetorius, Antonia, 146, 486, MO150 Prasad, Ashwini, MO167 Prat, Narcís, TH023 Prat-Mairet, Yves, TU036 Prats, Eva, MO213

263


authors

Pretot, Rene, TU033 Preudhomme, Hugues, TU085 Preus-Olsen, Gunnhild, 7 Preuss, Thomas, 42, 48, 167, 268, 270, 319, 393, 406, 569, WE246 Priac, Anne, MO104 Prica, Miljana, MO192 Price, Paul, TU307 Price, Sarah, 605 Priestly, Sarah, 40 Prieto, Diego, MO077, MO078 Prieur Vernat, Anne, 275, 630 Princivalle, Jessica, WE076 Pro, Javier, MO122 Prodana, Marija, WE052, WE065 Proia, Lorenzo, MO075 Prokes, Roman, TH053 Prokkola, Jenni, 90 Prosser, Krista, TUPC15 Proux, Olivier, 76 Provoost, Jeroen, 110 Prutz, Ines, WE151 Puglisi, Edoardo, 465 Pujades, Estanislao, TH031 Pukalchik, Maria, MOPC18 Pulido, Gerardo, 430 Purcell, Wendy, 570, TH005 Puy, Jaume, 263, TU189 Pyza, Elzbieta, WE048

Q

Qiu, Hao, 538, WE030, TU182 Qiu, J W, 462 Qiu, Jian Wen, 464 Quack, Markus, 557, 598 Quaranta, Gaetana, 484 Queau, Herve, 285, TU006 Querini, Florent, WEPC04 Quesada, Alba, TH034 Quesada, Isariebel, 70 Quik, Joris, 22, TU147, MO151 Quintaneiro, Carla, TH002 Quinteiro, Paula, TU247, TU269 Quinton, Ellen, MO255 Quiros, Ana, 450, TH122, WE279

264

authors

R

Ra, Jin-Sung, WE165 Ra, Jinsung, TU136 Rabova, Zuzana, 162 Radke, Michael, 575, WE084, WE297 Radny, Dirk, 282 Radonic, Jelena, WE124, WE149, MO191, MO192 Raesaenen, Katja, TU011 Ragni, Paolo, TH115 Rahmberg, Magnus, MO234 Rahn, Eric, 225 Raimundo, Joana, TH102, WE197 Rakowska, Magdalena, 326 Raldua, Demetrio, MO213 Ramaenen, Heli, MO108 Ramakrishnan, Balaji, 354 Ramirez, Fernando, 1 Ramirez, Noemi, MO008 Ramo, Robert, 2 Ramos, MariaConcepcion, TU189 Ramos, Sara, MO133 Rampazzo, Giancarlo, WE224 Ramskov, Tina, MO176 Rancati, Erica, TH093 Rand-Weaver, Mariann, 176, 192 Randak, Tomas, TH055, TH060, TU132 Randall, Marit, 171 Rani, Manviri, 301, 302, WE126 Ranke, Johannes, 266 Ranville, James, 255, 256, 261, TUPC07 Rao, M S, TU101 Raoul, Francis, TU036 Raptis, Catherine, 331 Räsänen, Kati, MO248 Räsänen, Katja, 228 Rasenberg, Mike, 110 Rasmussen, Jes, 353 Raspa, Giuseppe, TU193, MO275 Rastetter, N., MO087 Rastetter, Nadja, MO105 Rastogi, Tushar, 279, TU124 Rateau, Fabian, MO009 Ratilainen, Anna, MO248 Ratola, Nuno, 104, MO107, MO133, TU196

Ratte, Hans Toni, 42, TU035, 167 Ratte, Monika, TU288 Rattfelt Nyholm, Jenny, 63 Rattner, Barnett, 179, 440 Rattray, Graham, 212 Rauert, Caren, WE067, WE151 Rauert, Cassandra, 25 Rault, Magali, 73 Ravagnan, Giampietro, MO065, WE143, WE224 Rayner, John, 423 Raza, Muhammad Bin, TH064 Re, Ana, TU057 Readman, James, 584 Recchioni, Marco, 604, TH121, TH128 Recoura-Massaquant, Remi, TU006 Reddy, Chris, WE081 Redelstein, Regine, MO263 Redman, Aaron, 54, TU282, TU283, TU284, TU285, TU286 Redondi, Pietro, TH032 Redondo-Hasselerharm, Paula, MO032 Redshaw, Clare, TUPC23 Reed, Robert, 255 Reeg, Jette, MOPC14 Reemtsma, Thorsten, 257 Rees, Jean Francois, TH013 Rege, Sameer, 96, WE261 Regier, Nicole, 463, 544, TH095 Rehmus, Agnes, 61 Reichel, Rüdiger, WE034 Reichenberger, Stefan, 319, 320, 323 Reichert, Peter, 446 Reichman, Suzanne, MO095 Reifferscheid, Georg, 159, 477, 569, 587, WE009, WE116, TH135 Reihlen, Antonia, 221 Rein, Arno, TU228 Reinardy, Helena, 428 Reineke, Ninja, 221 Reiner, Eric, 241, TU098 Reinken, Gerald, TU218 Reip, Paul, 581 Rementeria, Ane, MO043 Remmler, Frank, WE098 Ren, Jingzheng, WEPC02

Renaud, Jean Mathieu, WE039 Renaud, Philippe, TH003 Renault, David, 347, 403 Rennie, Mike, 618 Reppas- Chrysovitsinos, Efstathios, WE148 Resende, Juliana, MO007, MO011 Rethore, Olivier, TU266 Rettinger, Klaus, MO143 Revel, Messika, TU174 Reveret, Jean-Pierre, 152, 154 Rey-Castro, Carlos, 263 Rey-Valette, Helene, 525 Reyes, Marta, 228 Reynolds, Louis, TUPC15 Ribeiro, Fabianne, 77 Ribeiro, Gabriela, TU095, WE125 Ribeiro, Julia, TH141 Ribeiro, Lucie, WE289 Ribeiro, Maria, WE044 Ribeiro, R.G.L.G., TU005, MOPC21, MO239 Ribeli, Erik, WE154 Ribo, Juan, WE026, WE027 Ricart, Marta, MO075 Rice, Lynsey, 195 Rich, Courtney, 105 Richard, Alienor, MOPC09 Richaume-Jolion, Agnès, 200, 201 Richir, Jonathan, MO027 Richter, Elisabeth, 106 Richter, Janine, TU100 Ricken, Benjamin, 419 Ricking, Mathias, 557 Rico, Andreu, 5, 471, 472, WE055, TU125, MO136 Rico Artero, Andreu, MO014 Ridoutt, Brad, TU247, TU269 Rieff, Gleidson, 351 Rieffel, Dominique, TU036 Rieradevall, Joan, 93, 95, TH110, MO233 Rietjens, Ivonne, MO157 Rigamonti, Lucia, 448 Rigaud, Thierry, 285, TU006 Rings, Ursula, WE064 Riols, Romain, TU038 Risk, David, TH090 Risso de Faverney, Christine, 80 Ristau, Kai, 159 Ritter, Roland

Riva, Carme, WE026, WE027 Rivela, Beatriz, WEPC01 Rivera, Luis Miguel, TU172 Rivetti, Claudia, 370 Rizzi, Juliane, WE213 Roat, Thaisa, MO295 Roberts, Gary, TU221 Robidoux, Pierre Yves, TU174 Robinson, Paul, TUPC20, TU117 Robson, Matthew, TU098 Roca, Yadira, WE294 Rocha, Claudia, WE001 Rocha, Livia, TU007 Rocha, Thiago, TU153, MO162 Rocha-Barreira, Cristina, WE298 Rocha-Santos, Teresa, MO099 Rode, Michael, TU205 Rodea-Palomares, Ismael, 378, 430 Rodgers, Kiri, TU287 Rodic, Marina, MO266 Rodius, Francois, 76 Rodrigo, Jose, 329 Rodriguez, J.L., 453 Rodriguez Gil, Jose Luis, 520, MOPC22 Rodriguez Martin-Doimeadios, Rosa, TU042 Rodriguez-Garcia, Gonzalo, MO236 Rodriguez-Mozaz, Sara, 297, 298, 518 Rodriguez-Sanchez, Neus, WEPC16, WE203 Roeben, Vanessa, 268, 406 Roelofs, Dick, 345, 470, MO208 Roembke, Joerg, 348, 350, WE074, WE102, WE105 Roembke, Jörg, WE018, WE028, WE031, TU129, TU130 Roessink, Ivo, 42, 388, 517, WE233, MO299 Roex, Erwin, 21, 90 Roger, Fabian, WE056 Rogero, Jose, MO046, MO103 Rogero, Sizue, MO046, MO103 Roguet, Adelaide, TH054 Roh, Ji-Yeon, 586, TH075 Roig, Neus, 516, MO259

Rojo-Nieto, Elisa, TU052, TH100, MO246 Rolaki, Alexandra, MO208 Roller, Elias, 106 Romani, Anna, MO075 Romero, Ana, 197, 411, TUPC10, WE029, TU162 Romich, Manfred, 101 Romkens, Paul, 593 Roncaglioni, Alessandra, 508 Rongua, Lin, WE233 Roose, Patrick, TH069 Rorbech, Jakob, TU234 Rorije, Emiel, MO308 Rosa, Andre, TH049 Rosa, Ines, TU057, TU061 Rosal, Roberto, 378, 430 Rösch, Andrea, WE210 Rosenbaum, Ralph, 332, TUPC03, MOPC15, MO218, TU254, TU257, TU259, TU265 Rosenblad, Magnus Alm, 130 Rosenfelder, Natalie, TU099 Rosenfeldt, Ricki, 78, MO172, MO177 Rosignoli, Federica, 374, TU009, TU225 Roslev, Peter, MO261 Rosolen, Jose Mauricio, TU172 Ross Nickoll, Martina, 406, 101, 167, 268, 350, WE064, 413 Rossetti, Simona, WE078 Rossi, Vincent, 605 Rotander, Anna, TU046 Rothenbacher, Klaus, 408 Rother, Hanna-Andrea, WEPC21 Rotini, Alice, MO031, MO045 Roucaute, Marc, WE057, WE062, MO083 Rousis, Nikolaos, 184 Roussel, Cedric, 447, TH126, TU262 Roussel, Helene, WE054 Rousselle, Philippe, 76 Routledge, Edwin, 566 Routti, Heli, 118 Roux, Philippe, 36, TU244 Rovira, Joaquim, MO259 Rovira, Maria del Mar, MO076 Rowland, Steven, 428, TU138 Roy, Axel, TH114 Rubach, Synnove, MOPC10

265


authors

Rubinos, David, MO077, MO078 Ruddle, Natalie, 170 Ruedel, Heinz, 557, 560, 598, WE151 Ruegner, Hermann, MO111, TU205 Ruehl-Fehlert, Christine, TU012 Ruenzler, Dominik, WE288 Ruepert, Clemens, 1, 2, 3, MO014, MO016, MO022, MO024 Ruf, Daniel, WE049 Ruffolo, Ralph, 241 Rugani, Benedetto, WEPC05, TU245, WE261 Ruggieri, Gianluca, TU237 Ruiz, Philippe, 495 Ruppert, Katharina, 614 Rusconi, Marianna, 374, TU009, TU069, WE159, WE171, WE291 Rusina, Tatsiana, TH053 Russell, Mark, WE166, WE167 Ruttkies, Christoph, 479 Ruus, Anders, 436, 437, 498 Ryan, James, TUPC20 Rybicki, Marcus, 75, 127 Rychen, Guido, TH083, WE226 Rydberg, Tomas, 219 Rydh Stenstrom, Jenny, 415

S

Saarela, Anne Kristiina, TUPC09 Saaristo, Minna, 230 Saavedra, Yovana, MO233 Sabater, Sergi, 515, 518, TH027, MO075 Sabbadini, Sergio, TU237 Sabbe, Koen, 475 Sablayrolles, Caroline, 136 Sabo-Attwood, Tara, 91, 317, 529 Sabourin, Lyne, WE106 Saccol, Enilson, 351 Sacher, Frank, MO121 Sadauskas, Kazys, MO097, MO164 Saeed, Suhur, TU023 Saenz, Maria elena, TU164, WE204, MO290, MO291 Saez de Bikuña, Koldo,

266

authors

TU249 Safron, Andreas, MO128 Sage, Mickael, TU036 Saggese, Ilenia, 580 Saha, Mahua, TH058 Sahigara, Faizan, 511, TH009, WE232 Sahoo, Tarini, MO108 Saib, Ourada, MO205 Saini, Amandeep, 25, 509 Saitoh, Yuu, TH058 Sakalli, Sidika, TH060, TU132 Sakuragui, Marise, MO020 Sala, Serenella, 219, 395, TUPC13, TH121, TH128, TU261, WE270 Sala-Garrido, Ramon, MO220 Salbu, Brit, 34, WE011 Saleh, Navid, 529 Salice, Christopher, WE245 Saling, Peter, MO222 Sallaberry, Rogério, MOPC03 Salou, Thibault, MOPC05 Salvito, Daniel, MO142 Samel, Alan, WE153 Sample, Bradley, 440 Samsera, Rija, WE304 Samson, Rejean, 92 Samutrtai, Pawitrabhorn, TH046 San Juan, Lorena, MO081 Sanchez, Juan Antonio, TUPC11 Sanchez, Wilfred, 277, TU301 Sanchez, Wilfried, 74, 173, 366, TU107 Sanchez Chardi, Alejandro, TU049 Sanchez-Barbudo, Ines, 180 Sanchís, Josep Àngel, 316 Sandanger, Torkjel, MO206 Sanderson Bellamy, Angelina, MO005, MO017 Saner, Dominik, TH129 Sangion, Alessandro, WE287, WE302 Sani-Kast, Nicole, 146, MO150 Sanli, Kemal, 130, MO084 Santamaria, Marta, MO219 Santana, Juliana, TU050 Santana, Ligia, WE217 Santana-Rodriguez, Jose Juan, MO132, WE145 Santiago, Sergio, MO115

Santín, Giselle, TU168 Santoro, Federico, TU225 Santos, Amanda, MO067 Santos, Catia, WE038, MO161 Santos, Eduarda, 88, 461, TH016 Santos, Lucia, MO107, MO133 Santos, Maria, TU051, MO053, TU064 Santos, Maria Ana, WE197 Santos, Miguel, 223, WE001, WE037, WE052 Santos, Ricardo, MO029 Santos, Vania, TU153 Sapiets, Alison, 336 Sarasa, Esther, TU054 Saravia Arguedas, Ana Yury, MO014 Saria, Rayenne, TU171 Sarigiannis, Denis, 28, TUPC01, MO189 Sarkis, Jorge, MO040, MO046, TH103 Sarropoulou, Elena, MO154 Sasaki, Silvio, MO094 Sasik, Roman, TH025 Satapornvanit, Kriengkrai, 5 Sato, Masumi, WE158 Saur-Modahl, Ingunn, MOPC10 Sautel, Olivier, WE304 savorelli, federica, MO031 Saxena, Shilpi, TU101 Sayen, Stephanie, TU137 Scalbi, Simona, TH124 Scanferla, Petra, MO232 Scarlett, Alan, 428 Scavenius, Carsten, 527 Schad, Thorsten, MOPC14 Schaefer, Ed, 418 Schaefer, Hendrik, WE087 Schaefer, Ralf Bernhard, 519, 573, WE059, MO125 Schaefer, Sabine, 587, TH065 Schaefers, Christoph, 229, TH154, TH155, TH158 Schaeffer, Andreas, 48, 101, 148, 268, 350, 406, 426, 569, 596, WE064, WE085, WE086, MO143, TH150, TU186, TU294 Schafer, Jorg, MO043 Schäfer, Ralf, 574 Schäffer, Andreas, 413 Schärer, Michael, 281 Schatz, Marlene, WE115

Schaumburg, Kjeld, MO155, MO156 Schebek, Liselotte, MOPC03, TH133, MO231, MO235, TU238, TU246 Scheckel, Kirk, 253 Scheffczyk, Adam, WE105, TU129 Scheibner, Olaf, MO109 Scheibye, Katrine, 422 Scheider, Jessica, TH158 Scheifler, Renaud, 181, 237, 468, TU036, TU038, TU049 Scheil, Volker, 133 Schelker, Raymond, 399 Schenck, Rita, 450, TH122 Schenker, Urs, 631 Scheringer, Martin, 109, 146, 209, 307, 375, 486 MO150, MO196, WE229, WE270 Scherpenisse, Peter, TH050 Scherr, Frank, 268, 406 Scheuerman, Phillip, TU308 Scheumann, René, 214 Scheurer, Marco, 72, 73 Scheytt, Traugott, 283 Schifanella, Onofrio, MO277 Schifferli, Andrea, 277, 278, MO115, MO265, TU301 Schiliro, Tiziana, 17 Schillaci, Paolo, TH115 Schiller, Viktoria, 229, TH155 Schimanko Ceccatto, Ana Paula, 548 Schiopu, Nicoleta, MO224 Schipper, Aafke, 217, 522, TUPC16 Schirmer, Kristin, 134, 277, 290, 346, 376, 379, 381, 528, 571, TH003, TH004, TH012, MO071, MO079, MO160, MO208, TU301 Schirmer, Mario, 282 Schiwy, Andreas, MO262 Schlabach, Martin, 116, WE131, MO183 Schlechtriem, Christian, WE194 Schlekat, C, TH144 Schlekat, Chris, 156 Schlekat, Christian, TH026, TU184 Schlenk, Daniel, 292, TH025 Schlich, Karsten, 199, MO159, WE182, WE183 Schloter, Michael, MO085

Schluesener, Michael, 477 Schmelz, Rudiger, 351 Schmelz, Ruediger, 348 Schmid, Erwin, TH113 Schmidlin, Lara, WE051 Schmidt, Florian, WE085 Schmidt, Gunnar, MOPC20 Schmidt, Jannick, 499 Schmidt, Jannick Hoejrup, 397 Schmidt, Ralf, WE207 Schmidt, Stine, WE050 Schmidt, Thomas, 410 Schmidt, Thorsten, MO187 Schmidt, Torsten, 315, 318 Schmidt, Wiebke, TUPC23 Schmidt-Posthaus, Heike, TU132 Schmitt, Claudia, 614 Schmitt, Walter, 167 Schmitt-Jansen, Mechthild, 128, WE118, TU294 Schneider, Ilona, MO120 Schneider, Mandy, 279, TU119, TU124 Schneider, Marie, TU062 Schneider, Rudolf, 245 Schneider, Sandra, MO172 Schneider, Suzanne, TU013 Schneider-Rapp, Jutta, 73 Schnell, Sabine, 277, 572, TU301 Schnetzer, Nadja, 474 Schnitzler, Joseph, TU053, TH096 Schnurstein, Andreas, TH026 Schoeneboom, Jan, MO222 Schoenfeld, Jens, WE151 Schoenlau, Christine, MO265 Schoeters, Greet, 84 Schoknecht, Ute, TU288, TU289 Schollee, Jennifer, 15 Scholz, Karin, TUPC21 Scholz, Stefan, 513, TH007, TU026, TU032 Scholz Starke, Bjoern, 406 Scholz-Starke, Bjoern, WE064 Scholz-Starke, Bjorn, 101, 350, 413 Schönborn, Andreas, WE141 Schonenberger, Rene, WE005 Schonfeld, Jens, 247 Schorder, Declan, 584

Schori, Salome, WEPC07 Schowanek, Diederik, WE070, TH111 Schraepen, Nathalie, MO204 Schreiber, Hanna, 218 Schreiber, Rene, 513 Schreiter, Inga, MO187 Schröder, Tom, 213 Schroeder, Fabian, MO297 Schroeter-Kermani, Christa, MO190 Schueth, Christoph, MO187 Schug, Hannah, MO079 Schuhmacher, Marta, 516, TH027, WE108, WE161, MO189, MO259 Schulin, Rainer, TH080 Schulte, Christoph, MO143 Schulte-Oehlmann, Ulrike, 614 Schultz, Sandra, 179 Schultz, Tobias, TU250 Schulz, Ralf, 78, 358, 474, MO172, MO177, MO244 Schulze, Tobias, 385, WE117, WE133, WE146, TU299 Schulze-Sylvester, Maria, MO244 Schutt, Jeroen, TU290 Schuurmann, Gerrit, 387, WE194 Schuwirth, Nele, 445 Schwab, Erin, WE069 Schwab, Fabienne, WE179 Schwaiger, Julia, TUPC21, WE164 Schwartz, Jean-Jacques, TH063 Schwarz, Katharina, 24 Schwarz, Lisa, WE104 Schwarz, Markus, 221 Schwarz, Simon, 300 Schweikert, Carmen, MO285 Schwientek, Marc, MO111, TU205 Schwirn, Kathrin, WE184 Schymanski, Emma, 244, 479, WE146 Scipioni, Antonio, WEPC02, TH118 Scott, Philip, 344, 619 Scott, William, TUPC15 Scott-Fordsmand, Janeck, 341, 527, TU161 Scown, Corinne, WE260 Scrimshaw, Mark, 202

267


authors

Seager, Thomas, TH130 Sebestova, Blanka, MO292 Sebillot, Anthony, 232, 514 Sebire, Marion, 90 Sechi, Valentina, 352 Seeland-Fremer, Anne, 614 Segner, Helmut, TU012, WEPC16, TH034 Seiler, Thomas-Benjamin, WE008, MO061, WE140, MO244, MO263, TU299 Seiterle-Winn, Natalie, TU215 Seitz, Frank, 78, MO172, MO177 Seiz, Remo, 536 Sekiguchi, Toshio, MO028 Sekine, Ryo, 253, WE181 Selby, Katherine, 191 Selck, Henriette, 19, 368, MO155, MO156, MO175, MO176 Selleslagh, Jonathan, 309 Selonen, Salla, 356 Semenzin, Elena, 483, MOPC13, WE257, WE282 Semik, Danuta, WE048 Semplice, Matteo, 269 Sengl, Manfred, WE164 Serafini, Patricia, TU044 Seriki, Kemi, 71, MO117 Serodio, Daniela, WE130 Serra, Albert, 518 Serra, Anne-Antonella, 403 Serrano, Lenard, WE215 Serre, Jeanne, MO117 Serveto, Fabienne, TH056 Seston, Rita, 383, 438, MO113, MO127, WE192, WE193 Setala, Heikki, 356 Seuntjens, Piet, 321 Sevastou, Katerina, MO034, MO035 Sevcikova, Marie, TU022 sevigne, eva, 93, 95 Sevilla, Angel, WE014 Seyfried, Markus, WE071 Sforzini, Susanna, 349 Sfriso, Andrea, MO062 Sgier, Linn, 127, MO074 Sgorbini, Barbara, 17 Shaikh, Ziauddin, MO199 Shala, Filloreta, TU300 Shanthakumar, Thulasitha William, TH064 Sharp, Rachel, 166

268

authors

Sharpe, Alan, TU221 Sharples, Amanda, 98, WE019 Shaw, Ben, MO180 Shaw, Elizabeth, WE076 Shaw, Joe, WE012 Sheahan, Dave, MO038, MO073 Sheahan, David, 589 Shen, Li, TU098 Shi, Wei, 427 Shibata, Yasuyuki, 242 Shim, Won Joon, 301, 302, MO063, TH064, WE126, TH137, TU148, TU150 Shimasaki, Yohei, MO028, WE214 Shimmield, Tracy, MO034, MO247 Shin, Hyeong-Moo, 165 Shin, Ji-Hye, WE299 Shinn, Candida, MO239 Shinohara, Ryota, 296 Shiraishi, Hiroaki, MO044, TH153 Shoeib, Mahiba, WE292 Shore, Richard, 236, 440, TU041 Short, Stephen, TU121, WE251 Shresta, Prasith, 363 Shrivastava, J P, TU101 Shu, Longfei, TU011 Siber, Rosi, 225 Sibley, Paul, MO278 Sibly, Richard, 441 Sié, Marion, TH125, WE281 Sieber, Ueli, 281 Siegers, Wolter, TU143 Sierra, Jordi, 516, WE042, MO259 Sierra, Maria-Jose, 50 SIERRA ARAGON, MANUEL, 411, TUPC10, WE029 Sigg, Laura, 346, 376, 379, 381, MO079 Sijm, Dick, MO151 Silbiger, Helcy, MO040 Silva, Ana, TU296 Silva, Bianca, 163 Silva, Carlos, TU057 Silva, Daniele, WE125 Silva, Diogo, TH110, MO233 Silva, Flávio, MO088, MO096 Silva, Francisca, 491 Silva, Jose Avelino, MO107,

MO133 Silva, Karen, TU024 Silva, Luis, 316 Silva, Patricia, TU160 Silva, Vera, 183, TU057 Silva-Zacarin, Elaine, MO295 Silveri, Federica, 153 Silvestre, Jerome, MO158 Simic, Jovana, WE149 Simon, Bálint, MO236 Simon, Gael, TH015 Simon, Mariano, TUPC11 Simon, Olivier, 188 Simon Torres, Mariano, TUPC10 Simonin, Marie, 200, 201 Simons, Andrew, WEPC03 Simovic, Jelena, 367 Simpson, Peter, 408, 610, TH143, TH146, MO240 Sinclair, Chris, 191 Singer, Heinz, 367, TU082 Singla, Veena, WE130 Sintra, Tania, TU233 Sipos, Sandor, MO266, TU299 Sircar, Triranta, MO084 Sirina, Natalia, TU239 Sjollema, Sascha, 10, 125, MO032, TU290, TU291 Skalsky, Rastislav, TH113 Skark, Christian, WE098 Skjolding, Lars, MO166, WE176 Skoric, Misa, TU022 Skoulikidis, Nikolaos, 515 Skrinjar, Marija, MO191 Slaveykova, Vera, 51, 578, TH017, TH095, TH097, TH098, TH099, TU152, WE178 Sleeuwenhoek, Anne, 28 Sleight, Victoria, 12 Sliwinska, Anna, MO228 Slob, Adriaan, 515 Slobodnik, Jaroslav, 365, 481, WE146 Sloman, Terry, WE153 Slomberg, Danielle, 145 Slotsbo, Stine, WE050 Smedberg, Erik, TU201 Smedes, Foppe, 90, TH052, TH053 Smerilli, Arianna, 583 Smit, Els, TH145 Smith, Andy, 614

Smith, Kilian, 533, TH073 Smith, Richard, MO048, MO049, MO050, WE107 Smith, Rose-Michelle, TU137 Smith, S, TH143 Smith, Samantha, 261 Smitha, Sugavasi, WE222 Smolders, Erik, 259, 260, 262, 539 Smolders, Roel, 28 Smutna, Marie, TH149 Snape, Jason, 195, 247, 360, WE067, TU117, TU126 Soares, Amadeu, 77, 196, 223, 343, 467, WE001, TU002, TH002, TH023, TH024, TU026, TU027, WE032, WE037, WE038, WE052, MO054, WE065, MO069, MO099, TU110, TU115, TU116, TU131, TU133, MO136, TU155, TU159, MO161, WE237, MO238, WE238, WE294, TU296 Soares, Hellen, MO295 Sobanski, Tomasz, 110 Sobek, Anna, 588, TH139, WE148 Sobota, Andrzej, 527 Sobrino-Figueroa, Alma, MO002, MO003, MO004, TU025, TU056 Softeland, Liv, 277, TU301 Sogani, Monika, WE110 Sohm, Benedicte, 76, MO163 Soirinsuo, Anna, 68 Sokull-Kluettgen, Birgit, 505 Solga, Andreas, MOPC14, TH026 Solier, David, MO081 Solismaa, Lauri, TUPC09 Solomon, Keith, 32, 506, 520, MOPC22 Sombrio, Catarina Moraes de Oliveira, TU241 Somerset, V, 600 Sommerwerk, Nike, TU258 Sonavane, Manoj, WE138 Song, Jeehey, TU197 Song, Lan, 434 Song, You, 34, 459, WE011, WE017 Song, Young Kyung, WE126 Sonnack, Laura, 294 Sonne, Christian, 119 Sonnemann, G., 550,

WEPC09 Sonnemann, Guido, 396 Sorci, Gabriele, 181 Soren, Lokke, 499 Sorensen, Jesper, WE050 Sorensen, Lisbet, WE100, MO169, TU176 Sorensen, Mary, 599, TUPC17 Sorensen, Sara, 431, WE176 Soriano Disla, Jose Martin, 595 Sorme, Louise, 219 Sosa-Ferrera, Zoraida, MO132, WE145 Sosak-Swiderska, Bozena, MOPC17 Soto, Manuel, TH036, TH037, MO043 Sotti, Francesca, 44 Soulier, Coralie, 537 Sourisseau, Sandrine, 71, MO117, TU254 Sousa, Ana, TH153 Sousa, Jose, 351, 407, WE040, WE053 Sousa, Jose Paulo, WE039 Sousa, Vania, MO162 Souza, Iara da Costa, TU007 Souza, Naiara, MO020 Spanik, Ivan, WE124 Sparks, Peter, TU120 Spelt, Anouk, TU291 Sperni, Laura, WE143 Spickermann, Gregor, TU220, TU304 Spina, Federica, 17 Spira, Denise, 477 Spizzamiglio, Luca, TH106 Sprangers, Katrien, TU292 Springer, Armin, TU167 Springer, Timothy, WE253 Spurgeon, David, 197 Spycher, Simon, 435, TU280 Sreekrishnan, TR, MO199 Sremacki, Maja, WE124, WE149 Srut, Maja, 175 Stadlinger, Nadja, MO023 Stadnicka-Michalak, Julita, 571 Staerk, Hans-Joachim, 257 Stalter, Daniel, 280, TH011, WE135 Stambuk, Anamaria, 175 Stamm, Christian, 225, 226, 228, 367

Stampfli, Nathalie, WE059, MO126 Stanley, Jacob, MO213 Staples, Charles, 383 Stark, Jonathan, 115 Starrfelt, Jostein, 437, 473, 498 Steber, Josef, MO143 Steevens, Jeff, MO212 Stefani, Fabrizio, 374, TU009, TH032, WE171 Steinbach, Christoph, TU132, WE185 Steinhoff, Hans-Juergen, 324 Steinmann, Zoran, 217, TU252 Stemberger, Sara, WE282 Stengel, Daniel, TU020 Stenroed, Marianne, 220 Stenzel, Angelika, 43, 488 Steubing, Bernhard, MO227 Stevens, Jamie, TU008 Stibany, Felix, MO143 Stinckens, Evelyn, TU019 Stinson, Jonah, 602 Stival, Carlo, TH127 Stock, Michiel, WE012 Stoen, Lisbet, TU176 Stolpe, Bjorn, 584 Stolte, Stefan, WE174 Stolzenberg, Hans-Christian, 190 Stone, Vicki, 532, MO178 Storck, Florian, WE098 Storseth, Trond, MO169 Stosic, Milena, WE149 Stott, Lucy, 572 Stradling, Sam, 510 Strahm, Ivo, 226 Strande, Linda, 14 Strandell, Michael, MO128 Straub, Juerg Oliver, TUPC20 Strauss, Tido, 42 Stravs, Michael, TU082, WE146 Streck, Georg, WE289 Streil, Stefanie, MO249 Streissl, Franz, 166 Streloke, Martin, 338 Strid, Anna, WE066 Stringer, Gordon, 212 Strommer, Rauni, 356 Strothmann, Philip, 549 STRYSZOWSKA, Marta, WE304 Sturzenbaum, Stephen, 277,

269


authors

TU301 Styrishave, Bjarne, 119 Størdal, Ingvild, WE077 Subramanian, Vrishali, WE282 Sudo, Kengo, TU271 Suganuma, Noriyuki, MO113 Sulmon, Cecile, 403 Sultana, Tamanna, 534 Sumarah, Mark, WE106 Summers, Heather, 602 Sumpter, John, 176, 192, TU008, TU102 Sun, Feifei, 420 Sun, Ping, WE202 Sun, Tianyin, WE188, WE189, WE190 Sun, Xiaoliang, WE250 Sunahara, Geoffrey, 198 Sundberg, Cecilia, 451 Sundqvist, Kristina, 588 Sundstrom, Bo, 414 Sung, Chan-Gyoung, TH136, TH137 Sung, Chan-Gyung, MO063 Sungthong, Rungroch, MO080, TU227 Supowit, Sam, TU072 Sur, Robin, WE089 Sushynski, Jacob, 383 Suter, Florian, MO227 Suter, Marc, 67, 290, 346, 401, WE005, TU011, WE015, MO057 Sutherland, Duncan, 527 Sutton, Peter, 169 Suzuki, Betina, 414 Suzuki, Nobuo, MO028 Svendsen, Claus, 75, 127, 197, MO156, TU162 Svensson, Ola, MO005, MO017 Sverko, Ed, WE292 Svobodova, Zdenka, TU022 Swarowsky, Klaus, MO285 Swart, Kees, TU081 Swartjes, Frank, 593 Sweeney, Paul, 336, TU218 Sweetlove, Cyril, TU230 Switzer, Christine, 327 Sylte, Ingebrigt, 34 Sylvestre, Frederic, TU053 Szegedi, Krisztian, TU208, TU218 Szentes, Csaba, 166 Szonn, Kerstin, 167

270

authors

Sørensen Boll, Esther, 368

T

Tadashi, Ariyoshi, TH035 Taeger, Klaus, WE070 Tagliani, Paulo Roberto, WE298 Tagni, Federica, TU193 Taing, Eric, 325 Tajima, Yuko, TU045 Takada, Hideshige, TH058, TU140 Takahashi, Catarina, TU172 Takazawa, Yoshikatsu, 242 Takesono, Aya, 234 Talk, Anne, MO085 Tamura, Ikumi, TU001 Tan, Lu, MO123 Tanabe, Kiyoshi, 242, TU097 Tanabe, Shinsuke, 296, TU045 Tanaka, Hirofumi, MO202 Tanaka, Kosuke, TU140 Tanaka, Taku, TU214 Tanaka, Yoshinari, 611 Tang, Janet, 161, 280, TUPC14, MO100, WE135 Tang, Longlong, TU271 Tang, Ting, 321 Tang, Weihao, 310 Tangaa, Stine Rosendal, MO155 Tanguay, Robert, MO171 Taniguchi, Satie, TU043, TU044, MO094 Tanimura, Nobuhiko, WE158 Taniyasu, Sachi, 137, WE158 Tanoue, Rumi, 296 Tao, Wuqun, TH033 Tarantini, Mario, 604 Tarazona, Jose V., 112, 155 Tarnacki, Katharina, WEPC22 Tarpani, Raphael, 194 Tartari, Gianni, 597, TH032 Tartu, Sabrina, 117, 120 Tatarazako, Norihisa, TU001, TU185 Tatsi, Kristi, MO180 Tauler, Roma, TU133 Taulis, Mauricio, TUPC14 Tavares, Driele, MO020 Tavares, Mauricio, TU043, TU044 Tavares Lourenco, Clara, MO296

Tavazzi, Simona, 277, TU301 Taylor, Seamus, 41 Tebby, Cleo, TU017 Tedengren, Michael, 3, MO001, MO005, MO015, MO017, MO025 Tedim, Joao, MO161 Teichert, Sebastian, TU114 Teichmann, Hanka, WE031 Teigeler, Matthias, TH154, TH155 Teixeira, Bernardo, 93 Teixeira, Margarida, TU153, MO162 Teixeira, Patricia, TU050 Tell, Joan, TUPC20 Tella, Marie, 76 Tello, Alfredo, TU125 Teodorovic, Ivana, MO266, MO286 ter Halle, Alexandra, TH077 ter Laak, Thomas, TUPC19, TU103, MO308 Tercero, M Carmen, TH030 Terekhova, Vera, MOPC18, WE187 Terezan, Ana, MO020, WE177 Termes Rife, Montserrat, MO220, MO221 Ternes, Thomas, 477, WE101, MO120 Terrado, Marta, TH027 Terzaghi, Elisa, MO275 Terzic, Senka, WE142 Tessier, Daniel, TU218 Tete, Nicolas, 181, TU049 Teutsch, Georg, 515 Teyssandier, Nelly, 514 Thalmann, Basilius, 143 Thalmann, Beat, WE139, WE140, MO262 Thalwitz, Gunnar, 553 Than Thi, Hien, 4 Theissinger, Kathrin, MOPC19 Thellmann, Paul, MO102 Thiele, Karen, WE284 Thiele-Bruhn, Sören, 250, WE034 Thienpont, Benedicte, MO213 Thit Jensen, Amalie, WE176, MO176 Thomas, Kai, 319, 320, TU209, TU273 Thomas, Kevin, 20, 34, 67, WE005, MO057, WE076,

MO149 Thomas, Paul, 511, TH009, WE232, MO307 Thomas-Guyon, Helene, 80 Thome, Jean-Pierre, TU055, TU066, TH140, WE205 Thompson, Helen, 169, MO300 Thompson, Richard, 12, TU138 Thomsen, Anja, TU204 Thorbek, Pernille, 441, 456, MO300 Thorenz, Andrea, 396 Thornton, Arthur, MO110 Tidwell, Lane, TU202 Tierney, Keith, TH025 Tiesnitsch, Jordan, WE121 Tillman, Ayesha, 454 Tilton, Susan, WE013 Timmer, Niels, TH050 Tinant, Gilles, WE205 Tindall, Andrew, 232, 514 Tinguely, Simone, TU034 Tiruta-Barna, Ligia, WEPC05, MO224 Tišler, Tatjana, 69, TU059 Tissier, Chrystele, WE289 Tixier, Thomas, WE105, TU129, TU130 Tlili, Ahmed, 144, MO160 Tobias, Craig, MO048, MO049, MO050, WE107 Tobler, Nicole, MO287 Tobor-Kaplon, Marysia, TH010 Tockner, Klement, TU258 togola, anne, TH028, TU083 Tokimatsu, Koji, MO217, TU264 Tolkamp, Harry, TUPC19 Tollefsen, Erik, WE203 Tollefsen, Knut Erik, 29, 34, 220, 459, WE011, WEPC16, WE017, TH072, MO210 Tollefsen, Knut-Eric, 365 Toman, Mihael, TU059 Tomanek, Lars, 400 Tomovic, Gordana, MO282 Toms, Leisa-Maree, MO196 Tonello, Paulo, TH049 Tonietto, Alessandra, MO124 Toolaram, Anju Priya, TU124 Topp, Ed, 247 Topp, Edward, 348, WE106 Tordon, Rob, TH090

Torelli, Marco, MO146 Tornambe, Andrea, MO031, MO045 Tornier, Ingo, 170 Torp, Torfinn, 171 Torrent, Fernando, TU018 Torres, Carmen, TH123 Torres, Joao, 58 Torrijos, Manuel, MO122 Toschki, Andreas, 350, WE086 Touceda, Maria, MOPC09 Tourinho, Paula, 196, TU159, TU160 Tournant, Pierline, 181 Townsend, Kallie, 288 Traas, Theo, 56, MO151, MO308 Trajkovic, Dragana, MO116 Tran Thi, Minh Hue, MO015 Tran Thi Minh, Hue, MO001, MO025 Traore, Mohamed, 46 Trapp, Judith, 402 Trapp, Matthias, 319, 320, TU209, TU273 Trapp, Stefan, 208, 596, TU228 Traudt, Elizabeth, 261 Traunspurger, Walter, 159, TH135 Trautwein, Christoph, TU119 Tremblay, Louis, 619 Tresise, Mike, TU015 Trevisan, Marco, 465 Treyer, Karin, WEPC03 Triebskorn, Rita, 72, 73, 133, 227, 300, MO102, MO119 Trindade, Tito, MO147 Tripault, Hadrien, 323 Trnovec, Tomas, 84 Trofimova, Elena, MO294 Trollope, Henry, 176 Trombini, Chiara, 377 Truman, Clint, TU276 Tsapakis, Manolis, MO034, MO035, MO154, MO247 Tsui, Mirabelle, MO058 Tsunemi, Kiyotaka, MO202 Tubic, Aleksandra, MO286 Tuerk, Jochen, 246, MO109, MO258 Tufi, Sara, 89, 567 Tuma, Axel, 396 Tunic, Tanja, MO266, MO286 Turek, Agata, TH007

Turies, Cyril, 74, WE138 Turja, Raisa, 63, 124, MO047 Turk, Valentina, 277, TU301 turk sekulic, maja, WE149, MO191, MO192 Turkcu, Neslihan, WE239 Turner, Amalia, WE179 Turritto, Alise, TH091 Turtiainen, Tuukka, 490 Tyler, Charles, 88, 172, 234, 391, 405, TU008, TU034, MO168 Tysklind, Mats, 592, MO283

U

Uceta Rojas, Patricia, TU042 Udechukwu, Bede, 60 Udert, Kai, 14 Ufer, Andreas, 521 Ugalde, Rocio, 2 Ugaya, Cassia Maria, MOPC11 Uher, Emmanuelle, WE225 Ukor, Friday, TU190 Uksa, Marie, MO085 Ullucci, Sonia, MO275 Umbuzeiro, Gisela, 163, 478, MO067, TH141 Undap, Suzanne, MO028 Undeman, Emma, TU201 Unrine, Jason, MO179 Uren Webster, Tamsyn, 88, 461, TH016 Urien, Nastassia, WE223, WE225 Urlich, Nadin, WE231 Urrea, Gemma, MO076 Urushitani, Hiroshi, TH153 Uzbekov, Beksultan, WE114 Uzor, Michelle, 530

V

Vacchi, Francine, 163 Vadenbo, Carl, TU234 Vaisanen, Ari, 264, TU010 Val, Adalberto, TU024 Val, Jonatan, MO082, TU111 Valarezo, Carlos, 61 Valbonesi, Paola, 249 Valdes, Juliana, MO039, TH138 Valdivia, Sonia, 394, WE279 Vale, Carlos, MO053, TH102 valente, clara, MOPC10 Valenti, Marco, MO148

271


authors

Valentine, Rudolph, WE167 Valle-Sistac, Jennifer, MO141 Valles, Bettina, WE026 Vallotton, Nathalie, TU307 Vallverdu Coll, Nuria, 237 Vallverdu-Coll, Nuria, 238, TU042 Valsami-Jones, Eugenia, 80 Valsecchi, Sara, 374, TU009, TU069, WE159, WE171, WE291 Van Ael, Evy, 558 Van Aerle, Ronny, 88 van Bavel, Bert, TU046 Van Broekhuizen, Fleur, MO204 Van Cauwenberghe, Lisbeth, 304 Van de Bor, Margot, 84 van de Meent, Dik, 480, WE150, MO151, TU309 Van de Perre, Dimitri, 517 van de Waart, Beppy, TH010 van Delft, Wouter, TU068 van den Brink, Nico, 440, MO157 van den Brink, Paul, 2, 3, 5, 42, 365, 388, 442, 471, 472, 517, MO001, MO005, MO015, MO016, MO017, WEPC19, MO022, MO023, MO024, MO025, WE054, WE055, TU125, WE234, WE242, WE247 Van den Heuvel-Greve, Martine, 158 van der Burg, Bart, 29 van der Ent, Ruud, 272 van der Geest, Harm, 10, 125 Van der Heijden, Marcel, TU157 van der Kamp, Jonathan, 150, MO216 Van Der Kraak, Glen, 32 van der Lee, Martijn, WE208 van der Linden, Ton, 265 van der Meulen, Myra, MO032 Van der Oost, Ron, 90 Van der Steen, Jozef, MO299 van der Veen, Andrea, TH158 van der Velde, Marijn, TH113 van der Werf, Hayo, MOPC05 van Diepenbeek, Peter, TUPC19

272

authors

van Donk, Ellen, TU120 van Egmond, R, TH143 van Gestel, C.A.M., 75, 77, 196, 207, TU159, TU182 Van Gestel, Cornelis, 264, TU183 van Gheluwe, Marnix, 156, TU184 van Gils, Jos, 365, 480 van Ginkel, Kees, 418 van Griensven, Ann, 321 van Hattum, Bert, 306, WE293, WE295 Van Hees, May, 490 Van Hemelryck, Steven, 218 van hoeck, arne, WE216 Van Hoof, Gert, 554 van Leeuwen, Stefan, WE206, WE208 van Loon, Patricia, TH111 van Mameren, Carry, MO269 Van Meulebroek, Lieven, TU070 van Pelt, Frank, MO092 van Pomeren, Marinda, 174 van Ras, Niels, 576 Van Regenmortel, Tina, TU180 Van Sprang, Patrick, 55, 205, TU178, TU179, TU214 van Straalen, Nico M., 345, 470 Van Turnhout, Nigel, TU292 van Veggel, Marc, 326 van Vliet, Sander, WE121 van Vuren, Johan, MO006, TU015 Van Wensem, Joke, 622, 625 van Wezel, Annemarie, 258, 365, 481 van wijngaarden, Rene, 5 Van Zelm, Rosalie, TUPC05, TH113, TU254, TU258 Vandecasteele, Ine, TUPC13 Vandegehuchte, Michiel, 121, 203, TU070 Vanden Bussche, Julie, 121, TU070 Vandenhove, Hildegarde, 490, WE216, WE240 Vangheluwe, Marnix, 55 Vanhaecke, Lynn, 121, TU070 Vannoni, Marta, MO038 Vanrolleghem, Peter, 618 Varano, Valentina, TU118 Varese, Cristina, 17

Vargas, Mar, TU248 Vargas, Micaela, 18 Vargas, Seiling, 1 Vargas Villalobos, Seiling, MO014 Varrault, Gilles, 537 Vasconcelos, Ana, MO007 Vasconcelos, Ana Maria, MO011 Vasileiadis, Sotirios, 465 Vasilev, Krasimir, 253, WE181 Vasileva, Emiliya, TH092 Vasters, Kerstin, 141 Vauchez, Antoine, 189 Vaxelaire, Stephane, 447 Vazquez Botello, Alfonso, MO002 Vazquez-Rowe, Ian, 607 Vázquez-Rowe, Ian, TU268 Vazquez-Sune, Enric, TH031 Vazzola, Federica, WE143 Veber, Philippe, 495 Velasco, Josefa, TH022 Velzeboer, Ilona, 313 Venâncio, Cátia, TH024 Vendemiatti, Josiane, 163 Ventura, Sónia, 491, TU233 Venzmer, Joachim, WE202 Verbruggen, Eric, 56, 235 Vercaigne, Isabelle, TH146, TU179 Verdonck, Frederik, TH146, TU179, TU191, TU214 Vergauwen, Lucia, 33, 172, 460, 512, TU019 Verges, Charlotte, MO009 Vergnoux, Aurore, 80 Verhaert, Vera, 59 Verheijen, Frank, WE052 Vermeiren, Frederic, 218 Vermeirssen, Etienne, 278, 536, 574, WE022, MO098, MO245 Verneuil, Laurent, MO158 Verones, Francesca, 271 Verougstraete, Violaine, TU191 Verschuren, Dirk, WE054 Versieren, Liske, 262 Versonnen, Bram, 155 Verstraelen, Sandra, 33, 512 Verweij, Rudo, 75, 127 Verweij, Rudo A, TU188 Verzat, Benoit, WE259, WE267 Vestergren, Robin, MO206

Vethaak, Dick, 10, 125, MO032, MO039, TU144, TU169 Vetter, D., TU191 Vettier, Aurelie, 173 Vey, Matthias, MO142 Viaene, Karel, TUPC16, WE055, WE063, WE234, WE247 Vialle, Claire, 136 Vianelli, Alberto, MO275 Viant, Mark, 90, 389 Viarengo, Aldo, 277, 349, TU301 Viaud, Valerie, TU243 Vidal, Rosario, TUPC04 Vidal-Martinez, Victor, MO010 Vidaurre, Rodrigo, WE284 Vieira, Armando, MO124 Vieira, Eny, TU076, TU095, WE125, WE215 Vieira, Paulo, WE177 Vierna, Joaquin, WE028 Vighi, Marco, 219, TH019, WE058, WE270 Vignati, Davide, 206, 597, TH108, TH148, MO152 Vignati, Davide AL, WE113 Vigneron, Amandine, 285, TU006 Vignoles, Christian, 136 Vigon, Bruce, 394 Vijaya Bhaskara Rao, Arava, MO021, WE222 Vijver, Martina, 412, 433, 434, 538, 541, WE030 Vilarrasa, Marta, TU189 Villa, Sara, WE270 Villalba, Gara, MO233 Villanueva, Pedro, TU268 Villanueva Fragozo, Susana, MO002 Villeneuve, Dan, 131 Villeneuve, Daniel, 29, 33, 86, 512, MO209 Villeneuve, Jacques, 447 Vinas, Lucia, 123, MO051 Vinas, Natalia, 29, 31, 34, 91, MO212, MO213 Vincze, Krisztina, 133 Vionnet, Samuel, 502, 605, TH134 Vis, R, TU290 Visin, Flavia, WE224 Vitkus, Rimantas, MO097,

MO164 Vizcaino, Anton, WE028 Vlahos, Penny, MO048, MO049, MO050, WE107, WE157 Voegelin, Andreas, 143 Vogel, Hans-Joachim, 73 Vogel, Ulla, TU175 Vojinovic MIloradov, Mirjana, WE124, WE149, MO191, MO192 Volchko, Yevheniya, 592, MO283 Volkart, Kathrin, 398 Völker, Doris, WE182, WE184 Volker, Steve, TU037, TU071 Volker, Steven, 179 Volland, Moritz, 377 Vollenweider, Pierre, 355 Vollmer, Tobias, WE019 Vollrath, Fritz, 553 Volpi Ghirardini, Annamaria, MO065 von Briesen, Hagen, MO190 Von der Kammer, Frank, 486 Von der Ohe, Peter, 245, 573 von Elert, Eric, 141, MO140 von Fumetti, Stefanie, WE051 Von Goetz, Natalie, 27, 81 von Gunten, Urs, TU087 von Mérey, Georg, 98, 169, WE019 von Moos, Nadia, WE178 Von Osten, Jaime, MO054, MO069, WE294 von Stedingk, Hans, WE066 Vorberg, Lisa, MO120 Vossen, R., WEPC22 Voua Otomo, Laetitia, 469 Voua Otomo, Patricks, 469, TU165 Voulvoulis, Nick, 515 Vracko, Marjan, 492 Vrana, Branislav, 162, TH053 Vrbkova, Silvie, 98 Vrijhof, Henk, WE290 Vulliet, Emmanuelle, 189, 366, TUPC24, TU078 Vulpe, Chris, 389 Vyviurska, Olga, WE124

W

Waaijers, Susanne, 425, WE096

Waeterschoot, Hugo, 55, TU191, MO305 Wagelmans, Marlea, 576, WE097 Wagenaar, Ina, TU015 Wagner, Danny, TU127 Wagner, Philippe, 76 Wagner, Stephan, TU114 Walker, Lee, 236, TU041 Wall, Erika, WE137 Wallace, Dennis, 474 Wallace, Derek, 100 Wallin, Hakan, TU175 Walter, Christian, TU243 Walton, Helen, 40, MO251 Walz, Karl-Heinz, WE133 Wan, Kwok Wai, MO058 Wang, Bo, 305 Wang, Jian, TH038 Wang, Lan, MO019 Wang, Magnus, 45, TH029, WE248, MO254, WE256 Wang, Songfeng, 420 Wang, Wen-Xiong, TH038 Wang, Yujue, MO276 Wang, Zhanyun, 307, 375 Wania, Frank, 210, TH062, MO185, TU194, TU195 Wanke, Ruediger, TUPC21 Wannaz, Cedric, TUPC02 Warn, Tony, 612 Warne, Michael, 619 Warnecke, Dietmar, TH158 Warner, Nicholas, MO131 Warwick, Oliver, WE301 Wassbotten, Ingar, MO131 Waszak, Karolina, 348 Watanabe, Claudia, MO018 Watanabe, Haruna, TU001 Watanabe, Karen, MO208 Watanabe, Marcos, WE258 Watanabe, Norihiro, WE231 Watanuki, Yutaka, TU140 Watermann, Burkard, TU204 Wathen, John, 298 Wattier, Remi, 285, TU006 Waugh, Courtney, 116 Wawryniuk, Milena, TU086, TU113 Weaver, Paul, 354 Weber, Christoph, 168 Weber, Denis, TU206, TU304 Weber, Frank-Andreas, 190 Weber, Klaus, TU012 Webster, Alain, WEPC08 Wee, June, WE025

273


authors

Wehrli, Bernhard, 531 Wei, Hu, WE064 Weidema, B.P., 149, MO218 Weidmann, Nicolas, 398 Weil, Marcel, 97, MO236 Weil, Mirco, MO115, TU167 Weimerskirch, Henri, 117 Weisbrod, Annie, 554 Weiss, Frederik, 571 Weiss, Jana, 371, MO195 Weljie, Aalim, 404 Weltje, Lennart, 563, 614, MO240 Welzl, Gerhard, MO085 Wende, Sabine, WE207 Wenning, Richard, MO241 Wepener, Victor, 59, MO006, TU165 Werner, Christine, WE118 Werner, David, 328, WE020 Werner, Inge, 134, 277, 278, 609, WE022, MO098, MO115, MO245, MO265, TU301 Werner, Stephen, WE122 wernersson, ann sofie, WE134 Wess, Ralf Arno, WE068 West, Charles, 428 Westman, Ola, WE136 Westrup, Sebastian, 246, MO109 Wetmore, Barbara, 165 Wetzlinger, Renate, MO287 Weyhmueller, Michael, 73 Weyman, Gabe, 44, 98 Weyman, Gabriel, WE019 Whale, Graham, 362, TH026, WE067 Whalen, Joann, 198 Wheeler, James R., 563, TU013, MO240 Whelan, Maurice, 29 Whelan, Mick, 423, MO131 White, J Wilson, 231 White, Jason, TH043 White, Joseph, 100 White, Mark, TU276 White, Thomas, 389 White, Will, 494 Whitehouse, Paul, 610, 612, 613 Whitley, David, TU221 Whitney, Micheal, WE157 Whitworth, Deanne, MO071 Wiberg, Karin, 588, 592, TU090, WE137, WE154,

274

authors

MO283 Wichmann, Arne, 229 Wick, Arne, WE101 Wick, Lukas, TU226 Widmer, Franco, TU157 Wieczorek, Matthias, 476 Wiedemann, Gisela, TU215 Wiegand, Claudia, 347, WE004, WE023 Wiesner, Mark, WE179 Wiesner, Mark R, WE179 Wiest, Laure, 189 Wiklund, Ann-Kristin, MO072 Wilcke, Wolfgang, 61 Wild, Seanan, 115, MO026 Wildbolz, Caroline, WEPC07 Wilde, Marcelo, TU119 Wildenberg, Martin, 218 Wildey, Ros, TU231 Wilfart, Aurelie, 525 Wilken, Rolf-Dieter, MO187 Wilkes, Graham, 348 Willett, Catherine, 31 Williams, Mike, TUPC07 Williams, Richard, TU008 Williams, Tim, 90 Williams, Tony, 239, TU047 Williamson, Jacob, 261 Willig, Michael, WE231 Willing, Andreas, WE070 Willrodt, Christine, 490 Wilson, Lain, MO110 Wilson, Rod, TH016 Windfeld, Ronja, MO156 Wingfield, John Charteris, 120 Wings, T., WEPC22 Winklhoefer, Karin, TH032 Wiseman, Clare, 82 Wiseman, Steve, 87, WE008, MO214 Wisniewska, Olga, 355 Witt, Gesine, TH052, MO061, TH074 Witte, Francois, TU242 Wittebol, Janneke, WE097 Witters, Hilda, 33, 512 Wittmer, Anita, MO115 Wittmer, Irene, 226, 367 Woessner, Annika, WE098 Wohde, Manuel, WE104, WE105, TU129, TU130 Wolf, Anja, 413, MO187 Wolf, Jeffrey, TU012 Wolf, Kirana, 214 Wolff, Deidre, TH120

Wolff, Helene, TH063 Wolfram, Jakob, 474 Woltosz, Walter, WE227 Won, A-Young, TH194 Wong, Bob, 230 Wong, Chris K C, 462 Wong, Fiona Woo, Seonock, TU108 Woodburn, Kent, 383, 438, WEPC13, WE192, WE193, WE290 Woodhall, James, 380 Woods, Richard, TH026 Worbe, Sebastien, 94 Worth, Andrew, TH006 Woudneh, Million, TH082 Wowra, Karoline, TU246 Wragg, Joanna, 594 Wright, Stephanie, TU138 Wu, Lingling, 413 Wu, Qian, WE132 Wu, Xiaoyan, MO019 Wunderlin, Daniel, TU007 Wunderlin, Pascal, 281 Wurm, Karl, 73 Wyrwoll, Anne, 148 Wyss, Franziska, 452

X

Xia, Pu, 427, MO215 Xia, Xinghui, TH061 Xian, Qiming, MO114 Xiao, Hang, WE292 Xiao, Hongxia, 413, WE139 Xiao, Ruiyang, WEPC14 Ximba, Bhekumusa, WE300 Xing, BaoShan, TH043 Xirogiannopoulou, Pelagia, MO255 Xu, Feng, 210 Xu, Ming, 188 Xu, Shihe, MO129 Xuereb, Benoit, MO070

Y

Yagur-Kroll, Sharon, 277, TU301 Yakimenko, Olga, MOPC18 Yalaltdinova, Albina, TU239 Yamada, Tadasu, TU045 Yamanaka, Noriko, WE158 Yamashita, Nobuyoshi, 137, WE158

Yamashita, Rei, TH058, TU140 Yamazaki, Eriko, WE158 Yamazaki, Kunihiko, TU305 Yang, Gongda, WE251 Yang, Jisu, 579 Yargeau, Viviane, TU127 Yaseneva, Polina, TH132 Yasuoka, Rieko, TU264 Yeh, Ruby, 280 Yeo, Geok, TH058 Yim, Un Hyuk, MO063, TH064 Ying, Guang-Guo, 139 Yoccoz, Nigel Gilles, 118 Yon, Denis, TU218 Yoo, Sun-Ju, TH136 Yoon, Hye-On, WE112 Yoon, Hyeon, WE111 Yoshida, Kentaro, MO217 Yoshii, Hiroshi, MO044 Yoshioka, Koji, WE158 Yoshioka, Miyako, WE158 Ythier, Eric, MO301 Ytreberg, Erik, 122 Yu, Hongxia, 427 Yu, Seungho, TU136, WE165 Yu, Somi, TU158 Yuan, Xingzhong, 413, WE064 Yuan, Ye, 101 Yue, Yang, 381 Yum, Seungshic, TU108 Yurchenko, Yury, MO126

Z

Zabeo, Alex, MOPC13, TU214, WE257 Zacchi, Flavia, MO094 Zachary, Dan, WE261 Zahlsen, Kolbjorn, WE100 Zaldibar, Be単at, MO043 Zaltauskaite, Jurate, WE033, MO097 Zamagni, Alessandra, 218, 604 Zanella, Michela, MO152 Zang, Xiaoran, 318 Zanoni, Maria Valnice, 163 Zanuto, Guilherme, WE125 Zapata-Perez, Omar, MO010 Zare, Ava, 404 Zaun, Florian, MO187 Zee, Jenna, WE008 Zelnickova, Lenka, TU022

zeman, florence, TU017 Zemmelink, Henk, WE121 Zereini, Fathi, 82 Zeri, Christina, MO154 Zetzsch, Cornelius, WE270 Zhang, Gan, WE091 Zhang, Huanhuan, 310 Zhang, Lihong, TU126 Zhang, Luqing, 432 Zhang, Peng, 101 Zhang, Xianming, WE130 Zhang, Xiaowei, 427, WE002, MO215 Zhang, Ya-Qi, WE174 Zhang, Yuan, MOPC13 Zhang, Zhenxuan, TH064 Zhao, Jian, TH043 Zhao, Shizhen, TH033 Zheng, Qian, WE091 ZHU, Bingqing, 424 Zhu, Yong-Guan, 247 Zichella, Antonella, 269 Ziegler, Susan, 543, TH088 Zielinski, Patryk, TU086 Zijp, Michiel, 219, TU309 Zimmer, Elke, WE240 Zimmer, Miriam, WE116 Zimmermann, Benedikt, 97 Zimmermann, YannickSerge, 426 Zinck, Sebastien, 627 Ziv, Guy, TH027 Zivancev, Nevena, WE149 Zivtins, Roberts, MO251 Zlabek, Vladimir, TH055, TH060, TU132 Zoh, Kyung-Duk, WE123, TH194 Zonca, Annalisa, MO277 Zonja, Bozo, TUPC22 Zoppini, Annamaria, MO064 Zotina, Tatiana, MO294 Zou, Hongyan, WE297 Zounkova, Radka, 277, TU301 Zoz, Fabio, TH101 Zubrod, Jochen, 358, 474, 574 Zuccato, Ettore, 184 Zuin, Alessandra, MO065, WE224 Zuin, Stefano, MO232 Zuliani, Filippo, WEPC02 Zulkifli, Syaizwan, 60 Zullei-Seibert, Ninette, WE098 Zurawicz, Ewelina, WE221

Zuriaga, Estefania, TU054 Zushi, Yasuyuki, 242, TU096, TU097 Zuyderhoff, Alix, TH013 Zuzow, Marcus, 400 Zwintscher, Ariane, WE194

275


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S U B M I T YO U R A B S T R A C T S B Y 2 8 M AY !

SETAC North America 35th Annual Meeting 9 – 1 3 N O V E M B E R 2 0 1 4 , VA N C O U V E R , B C VA N C O U V E R . S E TA C . O R G

All SETAC members receive free access through the new journal apps! Pick up your access code at www.setac.org/group/journals

Sea to Sky

Interconnecting Ecosystems


The Quest started in Africa...

20th

SETAC Europe LCA Case Study Symposium

LCA in promoting eco-innovation and sustainability: education, research and application Novi Sad, Serbia, 24-26 November 2014

Global Horizon Scanning Project Help SETAC identify geographically specific research needs to address stressor impacts on environmental quality.

lcanovisad.setac.org Symposium topics: • LCA and Ecodesign to promote eco-innovation, • Education on promoting eco-innovation and sustainability, • LCA and SMEs: main motivations and advantages of using LCA, • Translating Life Cycle Thinking/LCA results into communications; • Environmental footprints, • Broadening the scope of sustainability assessment: Social LCA and LCC, • Developments in LCA methodology: increasing the reliability, simplicity and applicability,

• LCA databases and data networks: development and application of regionalspecific LCI databases, • LCA of energy systems, • LCA of bio-systems and food products, • LCA in industry - eco-innovation, • LCA and urban metabolism: infrastructure, transportation, waste management, • Special session: LCA networking - improving cooperation for eco-innovation, • Special session: Water footprint - methods, standards and tools

Provide your Big Question in the SETAC Square

Scan the QR code for tinyurl.com/SETAC-Q to submit your research questions.

A collaboration between SETAC and the Faculty of Technical Sciences Novi Sad, with support of the CASE LCA Network.

Abstract submission now open!


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SETAC North America 35th Annual Meeting Sea to Sky: Interconnecting Ecosystems 9–13 November 2014 | Vancouver, Canada vancouver.setac.org

SETAC Latin America 2015 Meeting TBD | Buenos Aires, Argentina

SETAC Asia/Pac

Advancing Science f 14–17 September 2014 adelaide.setac.org

Upcoming SETAC 288


SETAC Europe Office Avenue de la Toison d’Or 67 B-1060 Brussels, Belgium T +32 2 772 72 81 F +32 2 770 53 86 setaceu@setac.org SETAC North America Office 229 South Baylen Street, 2nd Floor Pensacola, FL 32502, USA T +1 850 469 1500 F 1 850 469 9778 setac@setac.org

www.setac.org


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