Meeting program
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- SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS (TO EVER-CHANGING ECOLOGICAL CHALLENGES) Proud sponsor of the SETAC North America Annual Meeting
- WEDNESDAY 9 NOVEMBER GENERAL OPENING HOURS
- Thanks to the SETAC North America Board of Directors for their dedicated service in 2016! President Karsten Liber, Univ of Saskatchewan, Canada Vice President
- Member-at-Large Kim Fernie, Environment Canada, Canada Board Members
- Student Member L. Blair Paulik, Oregon State Univ, USA SETAC North America Executive Director
- STUDENT NOONTIME SEMINAR 11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. | Conway | SOLD OUT Hindsight May Be 20:20; How Good Is Our Foresight Kate Sellers
- Sold ou t 49 twitter.com/SETAC_World SETACOrlando DAILY KEYNOTE SPEAKER
- CAREER NETWORKING RECEPTION
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SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS (TO EVER-CHANGING ECOLOGICAL CHALLENGES) Proud sponsor of the SETAC North America Annual Meeting SETACad1016v6.indd 2 10/7/16 4:30 PM WEDNESDAY 9 NOVEMBER GENERAL OPENING HOURS 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Registration East Registration 8:00 a.m.–6:30 p.m. Poster Viewing and SETAC Store Exhibit Hall 9:00 a.m.–6:30 p.m. Exhibitions – Last Day! Exhibit Hall DAILY SCHEDULE 7:00 a.m.–8:00 a.m. Poster Setup Exhibit Hall 8:00 a.m.–9:15 a.m. Morning Platform Sessions See session listing 9:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Career Navigation for Students and Recent Graduates Exhibit Hall 9:15 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Coffee Break Exhibit Hall 10:00 a.m.–11:15 a.m. Morning Platform Sessions cont’d See session listing 11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Student Noontime Seminar Conway 11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Lunch Break 1:00 p.m.–2:30 p.m. North America Student Assembly Conway 1:00 p.m.–2:15 p.m. Afternoon Platform Sessions See session listing 2:15 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Coffee Break Exhibit Hall 3:00 p.m.–4:15 p.m. Afternoon Platform Sessions cont’d See session listing 4:30 p.m.–5:15 p.m. Keynote Speaker: David Schindler 5:00 p.m.–6:30 p.m. Poster Social Exhibit Hall 6:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m. Career Networking Reception St. John’s 24 9:00 p.m.–Late Student Mixer (ticket required) Club 39 47 Thanks to the SETAC North America Board of Directors for their dedicated service in 2016! President Karsten Liber, Univ of Saskatchewan, Canada Vice President Tom Augspurger, Federal Government, USA Secretary-Treasurer Douglas J. Fort, Fort Environmental Laboratories, Inc., USA Immediate Past President Mary C. Reiley, Federal Government, USA Member-at-Large Kim Fernie, Environment Canada, Canada Board Members Mace Barron, Federal Government, USA Jennifer Bouldin, Arkansas State Univ, USA Michelle Embry, ILSI HESI, USA Wendy Hillwalker, SC Johnson, A Family Company, USA Roman P. Lanno, Ohio State Univ, USA Fernando Martínez-Jerónimo, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas-I.P.N., Mexico Matt Moore, Federal Government, USA John Toll, Windward Environmental, USA Katrina Von Stackelberg, NEK Associates, LTD, USA Kristie L. Willett, Univ of Mississippi, USA Student Member L. Blair Paulik, Oregon State Univ, USA SETAC North America Executive Director Greg E. Schiefer, ex officio Thank you! 48 WEDNESDAY 9 NOVEMBER Business Meetings TIME MEETING LOCATION 7:00 a.m.–8:00 a.m. Midwest Regional Chapter St. John’s 26/27 7:00 a.m.–8:00 a.m. Training and Education Committee St. John’s 32/33 10:00 a.m.–10:45 a.m. SETAC Globe Meeting St. John’s 28 10:45 a.m.–11:30 a.m. SETAC Communications Committee St. John’s 28 11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. IEAM Editorial Luncheon St. John’s 31 11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Wildlife Toxicology Advisory Group Gatlin A1 12:00 p.m.–1:00 p.m. Global Awards Committee St. John’s 32/33 12:00 p.m.–1:00 p.m. Public Outreach Committee St. John’s 28 12:00 p.m.–1:00 p.m. Sediment Advisory Group St. John’s 30 1:00 p.m.–2:30 p.m. 2017 Program Committee St. John’s 26/27 1:00 p.m.–2:00 p.m. North America Awards & Fellowship Committee St. John’s 30 2:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. North America Board of Directors St. John’s 32/33 3:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m. Plant Advisory Group St. John’s 30 4:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. Ecological Risk Assessment Advisory Group St. John’s 28 4:30 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Exposure Modeling Advisory Group St. John’s 26/27 6:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m. Career Networking Reception St. John’s 24/25 6:30 p.m.–8:00 p.m. Bioaccumulation Science Advisory Group St. John’s 32/33 STUDENT NOONTIME SEMINAR 11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. | Conway | SOLD OUT Hindsight May Be 20:20; How Good Is Our Foresight? Kate Sellers President-Elect of the Product Stewardship Society and Technical Director at ERM Our decisions as scientists can profoundly affect the world in which we live, but no scientist has complete information or perfectly accurate tools to support their recommen- dations. We must often balance competing objectives and act when we can only imperfectly understand the potential consequences. In this noontime seminar, we’ll explore how we make wise decisions as environmental scientists in an ever-changing world. Kate Sellers, a Technical Director in the product sustainability practice at ERM, will catalyze the discussion with a case study from her recent book “Product Stewardship: Life Cycle Analysis and the Environment” (CRC Press, 2015). Attendees will use the lessons we can learn from that look back in time to explore some of the issues that challenge us today. We hope to engage the attendees in a lively, thought-provoking discussion! Sponsored by: Landing your dream job can be tricky. Join us at the Career Navigation Event from 9:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m. in the Exhibit Hall to hear expert advice about how to get there! Sold ou t 49 twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACOrlando DAILY KEYNOTE SPEAKER 4:30 p.m.–5:15 p.m. | Panzacola F3, F4, G2 David Schindler Killam Memorial Chair and Professor of Ecology, University of Alberta David Schindler began his career as an assistant professor at Trent University from 1966–1968. In 1968, he was the founding direc- tor of the Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) in northwestern Ontario, where ecosystem-scale experiments with a variety of pollutants and long-term monitoring of lakes and streams have taken place for more than 40 years. His seminal work on eutrophication has been used to establish ecologi- cal management policies around the world. Schindler spent many hours explaining his research on phosphorous to policymakers, which resulted in the removal of phosphates from laundry detergents and improvements in sewage treatment. Recently, his work on the effects of oil sand mining on the Athabasca River, and its tributaries has prompted upgraded monitor- ing at both the provincial and federal levels. These accomplishments alone are laudable, but Schindler has also spent much of his time working with Aboriginal Canadians for the protection of their aquatic resources. He has been the Killam Memorial Chair and Professor of Ecology at the University of Alberta since 1989. Schindler’s science aims to underpin environmental policy and has earned him numerous national and inter- national awards, including the Gerhard Herzberg Gold Medal, the First Stockholm Water Prize, the Volvo Environmental Prize and the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement. Schindler is the 2016 SETAC Rachael Carson Award recipient. The award is bestowed only once every four years at the SETAC World Congress and was initiated on the 25th anniversary of the publication of Silent Spring. CAREER NETWORKING RECEPTION 6:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m. | St. John’s 24 SOLD OUT Maximizing Personal and Team Performance: Speed Networking Reception for Early to Mid-Career Professionals Are you looking for strategies to maximize individual and team productivity? Have you ever been asked to deliver the impossible or unknowingly asked the impossible of others? If you answered yes to any of these, please join us at a speed networking reception hosted by the SETAC North America Career Development Committee, where you will have the opportunity to interact with many experienced SETAC leaders from academia, business and government. This SETAC event is for early to mid-career professionals, but students are warmly welcomed! Space is limited so advance registration is recommended. Your ticket includes admission to the event, 2 drink tickets and light snacks. Final day to play exhibitor bingo! Hand in your card by noon and join the drawing during the Poster Social. 50 | 7 th SETAC World Congress/SETAC North America 37 th Annual Meeting Presentation will be recorded. 8:00–8:15 8:20–8:35 8:40–8:55 9:00–9:15 C O F F E E B R E A K A1 Assessing Contaminant Effects in Multi-Stress Ecosystems - Part 1 | David Ostrach, Cameron Irvine 376 Can a comprehensive understanding of real drivers of ecological degradation be drawn from presently available data? A case study for Europe | I. Rodea-Palomares 377 Urban runoff differentially affects coho and chum salmon spawners | J. McIntyre 378 Climate change and contaminants: A recipe for trouble | S. Hasenbein 379 Potential Effects of Pesticide Mixtures on Stream Quality in the Midwestern United States | L. Nowell A2 The Other Oil Spills | Marthe Monique Gagnon, Emily Maung-Douglass 384 Effects of a petroleum spill on stream communities in West Creek, Colorado | S. Duggan 385 Lac-Mégantic oil spill and disaster - Quality and Toxicity Assessment: Results, Difficulties and Concerns | R. Galvez 386 Diluted Bitumen (Oil Sands) Spills into Rivers--Lessons from the 2010 Enbridge Line 6B Pipeline Release into the Kalamazoo River | F. Fitzpatrick 387 The Montara Oil Spill, Timor Sea - Two Years of Fish Health Monitoring | M. Gagnon A3 EDCs and Pharmaceuticals in the Environment - Part 1 | Marc Mills, Kavitha Dasu, Edward Kolodziej, Ruth Marfil-Vega 392 Analysis on the Effects of Pharmaceuticals and Their Uptake and Metabolism in Plants Using Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry | R. Mullen 393 The fate of antibiotics and antimicrobial biocides in Swedish sewage treatment plants | M. Östman 394 Occurrence of contaminants of emerg- ing concern (CECs) in reclaimed water intended for potential potable reuse | K. Dasu 395 Distribution of Endocrine Disrupting Compounds in the Aquatic Food Web, Lake Mead, Arizona and Nevada | M. Moran A4 Fate, Toxicology, or Risk Assessment of Materials of Interest to the Military | Ron Checkai, Doris Anders, Mark Johnson, David Johnson, Geoffrey Sunahara 400 Ecotoxicological risk of explosives and heavy metals on aquatic species in surround- ing water system nearby active firing range | M. Kim 401 Toxicological Effects of Munitions Compounds and their Breakdown Products on Coral | C. Woodley 402 Aquatic Toxicity of the Insensitive Explosive DEMN | M. Quinn 403 Birds are not feathered mammals: phylogenetic differences in toxicity from oral exposures to 3-Nitro-1,2,4-Triazol-5-One (NTO) | A. Jackovitz F1 Toxicity Extrapolations in Aquatic Organisms and Wildlife | Adriana Bejarano, Morgan Willming 408 Rethinking the Use of Uncertainty Factors for the Derivation of Toxicity Reference Values | E. Mendelsohn 409 The chemistry side of AOP: implications for toxicity extrapolation | M. Barron 410 Integrating Aquatic Interspecies Toxicity Estimates into Large Databases: Model Evaluations and Data Gains | A. Bejarano 411 Effects of Deepwater Horizon Oil on Red-Eared Sliders and Common Snapping Turtles as Surrogate Species for Sea Turtles | C. Mitchelmore F2 Experimental and Modeling Approaches to Account for Real-World Complexity in Environmental Toxicology | Chairs ---> 416 AQUATOX: A quantitative platform to identify and evaluate multiple interacting stressors in complex environments in an intensely farmed watershed | E. Blancher 417 Assessing the Combined Effects of Metal Contamination and Sediment Deposition on Benthic Invertebrate Colonization | B. Dabney 418 Utilizing Higher Tier Aquatic Exposure Modeling and Monitoring for Pesticide Risk Assessments | D. Dyer 419 Building a Predictive Adverse Outcome Pathway for Multiple Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors to Predict Effects to Population Scale Endpoints | W. Landis F3 F4 G2 Advanced Analytical Methods for Contaminant Discovery | Nathan Dodder, Bernard Crimmins, Lee Ferguson, Shane Snyder 424 Exploring environmental chemical space through HR/AM mass spectrometry and cheminformatics: The example of wastewater- derived organic micropollutants | L. Ferguson 425 Nontarget Analysis of Polar Organic Chemical Integrating Sampler Extracts-- complementary tools for unknowns analysis | E. Furlong 426 Occurrence of suspect and non-target con- taminants and their transformation products in a linked surface water system influenced by treated wastewater | A. Huba 427 Evaluation of Emerging Contaminants in Great Lakes Fish using comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography high resolution mass spectrometry | S. Fernando G1 Climate Change and Water Resource Management: An Ever-Changing Challenge | Matt Moore, William Clements, Jennifer Lee Stauber 432 Life in a Warmer More Acidic World: Physiological Implications of Climate Change on Aquatic Organisms | K. Brix 433 Assessing Climate Change Effects on Freshwater Fish Distribution Using a Habitat Suitability Model | T. Shim 434 Protecting Aquatic Life from Effects of Streamflow Alteration | D. Eignor 435 Ecotoxicological impact of re-mobilized sediments and flood events for look regu- lated rivers and wetlands | H. Hollert H1 H2 Microplastics in the Aquatic Environment: Fate and Effects - Part 1 | Kay Ho, Robert Burgess, John Weinstein 440 A Framework for Dynamic Estimation of Environmental Concentrations of Microplastics in WWTP Effluents and Receiving Waters at a National Scale | N. Maples-Reynolds 441 Sorption of triclosan and methyl- triclosan to microplastic and potential for facilitated release from wastewater treatment plants | B. Beckingham 442 The effects of tributaries on the transport of microplastics in the Hudson River Watershed | I. Krout 443 Uptake and Retention of Microplastic Particles by the Daggerblade Grass Shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio | A. Gray H3 H4 From Phosphates to Food Webs: A Tribute to David Schindler’s Legacy in Aquatic Sciences | Karen Kidd, Jules Blais, Heidi Swanson 448 David Schindler’s legacy: Ecosystem- scale ecotoxicology | D. Orihel 449 Whole-lake manipulations at the Experimental Lakes Area do not support the need for nitrogen control to reduce eutrophi- cation in lakes | M. Paterson 450 Recovery from Acidification: A Forty Year Experiment in the Killarney Park Area, Canada | J. Gunn 451 Following David Schindler’s Lead: Understanding the Importance of Atmospheric Deposition of Polyaromatic Compounds in the Alberta Oil Sands Region | D. Muir I1 I2 Fate and Effects of Metals: Biogeochemical Perspective | Kevin Rader, Richard Carbonaro 456 Effects of Oxidation on Metal Bioavailability and Metal Release from In-place Sediments: A Modeling Perspective | K. Farley 457 Sediment characteristics affecting inter- nal loading of arsenic in a prairie reservoir, Buffalo Pound Lake, SK, Canada | L. D’Silva 458 Arsenic sorption to bacteriogenic iron oxides (BIOS) | M. Moriarty 459 Rare earth element sorption: lessons learned from field collected biofilm data | L. Ashby I3 I4 Demonstrated Remediation Technologies Addressing Contaminated Soil, Sediment and Water | Alan Jones 464 Enhanced degradation of benzo[a] pyrene in coal tar contaminated soils using biodiesel | T. Oriaku 465 From bioavailability science to soil bioremediation: Sustainable stimulation of biological degradation for enhanced removal of PAHs | J. Ortega-Calvo 466 Enhanced anaerobic biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons in sediments and water using bioelectrochemical systems (BES) | J. Morris Discussion Spotlight Session Aquatic Toxicology and Ecology Environmental or Analytical Chemistry Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management Wednesday Morning Platform Presentations 7 th SETAC World Congress/SETAC North America 37 th Annual Meeting | 51 Presentation will not be recorded. C O F F E E B R E A K 10:00–10:15 10:20–10:35 10:40–10:55 11:00–11:15 Assessing Contaminant Effects in Multi-Stress Ecosystems - Part 1 | David Ostrach, Cameron Irvine A1 380 Proteomics and Transcriptomics analyses of Florida Manatee (Trichechus Manatus Latirostris) Mortalities in 2013 | N. Denslow 381 Environmental Temperature Moderates the Effects of Estrogenic Exposure on Larval Fathead Minnows | M. Cox 382 Evaluating Stormwater Impacts on Coastal Sediment Recontamination | D. Reible 383 Lessons Learned from the South River and Upper Shenandoah Series of Multiple Stressor Ecological and Human Well-being Risk Assessments | W. Landis The Other Oil Spills | Marthe Monique Gagnon, Emily Maung-Douglass A2 388 Toxicity of organic fractions of hydraulic fracturing flowback and produced water (FPW) to early life stage of zebrafish | Y. He 389 Developmental and endocrine responses in a freshwater fish (Oreochromis mossambi- cus) and amphibian (Xenopus laevis), exposed to old bunkered crude oil | J. van Wyk 390 Respirometry and Swim Performance Alterations in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) acutely exposed to Hydraulic Fracturing Flowback and Produced Water | E. Folkerts 391 Rapid adaptation to oil exposure in the cosmopolitan copepod Acartia tonsa | K. Krause EDCs and Pharmaceuticals in the Environment - Part 1 | Marc Mills, Kavitha Dasu, Edward Kolodziej, Ruth Marfil-Vega A3 396 Mass loading, removal and environ- mental emission of select psychoactives, antihypertensives, and antibiotics from two sewage treatment plants in India | B. Subedi 397 High-throughput Based Screening of Waters for Endocrine Bioactive Chemicals | W. Heiger-Bernays 398 Characterization of the endocrine poten- cies of municipal effluents across Canada using in vitro bioassays | T. Bagatim 399 Examining Urban Metabolism and Contaminants of Emerging Concern: A Sewage Epidemiology Pilot Study in Hong Kong | S. Burket Fate, Toxicology, or Risk Assessment of Materials of Interest to the Military | Ron Checkai, Doris Anders, Mark Johnson, David Johnson, Geoffrey Sunahara A4 404 Geographical distribution of contami- nants in the soil at a Canadian military test site | J. Olson 405 Verification Monitoring and Stability Assessment of In Situ Stabilized Range Metals | M. Wynter 406 Exposure to munition specific carcino- gens and cancer risks for civilians on Vieques following military exercises ‘47-’99 | H. Sanderson 407 Mass flux characterization for determina- tion of reasonable maximum exposures to volatile organic compounds through the vapor intrusion pathway | H. Dawson Toxicity Extrapolations in Aquatic Organisms and Wildlife | Adriana Bejarano, Morgan Willming F1 412 Mercury Accumulation and Effects in the Brain of Atlantic Sharpnose Sharks (Rhizoprionodon terraenovae) | S. Ehnert 413 Phylogenetic Signal in Fish Acute Toxicity | S. Glaberman 414 A Petri Net Model for Physiologically Based ToxicoKinetics (PBTK) of Waterborne Fluoranthene in Rainbow Trout | I. Edhlund 415 Bioelectrical impedance analysis as a predictor of fish health using rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) | J. Durante <--- Title | Ismael Rodea-Palomares, Teresa Lettieri, Rafael Muñoz-Carpena F2 420 Mixtures of Chemical Pollutants at Environmental Concentrations: How to deal with? | T. Lettieri 421 Restoration Scaling of Lost Ecosystem Services in Complex Aquatic Systems | D. Hanson 422 Asymmetric effects of pharmaceutical exposure genarate unexpected ecological effects | T. Brodin 423 Comparative potency and mechanisms of four model industrial chemicals to induce antioxidant and oxidative stress gene expres- sion in zebrafish larvae | M. Mills Advanced Analytical Methods for Contaminant Discovery | Nathan Dodder, Bernard Crimmins, Lee Ferguson, Shane Snyder F3 F4 G2 428 Chemical characterization of indoor dust by comprehensive target and non-target screening using GC- and LC-QTOF-MS/MS | T. Young 429 Streamlining Non-Targeted GCxGC/ TOFMS Data Analysis of Remediated Soil Samples using Python | I. Titaley 430 Identification of Novel Brominated Disinfection By-Products of Concern by Use of DIPIC-Frag Untargeted Screening and Effect- Directed Analysis | C. Watts 431 Progress in the analysis of chlorinated paraffins - different methods and interlabora- tory study results | J. de Boer Climate Change and Water Resource Management: An Ever-Changing Challenge | Matt Moore, William Clements, Jennifer Lee Stauber G1 436 Indirect effects of climate change on Zinc cycling in sediments: the role of changing water levels | S. Nedrich 437 The deal with diel: Effects of temperature fluctuations, asymmetrical warming, and ubiquitous metals contaminants on three amphibian species | M. Brooks 438 Exploring the impacts of multiple anthropogenic and environmental stressors: data needs for predicting ecological effects | L. Lockett 439 Acute thermal challenge potenti- ates benzo-a-pyrene-induced cardiac and metabolic toxicity in juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) | L. Weber Microplastics in the Aquatic Environment: Fate and Effects - Part 1 | Kay Ho, Robert Burgess, John Weinstein H1 H2 444 Ingestion and rejection of microplastics by suspension-feeding bivalves: implications for exposure and environmental fate | J. Ward 445 Cellular accumulation of polystyrene particles in the Eastern oyster: dependence on size | T. Gaspar 446 Microplastic particle exposure and life-history traits of Chironomus riparius | W. Kunce 447 Trophic transfer of microplastics and adsorbed contaminants | S. Au From Phosphates to Food Webs: A Tribute to David Schindler’s Legacy in Aquatic Sciences | Karen Kidd, Jules Blais, Heidi Swanson H3 H4 452 Building on David Schindler’s legacy: Assessing impacts on lakes across spatial and temporal scales using lake sediments as archives | J. Blais 453 Integration of Indigenous knowledge and western science in studies of northern ecotoxicology: lessons from David Schindler and other revolutionaries | H. Swanson 454 The influence of climatic trends and variability on fish growth and survival in freshwater lakes | M. Rennie 455 Climate futures for temperate lakes: winter biogeochemistry and the vulnerability of lakes to change | H. Baulch Fate and Effects of Metals: Biogeochemical Perspective | Kevin Rader, Richard Carbonaro I1 I2 460 Role of Natural Organic Matter on Rare Earth Elements Speciation and Bioavailability with Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | J. Rowell 461 Subcellular partitioning profiles and molecular biomarkers in in-situ exposure clam and their associations with metal speciation as measured by DGT | Z. Wang 462 Bioaccumulation of Cu and Pb by fathead minnow and yellow lampmussel: evaluation of DGT technique for predicting uptake of metal mixtures | G. Mills 463 Could climate change affect metal pollu- tion in estuaries? | A. de Souza Machado Demonstrated Remediation Technologies Addressing Contaminated Soil, Sediment and Water | Alan Jones I3 I4 468 Use of Excretory Halophytes to Remediate a Salt-Impacted Site | K. Yun 469 Integrated Restoration/Remediation of a Mercury Contaminated River | S. Haffey 470 Altering Estuarine Sediment Transport Dynamics to Reduce Ecological Exposures: a Novel Form of Risk Management | C. Hauser 471 Batch Adsorption Studies on the Use of Sorghum husk for Treatment of heavy metal Contaminated Wastewater | O. Otitoju Linking Science and Social Issues Regulatory Directions Remediation/Restoration Terrestrial or Wildlife Toxicology and Ecology Wednesday Morning Platform Presentations 52 | 7 th SETAC World Congress/SETAC North America 37 th Annual Meeting Presentation will be recorded. 1:00–1:15 1:20–1:35 1:40–1:55 2:00–2:15 C O F F E E B R E A K A1 Assessing Contaminant Effects in Multi-Stress Ecosystems - Part 2 | David Ostrach, Cameron Irvine 472 A rapid screening approach for distinguishing multiple stressors in souther California streams | J. Diamond 473 Integrating Contaminant and Other Stressors in an Ecological Risk Assessment of an Urban Waterway | D. Haury 474 Phenotypic characterization of urban runoff toxicity in juvenile coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch | M. Chow 475 Environmental Exposure to an Urban Wastewater Effluent: Effects on the Energetic Metabolism of Northern Pike | J. Reinling A2 Contaminant Flux Across Environmental Compartments and Implications for Global Distribution | Kim Anderson, Jamie Minick, Sarah Allan 480 Recent developments in methodologies for determining sediment to water fluxes of hydrophobic organic contaminants in situ | E. Eek 481 Adapting passive samplers to investigate PAH and PCB flux from soil to air | C. Donald 482 Benthic Injury Dose-Response Models for PCB-Contaminated Sediment Using Equilibrium Partitioning | K. Finkelstein 483 Comparison of modeled and measured persistent organic pollutant flux between sediments and water column on the Palos Verdes Shelf | L. Fernandez A3 EDCs and Pharmaceuticals in the Environment - Part 2 | Marc Mills, Kavitha Dasu, Edward Kolodziej, Ruth Marfil-Vega 488 Altered antimicrobial susceptibility in stream bacterial isolates exposed to triclosan | K. Trowbridge 489 Spatio-temporal bioaccumulation and trophic transfer of ionizable pharmaceuticals in a semi-arid stream influenced by snow- melt | S. Haddad 490 Stress-related symptom and detoxifica- tion mechanisms induced by PPCPs in plants | C. Sun 491 Bioaccumulation of pharmaceuticals and other emerging contaminants: What’s in the lower aquatic trophic levels? | J. Wilkinson A4 Making Your Research Relevant to Regulatory Science and Supportive of Decision-Making | Carolina Penalva-Arana, Karen Eisenreich, Jane Staveley 496 It’s a two-way street... or at least it should be | V. Forbes 497 Research Supportive of Aquatic Life Ambient Water Quality Criteria Development | K. Gallagher 498 Making your research relevant to ecological risk assessments conducted by Environment and Climate Change Canada | J. Hill 499 Better designing and reporting of animal studies to support regulatory decision making | N. Burden F1 Bringing Probabilistic Risk Assessment into Criteria Development | Don Essig, Ken Weaver, Paul Anderson 504 Selecting Target Risk Levels When Deriving Criteria Using Probabilistic Methods | P. Anderson 505 Challenges associated with the use of probabilistic methods to develop human health WQC | S. Replinger 506 Generating a Distribution of Usual Fish Consumption Rates for Applying PRA to Human Health Criteria | D. Essig 507 Evaluation of Fish Consumption Rates for use in Florida’s PRA-based Human Health Criteria Derivation | K. Weaver F2 Advances in Exposure Modeling: Bridging the Gap Between Research and Application | Todd Gouin, Matthew MacLeod 512 Lifetime Exposome Modeling | O. Jolliet 513 Spatial improvements leading to advances in down-the-drain chemical expo- sure modeling with iSTREEM® 2.0 | D. Ferrer 514 Impacts of Hydroelectric Power Expansion on Methylmercury Exposures of Northern Indigenous Communities | R. Calder 515 Assessing Exposure and Ecotoxicological Impacts in the State of Qatar | C. Warren F3 F4 G2 Canadian Oil Sands: Advancing Science in Chemical and Toxicological Characterization, Reclamation and Monitoring – Part 1 | Chairs ---> 520 The toxicity of diluted bitumen to four fish species | S. Wallace 521 Review of methods for oil toxicity testing and implications for assessing dilbit toxicity | J. Adams 522 Potential sources of methylmercury in snowpacks and tailings ponds of the Athabasca Oil Sands Region, Alberta, Canada | C. Willis 523 Spatial and Temporal Variation of Trace Metals in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region Based on Dated Lake Sediment Cores | C. Cooke G1 Thinking Outside the Laboratory Box: An Ecological Approach in Tackling Ecotoxicological Problems | Michelle Hornberger, Emma Rosi-Marshall, Tomas Brodin 528 Exploring the intersection between ecosystem ecology and ecotoxicology: Developing the field of ecosystem toxicology | E. Rosi-Marshall 529 Aquatic agrochemical pollution increases the risk of human schistosomiasis | J. Rohr 530 Are fungicides a threat for the function- ing of heterotrophic systems? | M. Bundschuh 531 Whole ecosystem experiments to assess effects of glyphosate and fertilizers on wetland communities | K. Kidd H1 H2 Microplastics in the Aquatic Environment: Fate and Effects – Part 2 | Kay Ho, Robert Burgess, John Weinstein 536 Microplastic mediated transport of per- sistent organic pollutants in Daphnia magna – an evaluation of a toxicokinetic model using experimental data | M. Ogonowski 537 Ingestion of microplastic associated with green algae by Daphnia magna and enhancement of PCBs bioaccumulation | P. Canniff 538 Can hydrophobic organic chemicals sorbed to microplastics affect aquatic organisms? A review of laboratory studies | K. Kulacki 539 Microplastic as a vector of PCB uptake in Daphnia magna | Z. Gerdes H3 H4 Novel Mechanisms of Nanomaterial Toxicity Through Direct Exposure or Indirect Interactions with Environmental Components – Part 3 | Chairs ---> 544 Elucidating the role of nonmaterial coat- ing on uptake and translocation mechanisms at the sub-cellular level in plants using a hard X-ray nano probe | J. Unrine 545 Nanoparticle Detection in Environmentally Relevant Matrices Using DMA-ICP-MS | S. Wolf 546 Development of Gold-labeled Titanium Dioxide Nanoparticles for Examining Exposure and Biodistribution in Complex Matrices | A. Deline 547 Does nanoclay technology adversely affect aquatic biota relative to natural nano- clays? | S. Tullio I1 I2 Fate and Effects of Metals in the Environment: Modeling and Interpreting Effects of Metals Mixtures | Kevin Brix, Graham Merrington 552 Internal versus external dose for describ- ing ternary metal mixture (Ni, Cu, Cd) chronic toxicity to Lemna minor | Y. Gopalapillai 553 The unexpected effects of metal mixtures on zebrafish gills | F. Valdez Domingos 554 Effects of binary mixtures of Ag, Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn to the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis - short term uptake and chronic toxicity | A. Cremazy 555 The toxicity of mixtures of selenium, cad- mium, nitrate, and sulphate to Ceriodaphnia dubia | E. Costa I3 I4 Developments and Barriers in the Adoption of Amendments for Soil and Sediment Remediation | Jose Gomez-Eyles, Barbara Beckingham, Tom Sizmur, Marc Mills 560 Tools to overcome barriers for in-situ sediment treatment in the US | J. Stern 561 Modeling Activated Carbon Amendments in Shallow Ecosystems | M. Rakowska 562 Activated carbon amendments in PCB contaminated sediment: full life cycle test with Chironomus riparius | J. Akkanen 563 Remediation of PCB contaminated sediments using activated carbon: Thermodynamic exposure assessment | S. Schmidt Spotlight Session Aquatic Toxicology and Ecology Environmental or Analytical Chemistry Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management Wednesday Afternoon Platform Presentations 7 th SETAC World Congress/SETAC North America 37 th Annual Meeting | 53 Presentation will not be recorded. C O F F E E B R E A K 3:00–3:15 3:20–3:35 3:40–3:55 4:00–4:15 Assessing Contaminant Effects in Multi-Stress Ecosystems - Part 2 | David Ostrach, Cameron Irvine A1 476 Temperature and photoperiod-depen- dent sex determination in branchiopod crustaceans is modulated by the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 | A. Camp 477 Evaluating arsenic additions and future trends in a complex ecosystem | L. Levin 478 Effects of Salinity on Oil Spill Dispersant Toxicity in Estuarine Organisms | M. DeLorenzo 479 Multibiomarker evaluation of pollutant effects in Atlantic stingray (Dasyatis sabina) populations in Florida’s St. Johns River | J. Whalen Contaminant Flux Across Environmental Compartments and Implications for Global Distribution | Kim Anderson, Jamie Minick, Sarah Allan A2 484 Diffusive Flux of PAHs Across Sediment, Water, and Air Interfaces at Urban Superfund Sites | J. Minick 485 Distribution and Air-Water Exchange of Organic Flame Retardants in the Lower Great Lakes | C. McDonough 486 Air-water exchange of POPs across the Atlantic Ocean | R. Lohmann 487 A Rapid Decline of Persistent Organic Pollutant Concentrations in the Sarasota Bay, FL Bottlenose Dolphin Population | J. Kucklick EDCs and Pharmaceuticals in the Environment - Part 2 | Marc Mills, Kavitha Dasu, Edward Kolodziej, Ruth Marfil-Vega A3 492 Occurrence and Estrogenic Burden of Five Parabens in Sewage Sludge from the United States | J. Chen 493 Risks Associated with the Environmental Release of 15 Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients on US Food and Drug Administration’s “Flush List” | U. Khan 494 Role of Effluent Organic Matter in the Photodegradation of Compounds of Wastewater Origin | A. MacKay 495 Optimizing Operating Parameters to Enhance the Removal of Emerging Contaminants in Wastewater Treatment Plants Using the STP Model | C. Zhang Making Your Research Relevant to Regulatory Science and Supportive of Decision-Making | Carolina Penalva-Arana, Karen Eisenreich, Jane Staveley A4 500 Designing and Conducting Chemical Fate Research to Support Risk Assessment | M. Lee 501 The use of environmental exposure data to support regulatory risk assessments for octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4) | K. Thomas 502 Regulatory guided research to improve biodegradation assessments | T. Martin 503 Assessment of Ecotoxicity Data for Regulatory Risk Assessment | J. Green Bringing Probabilistic Risk Assessment into Criteria Development | Don Essig, Ken Weaver, Paul Anderson F1 508 Relative Source Contribution: Capturing the Full Potential of Exposure Characterization in Criteria Development | K. Summerfield 509 The Development of Data-Driven Exposure Distributions for Risk-Based Soil Cleanup Criteria | L. Stuchal 510 Deriving Health Human Criteria for Florida using a Probabilistic Approach | K. Weaver 511 Inclusion of Physiological, Metagenetic and Genetic Susceptibility Distributions in Exposed Human Populations for Probabilistic Risk Assessment | L. Fink Advances in Exposure Modeling: Bridging the Gap Between Research and Application | Todd Gouin, Matthew MacLeod F2 516 Assessing the influence of second- ary organic versus primary carbonaceous aerosols on long-range atmospheric PAH transport | C. Friedman 517 Sorptive capacities of leaves for organic pollutants measured using passive dosing: Lipid characterization and passive dosing experiments | D. Bolinius 518 Characterizing the Health Impact of Chemicals from Use of Dishwasher Detergents | V. Nguyen 519 A Novel Spatial Aquatic Food-Web Bioaccumulation for Bridging Field Study Data and Regulatory Decision Making | F. Gobas <--- Title | Richard Frank, Jonathan Martin, Steve Wiseman F3 F4 G2 524 An omics platform for the advancing of the environmental monitoring program in the Alberta oil sands region | A. Pereira 525 A spatial and temporal assessment of contaminants in otoliths from the Lower Athabasca region | M. Poesch 526 Fish Health in the Alberta Athabasca Oil Sands, Developing Baseline to Assess Future Change | M. McMaster 527 Where do we go from here? Lessons from 25 years of Environmental Effects Monitoring (EEM) in Canada | T. Arciszewski Thinking Outside the Laboratory Box: An Ecological Approach in Tackling Ecotoxicological Problems | Michelle Hornberger, Emma Rosi-Marshall, Tomas Brodin G1 532 Effects of antihistamine on invertebrates and carbon and nutrient recycling in streams | T. Brodin 533 Aquatic insect emergence and pesticide flux from wetlands to terrestrial food webs in the Prairie Pothole Region | J. Kraus 534 Selenium ecotoxicology in freshwater lakes receiving coal combustion residual effluents: A North Carolina example | J. Brandt 535 Lessons learned in application of field data to addressing ecogoxicological issues | S. Luoma Microplastics in the Aquatic Environment: Fate and Effects – Part 2 | Kay Ho, Robert Burgess, John Weinstein H1 H2 540 Ingestion of microplastics by the fresh- water invertebrate Chironomus sancticaroli: effects on PBDE bioaccumulation and the gut microbiome | E. Lahive 541 Microplastic Contamination at the Base of the Food Chain | A. Cook 542 Assessment of microplastic ingestion in commercial fish species Engraulis encrasi- colus and Sardina pilchardus in the Western Mediterranean Sea | M. Compa 543 Microplastic ingestion in commer- cial and shark species in the Western Mediterranean Sea | C. Mascaró <--- Title | Joseph Bisesi, Candice Lavelle, Lee Ferguson, Tara Sabo-Attwood H3 H4 548 Differential uptake and toxicity of CuO nanoparticle to Daphnia magna from chronic exposure using two delivery scenarios | F. Wu 549 The release of “transparent blue” auto- mobile coatings containing nanoscale copper phthalocyanine and their effects to aquatic organisms | C. Pang 550 Accumulation of Silver Nanoparticles in Aquatic Food Webs Following Pulsed vs. Repeated Exposure in Artificial Streams | S. Petersen 551 Multigenerational Effects of Silver Nanomaterials in Caenorhabditis elegans | O. Tsyusko Fate and Effects of Metals in the Environment: Modeling and Interpreting Effects of Metals Mixtures | Kevin Brix, Graham Merrington I1 I2 556 X-ray fluorescence based examination of zinc distribution and speciation in rainbow trout gills: interactions with copper or cadmium | S. Niyogi 557 Interaction and toxicity of cadmium, copper, and nickel on the olfactory system of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss Walbaum, 1792 | G. Pyle 558 Metal-mixture toxicity (Copper + Nickel + Zinc) to aquatic insect communities in mesocosms | T. Schmidt 559 Modeling the Chronic Effects of Metal Mixtures to aquatic organisms: a meta- analysis | C. Nys Developments and Barriers in the Adoption of Amendments for Soil and Sediment Remediation | Jose Gomez-Eyles, Barbara Beckingham, Tom Sizmur, Marc Mills I3 I4 564 How much is enough? What more is needed to gain acceptance on the use of amendments as a safe and viable treatment technology | D. Jones 565 Ongoing Degradation of an Organophilic Clay Amendment in a Sediment Cap 11 Years after Placement | H. Blischke 566 Predicting Cu and Zn sorption capacity of biochars based on source material and pyrolysis temperature | T. Sizmur 567 Contaminant remediation: lessons learned from an ongoing field experiment with biochar to remediate a petroleum con- taminated soil in Havana, Cuba | D. Pacheco Linking Science and Social Issues Regulatory Directions Remediation/Restoration Terrestrial or Wildlife Toxicology and Ecology Wednesday Afternoon Platform Presentations Great Lakes Environmental Center, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to their protected veteran status or disability. In addition, GLEC does not discriminate against individuals based on their race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Download 360 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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