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Environmental Quality Through Transdisciplinary Collaboration

PROGRAMME BOOK SETAC EUROPE

27th Annual Meeting 07−11 May 2017 | Brussels, Belgium

Welcome It is our pleasure to welcome you to Brussels, a historical city founded in 979 and the capital of Belgium and of the European Union. It is home of the European institutions where decisions are made and some of the world's highest environmental standards set. We hope this meeting will create unique opportunities to connect SETAC science with Europe’s advanced environmental policy. We have put all efforts in place to make this an exciting meeting, both scientifically and socially and truly transdisciplinary. The theme of the 2017 meeting is “Environmental Quality Through Transdisciplinary Collaboration.” The Scientific Committee has organised joint sessions with other societies and developed a scientific programme consisting of 81 sessions distributed across eight tracks. Examples of joint sessions with other societies include “Bridging the gap between toxicology and ecotoxicology” with the Federation of European Toxicologists and European Societies of Toxicology (EUROTOX), “Role of exposure science for identifying early warnings on new and emerging risks of chemicals” with the International Society of Exposure Science (ISES), and “Exchanging ideas on mechanistic modelling in the context of water quality and environmental risks of chemicals” with the International Water Association (IWA). In addition, many sessions in the scientific programme will present transdisciplinary topics. We have an impressive line-up of top-class keynote speakers, who will each highlight various aspects of the meeting theme: • “From beach to bedside: what can oceans do for human health?” is the question Prof. Lora Fleming with the University of Exeter, UK will answer in her presentation about the importance of our oceans to maintain and improve human health. • This year being the tenth anniversary of the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), Geert Dancet, ECHA’s Executive Director, Finland will reflect on the main achievements of the REACH Regulation, and the scientific (environmental) challenges and research needs identified from working with this chemicals legislation. • “How far are we with “Product Environmental Footprint” developments?” Dr. Michele Galatola, Product Team Leader of DG Environment, European Commission will address the latest advances and its policy implications. And last but not least, we are excited with the organisation of the first ever Art&Science exhibition at a SETAC Europe conference. We hope you will enjoy and get inspired!

Content 01

Welcome

04

Meeting Supporters

04

Programme Committee

05

About SETAC

07

Interest Groups

09

Awards

13

Practical Information

21

Student Activities

16

Session Overview

15 22 25 49 73 95

Daily Schedule Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

109 SETAC Square 110 Exhibitor Information 136 155 157

Author Index Policies Floor Plan

As Brussels and Belgium are a true Mecca for lovers of chocolate, beer, good food and history, a range of social events has been organised. As almost 30% of the attendees are students, special occasions are set up for this important SETAC Europe group. New this year is the job event, a speed dating platform where students and companies can meet each other to discuss career opportunities. The organisation of this meeting would not have been possible without the Brussels office, a wonderful, enthusiastic and dedicated team, the Scientific and Local Organising Committees, both composed of a core group of devoted volunteers and the 13 sponsors and 52 exhibitors. On behalf of the Scientific and Local Organising Committees, welcome to the SETAC Europe’s 27th Annual Meeting.

Karel de Schamphelaere

Gertie Arts

Ilse Schoeters

Tri-Chairs of the SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting Programme Committee

WIFI Free wireless internet is available within the conference centre during the congress. Login: setac Password: setac17!

Welcome from SETAC Europe Dear colleagues, A warm welcome to the 27th SETAC Europe Annual Meeting. This year we meet at a stone’s throw away from the Brussels office and for us it feels like a home match again, 23 years after the 4th SETAC Europe Annual Meeting was organised in 1994 in The University of Brussels. Since then, much has changed and SETAC Europe has developed. The size of the Annual Meeting increased from some 400 participants in 1994 to around 2000 in 2017. With the proximity of so many European institutions, this year’s meeting makes it easy to bridge the distance between science and policy making. Literally. SETAC Europe has a history of delivering cutting-edge science reports and technical guidance documents for environmental risk assessment methods that feed into the process of European policy making and the development of European regulation and guidance documents. We proudly present a broad and balanced programme covering all the disciplines SETAC scientists are involved in. And more! With the joined sessions with the Federation of European Toxicologists and European Societies of Toxicology (EUROTOX), International Society of Exposure Science (ISES) and International Water Association (IWA), we extend our communication bridges to those working on the same topics but from dissimilar points of view to find practical solutions for environmental issues. The organisation of a meeting with 81 parallel sessions, 564 platform presentations, 1204 poster presentations and numerous parallel programmes is a tour de force and impossible without the dedicated help from numerous volunteers and staff.

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First and foremost, our respect and appreciation goes out to the meeting champions Karel de Schamphelaere (Ghent University), Ilse Schoeters (Rio Tinto) and Gertie Arts (Wageningen Environmental Research, Alterra) and to the Local Organising and Scientific Committees. This meeting started and developed thanks to their almost unlimited ideas and efforts to make it “the best ever”. Also, a special thank you to the SETAC Europe staff in Brussels; Barbara Koelman, Delphine Delire, Filip Gunst, Laura Rossy, Roel Evens, Rebecca Bundschuh and Veerle Vandeveire who worked far beyond the regular to make this happen. Our colleagues from the SETAC North America office in Pensacola headed by Greg Schiefer. All supported by dozens of students that give us their best during this week to make everything go smoothly. The 250 session co-chairs who reviewed all the contributions and composed the session programmes; the SETAC Europe and Global Partners and Affiliates, the meeting sponsors and the exhibitors at the meeting. All essential to make this meeting a place where academia, government and business come together, have a constructive dialogue and contribute to our mission “Environmental Quality Through Science®”. The conference centre Square that provides us a wonderful venue in the heart of Brussels and excellent staff to work with. And finally, a big thank you to 1768 presenters that make this meeting what it is. We wish you a wonderful week!

José-Julio Ortega-Calvo

Bart Bosveld

SETAC Europe President

SETAC Europe Executive Director

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Welcome from SETAC Global Dear SETAC members and guests, We extend our welcome to all of you! Thank you for participating in an extremely timely Annual Meeting for SETAC Europe. The theme – Environmental Quality Through Transdisciplinary Collaboration – speaks to our recognition of the importance of reaching out to colleagues in related fields. The challenging health and environmental science questions of the future increasingly require a broad perspective within which we can develop a deeper understanding of the nature of an issue as well as solutions. We are especially pleased that SETAC’s Global Horizon Scanning Project will receive attention as the research questions of the future help us focus on research opportunities, collaborations, workshops, and sessions on the science needed to inform policy. SETAC’s leadership is committed to helping ensure that scientific information and the scientific process are at the forefront for policies that may affect our environment and well-being. This will involve more outreach and communication efforts that lead to constructive dialogues with policy makers and regulatory agencies. Because of our tripartite composition – academia, government, and business – we have a unique voice that reflects broad and diverse perspectives. SETAC is also active in maintaining and improving the integrity of our science. This increases the credibility

of what we have to say on the science that bears on environmental matters. Your presentations, discussions, and deliberations in Brussels will be part of that voice. SETAC’s Interest Groups (the former Advisory Groups) will have a critical role and opportunity in this regard. Established scientists, early career scientists, and students are encouraged to participate in these groups at the SETAC Europe meeting and at other SETAC meetings. Interest Groups (IGs) are your SETAC “home within a home” for engaging in scientific discourse, for learning, and for planning key workshops and other activities. There are a number of linkages between the IGs and various sessions. Please take advantage of those opportunities. We will be joining you in Brussels. Please reach out and introduce yourself so we can chat a little while. We wish you the best and trust you will have a terrific experience at the SETAC Europe Meeting. Sincerely,

Kurt Maier

Charles Menzie

SETAC Global President

SETAC Global Executive Director

SETAC Europe Staff Bart Bosveld, Executive Director Barbara Koelman, Office & Meeting Manager Delphine Delire, Communications Manager Filip Gunst, Financial Administration Laura Rossy Ramirez, Membership Administration Rebecca Bundschuh, Education Project Manager Roel Evens, Scientific Project Manager Veerle Vandeveire, Finances & Registration Manager

And a "special thank" you to our SETAC North America colleagues for their constant support: Greg Schiefer, Jason Andersen, Sabine Barrett, Linda Fenner, Dusty Kennedy, Jen Lynch, Nikki Mayo, Terresa Murdoch, Tamar Schlekat, Laura Swanson

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Thank you! To our meeting supporters for their generous contributions! Platinum

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Programme Committee Chairs

Scientific Committee

Karel De Schamphelaere, Ghent University, Belgium

Anna Barra Caracciolo, National Research Council, Italy

Ilse Schoeters, Rio Tinto, UK

Yuri Bruinen de Bruin, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy

Gertie Arts, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

Local Organising Committee Katrien Arijs, ARCHE Consulting, Belgium Jana Asselman, Ghent University, Belgium Emma Deniere, Ghent University, Belgium Gert Everaert, Ghent University, Belgium Ann-Helene Faber, Utrecht University, Netherlands Andreas Focks, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands Bruno Hubesch, CEFIC - European Chemical Industry Council, Belgium Dries Knapen, University of Antwerp, Belgium Josef Koch, Ghent University, Belgium Denis Pohl, PFS Health and Environment, Belgium Frederic Silvestre, University of Namur, Belgium Francis Vanryckeghem, Ghent University, Belgium Lucia Vergauwen, University of Antwerp, Belgium Anne-Sophie Voisin, University of Namur, Belgium Violaine Verougstraete, EUROMETAUX, Belgium

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Bruno Campos, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain Frederik De Laender, University of Namur, Belgium Kathleen Debrouwere, VITO, Belgium Jean-Lou Dorne, EFSA, Italy Teresa Fernandes, Heriot-Watt University, UK Elisabeth Maria Gross, University of Lorraine, France Ketil Hylland, University of Oslo, Norway Laurent Lagadic, Bayer CropScience, Germany Stuart Marshall, Unilever, UK Tomica Mišljenovic, Petnica Science Center, Serbia Francesca Pellizzato, ECHA, Finland Jörg Römbke, ECT Ökotoxikologie GmbH, Germany Serenella Sala, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy Erik Smolders, University of Leuven, Belgium Georg Streck, European Commission - DG Grow, Belgium Violaine Verougstraete, EUROMETAUX, Belgium Martina Vijver, CML Leiden University, Belgium Elke Zimmer, ibacon, Germany

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

About SETAC and SETAC Europe SETAC is a not-for-profit, worldwide professional organisation comprised of around 6000 individuals and institutions in 100 countries dedicated to the study, analysis and solution of environmental problems, the management and regulation of natural resources, research and development, and environmental education. Our mission is to support the development of principles and practices for protection, enhancement and management of sustainable environmental

quality and ecosystem integrity. SETAC Europe is one of five Geographic Units (GU) of the global Society, established to promote and further the mission of SETAC in Europe, the Middle East and Russia. SETAC Europe is incorporated in Belgium as a not-forprofit organisation. The Society is administered to its articles of association and by-laws. For more information, visit www.setac.org

SETAC Europe is governed by a Council, elected by the general membership at the Annual General Assembly (AGA) which convenes every year during the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting. If you are a SETAC member from Europe, you are strongly encouraged to attend the assembly which will be held on

Wednesday, 12:45 pm−2:15 pm | Meeting Studio 211 & 212.

SETAC Europe Committees SETAC Europe Committees are established to manage dedicated affairs of the Society. If you are interested to contribute to the activities of SETAC Europe and willing to volunteer in one of its below committees, have a look at the open vacancies at www.setac.org > Get Involved > Committees > Europe Committees. • Awards

• Nominations

• Education

• Regional Branches

• Finance

• Registration and Certification of Risk Assessors

• Long-Range Planning

• Science

• Membership and Public Relations

• Student Advisory Council (SAC)

Join Us Today! Not a SETAC member yet? Sign up today to receive great benefits: SETAC’s prestigious peer-reviewed journals Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry and Integrated Environmental Assessment & Management

SETAC News and Globe messages to members

Go to www.setac.org

Career Centre Online for job seekers and employers from academia, business, government and nongovernmental organisations

Global networking opportunities, mentorship programmes and more

Reduced fees for meetings, courses and certification

Events, education and short courses geared towards students. Support in form of reduced fees, grants and awards for young scientists

SETAC Europe Partners SETAC Europe Partners are non-profit and for-profit organisations, institutions, government agencies, or associations concerned with the affairs and purpose of the Society and who wish to foster the Society’s purposes.

Interested in becoming a SETAC Europe Partner? Visit us at the Registration Desk during the meeting, or contact Barbara Koelman at [email protected] or +32 2 772 72 81

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Get Connected with SETAC Interest Groups!

IG

Interest Groups (IGs) are recognised internally within SETAC as well as outside the Society as the incubators of specific technical subject matters. They nurture and grow a technical subject matter by being a repository of expertise in the specified area, and provide opportunities to collaborate on specific topics such as scientific sessions, workshops and Technical Issue Papers. IGs also develop leadership skills and provide mentorship to early career members interested in learning more about the subject. Hence, irrespective of your background and stage of career, IGs are a great platform to develop your skills and to expand your network in a very exciting research field. More info at www.setac.org > Get Involved > Interest Groups or contact Roel Evens (SETAC Europe Scientific Project Manager, [email protected]) or Tamar Schlekat (SETAC Scientific Affairs Manager, [email protected]).

Several Interest Groups will meet and/or present posters in the coming days. Feel free to join and share your ideas! Interest Group

Meeting

Location

Poster

Science and Risk Communication

Mon, 2:00 pm–4:00 pm

Meeting Studio 206

TU260

Pharmaceuticals

Mon, 4:30 pm–5:30 pm

Meeting Studio 206

MO204

Bioaccumulation Science

Mon, 5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Meeting Studio 201 A/B

Ecological Risk Assessment

Mon, 5:30 pm–6:30 pm

Meeting Studio 204

Metals

Mon, 5:30 pm–7:00 pm

Meeting Studio 314 & 316

Dung Organism Toxicity Testing

Mon, 5:30 pm–7:30 pm

Meeting Studio 206

TU181

Ecotoxicology of Amphibians & Reptiles

Tue, 9:00 am-10:00 am

Meeting Studio 206

MO016

Ecosystem Services

Tue, 12:00 pm–1:00 pm

Meeting Studio 204

TU276

Chemistry

Tue, 3:00 pm–4:00 pm

Meeting Studio 206

WE105

Indigenous Knowledge and Values

Tue, 4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Hall 300

TU261

Animal Alternatives

Tue, 4:30 pm–6:00 pm

The Arc

TU035

Plants

Tue, 5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Hall 100

TU099

Soils

Tue, 5:30 pm–7:00 pm

Meeting Studio 314 & 316

WE129

Pollinators (Founding Committee)

Tue, 4:30 pm–5:15 pm

Meeting Studio 311 & 312

Mechanistic Effect Modelling

Wed, 4:30 pm–5:30 pm

Meeting Studio 202

WE075

Exposure Modelling

Wed, 5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Meeting Studio 311 & 312

TH087

Omics

Wed, 5:00 pm–7:00 pm

Meeting Studio 201 A/B

WE016

Endocrine Disrupter Testing & RA

Wed, 6:00 pm–7:00 pm

Meeting Studio 314 & 316

WE233

Nanotechnology

Wed, 6:00 pm–7:30 pm

Hall 300

MO141

Wildlife Toxicology

Wed, 6:00 pm–7:00 pm

Meeting Studio 313 & 315

MO258

Sediments

MO183

Sustainability

WE218

Human Health

TH167

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Thank you! Help us to thank our award and grant sponsors! By contributing to the award and grant programme you help recognising excellence in the environmental sciences and support SETAC´s mission; the development of principles and practices for protection, enhancement, and management for sustainable environmental quality. Interested to support SETAC´s award or grant programme? Visit us at the Registration Desk during the meeting, or contact Rebecca Bundschuh at [email protected] or +32 2 772 72 81

Grants for SETAC Members

39 Registration Grants covering the full meeting registration fees

27 Travel Grants to compensate up to 250€ of travel expenses

Jointly sponsored by SETAC Europe and Syngenta, SETAC Europe awarded 74 registrations, travel and short course grants and supported more than 40 students and scientists from emerging countries to come to the 27th SETAC Europe Annual Meeting.

8 Short Course Grants

Total amount of 14.000€ 8

to promote life-long education and training

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

SETAC Europe Awards Best Publication Award 2017

LCA Young Scientist Award 2017

Sponsored by Rifcon

Sponsored by LENZING AG and Springer Nature

Yang Yue

Eléonore Loiseau

Eawag, Switzerland

French National Research Institute of Science and Technology for Environment & Agriculture, France

and R. Behre, L. Sigg, M.J.-F. Suter, S. Pillai, K. Schirmer

Silver nanoparticle-protein interactions in intact rainbow trout gill cells

Broadening the object scale in LCA: towards Territorial LCAs

Environmental Science: Nano, Vol. 3

Noack Laboratorien Environmental Education Award 2017 Ángel Borja AZTI-Tecnalia Foundation, Spain

Angel Borja studied Biology, obtained a PhD in Marine Ecology (University of the Basque Country) and is Doctor in Sciences (honoris causa) by the University of Hull (UK, 2015). His main work is making marine ecology research useful for policy-makers and managers, studying the effects of human activities on marine ecosystems, monitoring of marine waters and recovery after impact. This includes developing methodologies to assess the marine status under European directives, being some of these methods used worldwide. He is member of the Scientific Committee of the European Environment Agency and its EEAcademy, dedicated to train and divulgate environmental sciences. He is author of more than 210 peer-reviewed papers, Specialty Chief Editor of Frontiers in Marine Ecosystem Ecology, Associated Editor of Continental Shelf Research and Journal of Sea Research, and member of the Editorial Board of Ecological Indicators and Marine Pollution Bulletin. Referee in more than 75 international journals and project evaluation agencies, is member of different advisory boards and scientific associations, serving as chair in numerous international conferences. He has participated in more than 100 European and international projects, being the coordinator of the recently finished EU 7th FP project DEVOTES (DEVelopment Of innovative Tools for understanding marine biodiversity and assessing good Environmental Status). He has been characterised by the continuous dissemination of science and organiser of a successful marine summer school since 2004.

Young Scientist Awards 2016 A special recognition of the Young Scientist Award winners for the best poster and best platform at the 26th SETAC Europe Annual Meeting in Nantes, France. Best Platform Presentation Sponsored by ECETOC

Best Poster Presentation Sponsored by SETAC Europe

Yuang Pan

Riccardo Massei

University of Sheffield, UK

Helmholtz-Center for Environmental Research (UFZ), Germany

has been granted for her platform presentation “Using the ecosystem services framework to link scientific research and policy-making: a case study of Lake Tai, China”.

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

received the award for his poster on “Detection of cholinesterase inhibitors in water samples from Novi Sad (Serbia) using effectdirected analysis”.

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SETAC Global Partners and Affiliates Thank you to the SETAC Global Partners and Affiliates for helping ensure our goal of Environmental Quality Through Science®.

Interested in becoming a SETAC Global Partner or Affiliate Member? Visit us at the Registration Desk during the meeting, or contact Barbara Koelman at [email protected] or +32 2 772 72 81

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

SETAC Global Awards Rachel Carson Award

David Schindler

Founders Award

Capacity-Building Award

University of Alberta, Canada

University of Florida, USA

Nancy Denslow

Silke Bollmohr

Bestowed only once every four years at a SETAC World Congress, the award recognises a scientist for their meticulous research and increasing awareness among the public for potential threats to the natural world.*

The prestigious Founders Award is the highest honour SETAC can bestow. It is given annually to an individual whose outstanding career and significant contributions to environmental science reflect the goals of SETAC.*

The Global Partners Capacity-Building Award recognises individuals or groups for their contribution toward building capacity in the environmental sciences within countries with developing economies.

SETAC/ICA Chris Lee Award

SETAC / Procter & Gamble Fellowship

ET&C Best Paper Award

Tamzin Blewett

Francesca Gissi

University of Alberta, Canada Jointly sponsored by SETAC and the International Copper Association, this award provides up to $5,000 to a graduate student or recent graduate whose ongoing research focuses on fate and effects of metals in the environment.*

IEAM Best Paper Award

Sheila Reddy

The Nature Conservancy, USA and G Guannel, R Griffin, J Faries, T Boucher, M Thompson, J Brenner, J Bernhardt, G Verutes, SA Wood, JA Silver, J Toft, A Rogers, A Maas, A Guerry, J Molnar, JL DiMuro

Evaluating the role of coastal habitats and sea-level rise in hurricane risk mitigation: An ecological economic assessment method and application to a business decision Volume 12:2

CSIRO, Australia

This $15,000, 1-year grant, sponsored by Procter& Gamble, is bestowed annually and rotates among the five SETAC geographic units. The Fellowship recognises a student enrolled in a doctoral programme at an Asia-Pacific or a Latin American university.*

Eco.Trac, Germany

Rianne Jacobs

RIVM, Netherlands and JAJ Meesters, CJF ter Braak, D van de Meent, H van der Voet Combining exposure and effect modeling into an integrated probabilistic environmental risk assessment for nanoparticles Volume 35:12

Herb Ward Exceptional Service Award

Timothy Canfield

Environmental Protection Agency, USA

Eugene Mancini

E.R. Mancini & Associates, USA

Renamed in 1999 to honour 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 recognises a SETAC member who has performed long-term exceptionally high-quality service to the Society.*

*presented at the 7th SETAC World Congress/SETAC North America 37th Annual Meeting

About Brussels Welcome to Brussels, the 1 million inhabitant capital of Belgium, home of the European Parliament and centre of European decision making. Brussels is a cultural and touristic hotspot, the city of surrealism and where the philosophy of “art-de-vivre” (“the joy of living”) was invented. Amongst the 80 museums available, visit the Magritte museum (just outside the conference centre) but also the historical centre with its “Grand Place” (UNESCO World Heritage Site) and many other architectural diamonds, including buildings and monuments in Gothic, Baroque and Art-Nouveau styles. Enjoy terraces on sunny squares and cobblestone streets, night-life, delicious local food with a choice

of hundreds of Belgian beers, or a walk in the Zoniënwoud forest (or Forêt de Soignes). Brussels is also a good starting point for joining the 100-years commemoration of World War I (in Ypres and surroundings) and discovering close by and equally vibrant, historic and medieval cities, like Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp, Liege, and Maastricht. Be absorbed by the Belgian atmosphere and get an unforgettable experience! For more information and activities, go to visit.brussels

Our Brand New Meeting App Available now in the Google Play, and in the iTunes app stores. Take advantage of the app’s many features: • View all session information including full abstracts • Comment on sessions and presentations and add your personal notes • Engage with other delegates through the interactive forum • Stay tuned with the latest meeting news

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• Sync with online itinerary planner and add items to the calendar on your device • Share an abstract through social media or with a colleague • View the satellite meetings and the social activities • Connect with the interactive maps • Know more about our sponsors and exhibitors

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Practical Information Badges

Letters of Participation

The badges must be worn to gain entrance to all sessions, meetings, and the exhibition during the conference. For the replacement of a lost badge a charge of 5€ applies.

Letters of participation will be provided to those who are registered for the meeting and will be sent to you after the meeting via email. If you are a presenter, you will receive a confirmation as well.

Cloakroom

Lost and Found

The cloakroom is free of charge and located in the registration area. SETAC is not responsible for any loss.

Please come to the Registration Desk for inquiries concerning lost and found items.

Opening Hours

Public Transportation

Sunday 7:30 am - 9:30 pm Monday - Wednesday 7:30 am - 6:30 pm Thursday 7:30 am - 3:00 pm

Drinking Water Water will be provided in coolers, and attendees are encouraged to use their foldable bottles received while checking in.

Emergencies / First Aid The security personnel is trained in first aid. If you have a medical problem you can also come to the registration desk. The general emergency number is: 112.

Evaluation After the conference we will invite you to a survey via email. We are very interested in your feedback and will use it to make future conferences even better.

Food Allergies Food that is served will be labelled by the catering company. For those with strict dietary restrictions or allergies to food, please contact Barbara Koelman ([email protected]) at the Registration Desk. Barbara will work with you on what might be possible to accommodate your needs.

Internet Corner There is an Internet Corner with 4 laptops available in the Exhibition Hall. Please bear in mind that others might want to check their emails as well and therefore we ask you not to stay too long on the computer.

It is very easy to travel trough the city by public transport. Have a look on stib-mivb.be The nearest metro station next to the conference centre is "Gare Centrale / Centraal Station". All main tram, bus and metro lines converge here.

Registration Desk The Registration Desk is located right after the entrance. Our staff as well as the volunteers are happy to help if you have any queries.

Opening Hours

Sunday 7:30 am - 8:00 pm Monday - Wednesday 7:30 am - 6:30 pm Thursday 7:30 am - 2:00 pm

Special Needs If you have a disability or limitation that may require special consideration in order to ensure your full participation in this meeting, please see a staff person at the Registration Desk.

Taxi Service Taxi Verts provides taxi services in Brussels, as well as to or from the airport. Call them at +32 2 349 49 49 or go to taxisverts.be Please keep in mind, during rush-hours the public transportation is usually faster.

Tourist Information An agent from the tourist office is available in the registration area to answer your questions about Brussels. Sunday

Abstract Book Download your copy of the SETAC Brussels abstract book at brussels.setac.org

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting



3:00 pm–8:00 pm

Monday-Wednesday

10:00 am–6:30 pm

Venue Contact SQUARE Meeting Centre Mont des Arts / Kungstberg, 1000 Brussels +32 2 515 13 00 [email protected] square-brussels.com

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Practical Information Information for Oral Presenters

Information for Poster Presenters

Talks are scheduled in 20-minutes time slots (including discussion). Please keep your presentation limited to 15-minutes maximum, to allow ample time for questions from the audience. The schedule will be strictly enforced to facilitate movement between sessions.

Poster Display

We advise you to:

Posters will be displayed in the Exhibition Hall (Level -2).

• Locate your session room in time. • Have your presentation uploaded in advance. • Bring your presentation on a memory stick, as a backup. • Be in the session room no later than 20-minutes prior to the start of the session and introduce yourself to the Session Chair(s). • Stay on schedule!

Presentation Upload and Review If you are a platform or poster spotlight presenter, you can upload your PowerPoint or Pdf presentation online via https://meetings.setac.org, or on site at the Presentation Upload and Review Desk in the Registration Area. Our staff and volunteers will be happy to help you out. Be sure to upload your presentation by 4:00 pm the day before your session is scheduled.

Each Poster has been assigned a specific code. The 2 letters represent the day your poster will be displayed, the number is the number of the poster board, e.g. MO123 = Monday, board 123. See page 111 for a map of poster boards.

Poster Setup and Take-Down Presenters are responsible for setup and take-down. Posters for the respective day can be put up from 7:30 am to 8:30 am. They should be removed by 7:00 pm (Mo, Tues, Wed) and 3:15 pm Thursday at the very latest or they will be discarded.

Poster Viewing and Attendance There are four designated poster viewings per day (see table below). Poster presenters are encouraged to be available to present their posters during these times in order to ensure maximum exposure for their research.

Poster Corner Presentations The Poster Corners are located in the Exhibition Hall (Level -2) and scheduled during the poster social (5:30 pm–6:30 pm). During the poster session, a group discussion will be organised with an introduction by the Session Chair in front of the posters. After this introduction, the posters will be discussed among the authors and the audience in the Poster Corner.

Poster Spotlight Presentations The Poster Spotlights will take place at the end of a platform session and consist of a 4-minutes platform presentation, highlighting the major findings of the work. If you have a Poster Spotlight Presentation (maximum 3 slides), have your presentation uploaded in advance (see Presentation Upload). As a backup, bring your presentation on a memory stick to the session room. Please stay on schedule and respect the 4-minutes presentation time.

Poster Viewing and Attendance Monday - Wednesday

Thursday

Poster setup

7:30 am–8:30 am

7:30 am–8:30 am

Morning coffee break

10:15 am–11:00 am

10:15 am–11:00 am

Lunch break

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

12:45 pm–2:45 pm

Afternoon coffee break

4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Poster social

5:30 pm–6:30 pm

Poster take-down

6:30 pm–7:00pm

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2:45 pm–3:15 pm SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Gold Hall

Exhibition Hall

Welcome Reception

7:30 pm−9:30 pm

Opening Ceremony Award Ceremony Keynote

6:00 pm

Mentorship Programme Gathering

5:00 pm

Short Courses

8:00 am− 5:00 pm

Registration Open

7:30 am—8:00 pm

Sunday 7 May

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

12

11

10

9

8

7

2:00pm−6:00pm

Student Mentor Lunch

12:45pm−2:15pm

Exhibition Hall

Copper Hall

Poster Social

5:30 pm

Keynote

4:30 pm

Coffee & Poster

SETAC Square

Reddit Platform Session AMA

2:15 pm

Lunch & Poster Viewing

12:45 pm

Exhibition Hall

Copper Hall

Student Party

9:00 pm - 3:00 am

Cantillon Brewery Visit

6:30 pm

Poster Social

5:30 pm

Science Slam

4:30 pm

Coffee & Poster Viewing

Platform Session

2:15 pm

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

12

11

10

9

8

7

12:45pm−2:15pm

Student Lunch & Poster Viewing Lunch Seminar

12:45 pm

Platform Session

11:00 am

11:00 am

Platform Session

Coffee & Poster Viewing

Platform Session

8:30 am

Registration Open

7:30 am—6:30 pm

Tuesday 9 May

Coffee & Poster Viewing

Platform Session

8:30 am

Registration Open

7:30 am—6:30 pm

Monday 8 May

SETAC Europe General Assembly

12:45pm−2:15pm

Exhibition Hall

Copper Hall

Walking Dinner at the Belgian Comic Strip Centre

7:30 pm

Poster Social

5:30 pm

Keynote

4:30 pm

Coffee & Poster Viewing

Platform Session

2:15 pm

Lunch & Poster Viewing

12:45 pm

Platform Session

11:00 am

Coffee & Poster Viewing

Platform Session

8:30 am

Registration Open

7:30 am—6:30 pm

Wednesday 10 May

Exhibition Hall

Meeting Studio 201 A/B

Job Event

8:00 − 11:00

Closing Reception Lunch & Poster Viewing

12:45 pm

Platform Session

11:00 am

Coffee & Poster

Platform Session

8:30 am

Registration Open

7:30 am—2:00 pm

Thursday 11 May

Daily Schedule

Sessions Overview Session

Day

Location

Track 1: Ecotoxicology and human toxicology (from molecules to organisms, from omics to in vivo) 1.01 - 21st century Ecotoxicology and Human toxicology: Applications and perspectives for the use of OMICs data

Wednesday

Hall 300

1.02 - Alternative approaches to animal testing for (eco)toxicity, and the regulatory application of the 3Rs in chemical risk assessments

Tuesday

Silver Hall

1.03 - Cost effective and ecological relevant testing using invertebrate species: new insights for environmental risk assessment

Thursday

Meeting Studio 311&312

1.04 - Environmental endocrine compound concentrations and human and ecosystem health effects

Wednesday

Copper Hall

1.05 - Multigenerational, epigenetic and evolutionary effects in human and environmental toxicology: from mechanisms to risk assessment

Monday

Hall 300

1.06 - Fish model species in human and environmental toxicology

Thursday

Hall 400

1.07 - Interplay between nutritional factors and chemical toxicity

Tuesday

Hall 300

1.08 - Marine and freshwater ecotoxicology

Tuesday

Hall 400

1.09 - Mechanistic ecotoxicology of engineered nanomaterials: lessons learnt from human models

Tuesday

Gold Hall

Track 2: Ecotoxicology becomes stress ecology (from populations to ecosystems and landscapes) 2.01 - Advances on the assessment of environmental pollutants to amphibians and reptiles

Monday

Meeting Studio 313&315

2.02 - Aquatic and Terrestrial Plant State-of-the-art Research linking ecotoxicology and exposure of chemicals

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 311&312

2.03 - Behavioural ecotoxicology: Unravelling behavioural responses to aid environmental and regulatory toxicology

Wednesday

Meeting Studio 311&312

2.04 - Big data analysis of monitoring data: what questions can be addressed?

Wednesday

Meeting Studio 313&315

2.05 - Combined effects of chemical and environmental stressors: from local stressors towards climate change

Monday / Tuesday

Hall 400

2.06 - Determining population relevance of ecotoxicological effects

Thursday

The Arc

2.07 - Effects and ecological consequences of aquatic exposures to particulate materials from the nano- to macro- scale

Tuesday

Gold Hall

2.08 - Engineered nanomaterial effects on soil and terrestrial communities

Tuesday

Gold Hall

2.09 - Experimental approaches and field studies to investigate ecosystem integrity under multiple stress

Tuesday

Hall 300

2.10 - Predictive models in ecotoxicology: bridging the gap between scientific progress and regulatory applicability

Wednesday

Hall 400

2.11 - Polar ecotoxicology: hot issues in cold climates

Monday

Meeting Studio 313&315

2.12 - Wildlife ecotoxicology: cumulative effects through the food chain to the community

Monday

Meeting Studio 313&315

Track 3: Environmental chemistry and exposure assessment (analysis, monitoring, fate and modeling) 3.01 - Advances in Exposure Modelling: Bridging the gap between research and application

Thursday

Meeting Studio 313&315

3.02 - Advances in the Environmental Fate of Down-the-Drain Chemicals, including Pharmaceuticals

Monday

Meeting Studio 314&316

3.03 - Highly Hydrophobic Chemicals: Reliable Investigations on Environmental Fate and Effects

Wednesday

The Arc

3.04 - Insights and challenges concerning the bioavailability of organic chemicals and communication implementation in risk assessment

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 313 & 315

3.05 - Measuring and Estimating Dose Metrics: Linking Exposures to Effects for improved Chemical Risk Assessment

Thursday

Meeting Studio 313 & 315

3.06 - Metals in the Environment: Fate, Speciation and Bioavailability in Water, Soil and Sediment

Monday

Copper Hall

3.07 - Modelling and monitoring of pesticides fate and exposure in a regulatory context

Monday

Hall 300

3.08 - Nanomaterial fate and toxicity - Implications of the environment as a global reactor for nanomaterials along their life-cycle

Monday

Gold Hall

3.09 - Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations

Wednesday / Thursday

The Arc / Silver Hall

3.10 - Persistence & Biodegradation Assessment

Monday

Meeting Studio 311&312

3.11 - Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs): Recent developments, sources, transport, fate and toxicity

Monday

Meeting Studio 311&312

3.12 - In situ measurement of nanoparticles

Monday

Gold Hall

Track 4: Ecological risk assessment and human health risk assessment of chemicals and other stressors and mixtures 4.01 - Advances in Soil Ecotoxicological Risk Assessment of Chemical Stressors

Wednesday

Meeting Studio 314&316

4.02 - Antibiotics and Antibiotic Resistance in the Environment: Ecological Fate and Effects, Resistance Development and Implications for Human Health

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 314&316

16

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Sessions Overview Session

Day

Location

4.03 - Applying Bioaccumulation Data to Better Inform Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of Chemicals

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 313&315

4.04 - Bioremediation and phytoremediation of contaminated environments

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 313&315

4.05 - Challenges and best practice in monitoring of micro- and nano-plastic abundance and environmental distribution

Wednesday

Gold Hall

4.06 - Challenges in Assessment and Management of Cosmetics and Personal Care Products

Tuesday

Exhibition Hall (Poster & Poster Corner Session) Meeting Studio 311&312

4.07 - Environmental consequences of oil and gas extraction and transport

Wednesday

4.08 - Environmental Fate, Effects, and Risk Assessment of Veterinary Medicines

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 314&316

4.09 - Environmental risk assessment in time and space - To boldly go where no man has gone before

Wednesday

Hall 400

4.10 - Future challenges in sediment toxicity testing for environmental risk assessment

Monday

Exhibition Hall (Poster & Poster Corner Session)

4.11 - Hazard and exposure assessment of chemical mixtures: steps towards increasing the realism of human and ecological risk assessments

Thursday

Copper Hall

4.12 - Hazard and risk assessment of human pharmaceuticals in the environment

Monday

Meeting Studio 314&316

4.13 - Improving the environmental assessment of complex composition substances and mixtures for Chemicals Management

Thursday

Copper Hall

4.14 - Integrated approaches for linking chemical contamination with biological effects

Wednesday

Meeting Studio 313&315

4.15 - Interpreting Biological Effects of Metals and Their Mixtures in the Aquatic and Terrestrial Environment

Tuesday

Copper Hall

4.16 - Linking environmental exposure and human biomonitoring data for human health risk assessment of chemicals

Thursday

Hall 300

4.17 - Microplastics, nanoplastics and co-contaminants: Fate, effects and risk assessment for biota, the environment and human health

Wednesday/ Thursday

Gold Hall

4.18 - New developments in ecotoxicology for the risk assessment of single and multiple stressors in insect pollinators : from the laboratory to the real world

Tuesday

Hall 300

4.19 - Risk assessment and remediation of mine sites and processing sites

Wednesday

Meeting Studio 314&316

4.20 - Toxicology and Ecotoxicology, human and ecological risk assessment of engineered nanomaterials: needs, goals and tools/methods for safer-by-design strategies

Wednesday

Copper Hall

4.21 - Wastewater effluents: How research can improve risk assessment and regulation

Monday

Meeting Studio 314&316

5.01 - Advancements in Life Cycle Impact Assessment and footprint method development

Tuesday

Hall 100

5.02 - Increasing the relevance of toxicity assessment in LCA: in the need for a cross fertilization between RA and LCA

Thursday

Hall 100

5.03 - Input/output and Hybrid Life Cycle Assessment for supporting the assessment of production and consumption patterns

Monday

Hall 100

Track 5: Life cycle assessment and environmental foot-printing

5.04 - LCA for supporting policy and decision making

Wednesday

Hall 100

5.05 - LCA of territorial contexts: upscaling the Life Cycle Thinking to business clusters, neighbourhoods, urban agglomerations and territorial entities

Monday

Hall 100

5.06 - Life Cycle Data and Modeling Developments: challenges and solutions

Monday

Hall 100

5.07 - The challenges of Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment (LCSA) of energy technologies

Wednesday

Hall 100

5.08 - The Role of Metals in Circular Economies: A Life Cycle Perspective

Wednesday

Hall 100

6.01 - Assessment of PBT and vPvB chemicals: Requirements, challenges and policy implications

Tuesday

The Arc

6.02 - Development and validation of standardised methods and their use in regulatory frameworks

Thursday

Meeting Studio 314&316

6.03 - Environmental risk assessment of biocides: regulatory requirements, challenges and consequences

Thursday

Meeting Studio 314&316

6.04 - Fate and Effects of Metals: Regulatory and Risk Assessment Perspective

Tuesday

Copper Hall

6.05 - Fate, risk assessment and management of natural toxins: state-of-the-art, challenges and future prospectives

Monday

Exhibition Hall (Poster & Poster Corner Session)

6.06 - Higher tier approaches in the risk assessment of plant protection products and their links to protection goals

Monday

Silver Hall

6.07 - Regulatory Best Practices for Assessment of Endocrine Active Substances

Wednesday

Copper Hall

6.08 - Risk assessment and management of waterbodies (ground, fresh, marine and drinking waters)

Wednesday

Meeting Studio 313&315

6.09 - Science communication and citizen science – strategies for successful stakeholder engagements

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 314&316

Track 6: Environmental policy, risk management, and risk communication

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

17

In the Picture The Scientific Committee has scheduled a series of sessions that put the overarching theme of the conference, “Environmental Quality Through Transdisciplinary Collaboration”, into practice. The key to successful and efficient environmental quality management hinges upon transdisciplinary collaboration between environmental and human toxicologists, environmental chemists, and scientists and policy-makers from a diversity of disciplines, such as conservation biology, ecology, human health, aquaculture, sociology, law, and economy. Several sessions will stimulate "Thinking-Outside-TheBox" (highlighted with ) and touch upon the

development of fundamentally new concepts, such as the integration of planetary boundaries in various sustainability assessment techniques (session 7.01), as well as the elimination of legacy toxics in the circular economy (session 7.02). In the Special Sessions (highlighted with ), additional expertise is brought in by invited speakers mostly from other scientific associations such as the International Society of Exposure Science (ISES) (session 8.01), the International Water Association (IWA) (session 8.03) and the Association of European Toxicologists and European Societies of Toxicology (EUROTOX) (session 8.06). With these collaborations, SETAC Europe will build bridges and overcome borders with other fields of expertise.

Session

Day

Location

Track 7: Think-Outside-The-Box (fundamentally new concepts, innovative/controversial ideas) 7.01 - Advancing science and application of planetary boundaries and related ecological limits concepts to enable absolute sustainability assessments

Tuesday

Hall 100

7.02 - Clean circular economy: recycling while eliminating legacy toxics

Wednesday

Silver Hall

7.03 - Nanoparticles and Microplastics: Harvesting Recent Findings to Fertilize a New Pressing Topic

Wednesday

Exhibition Hall (Poster Corner Session)

8.01 - Do we have the right tools to identify emerging hazards and risks?

Wednesday

Silver Hall

8.02 - Linking Oceans and Human Health: a new trans-disciplinary research challenge

Monday

The Arc

8.03 - Looking across organisational boundaries: exchanging ideas on mechanistic modelling between SETAC and the International Water Association (IWA)

Tuesday

The Arc

8.04 - The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture

Monday

The Arc

8.05 - Bridging between ecology, ecotoxicology and ecosystems services

Tuesday

Meeting Studio 311&312

8.06 - Toxicology and ecotoxicology: bridging the gaps

Monday

Silver Hall

8.07 - Global Horizon Scanning Project - open session

Thursday

The Arc

Track 8: Special Sessions

18

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Gold Hall Level 0

Silver Hall Level 0

Copper Hall Level 0

Hall 100 Level +1

The Arc Level +3

Hall 300 Level +3

Meeting Meeting Meeting Studio Studio Studio 314 & 316 313 & 315 311 & 312 Level +3 Level +3 Level +3

Hall 400 Level +4

8.06 - Toxicology & Ecotoxicology: Bridging the Gap

6.06 - ERA of Pesticides

Special Session

2.08 Nanomaterials in Soil

4.02 Antibiotics

3.04 - Bioavailability Organic Chemicals

2.02 - Plants

4.18 Pollinators

1.07 Nutrients & Chemical Toxicity

6.01 PBT & vPvP Chemicals

7.01 Planetary Boundaries

6.04 - Metals ERA

6.09 Science & Risk Communication

4.03 - Bioaccumulation Data in (E)RA

1.08 - Marine & Freshwater Ecotoxicology

4.08 Veterinary Medicines

4.04 Bio- & PhytoRemediation

8.05 - Plants in Ecosystem Services

2.09 Multiple Stress: Exposure Approaches & Field Studies

8.03 - Mechanistic Modelling in SETAC & IWA

5.01 - Advancements in LCIA

4.15 - Metal Mixtures

2.05 Multiple Stressors

2.07 Particulate Materials

2:15 pm - 4:00 pm

PM

1.02 - Animal Alternatives

1.09 - Nanomechanistic Ecotoxicology

Think-Outside-The-Box

4.12 Pharmaceuticals

3.02 Downthe-Drain Chemicals

4.21 Wastewater Effluents

2.05 - Multiple Stressors

2.11 - Polar Ecotoxicology

2.12 - Wildlife Ecotoxicology

3.10 - Biodegradation Assessments

2.01 Amphibians & Reptiles

3.11 - PFASs

3.07 - Pesticides Fate & Exposure

1.05 - Evolution, Multigeneration & Epigenetics in ERA

5.05 - LCA of Territorial Contexts

8.04 - Ecotoxicology in Aquaculture

5.03 - Input / Output & Hybrid LCA

8.02 Linking Oceans & Human Health

5.06 - Life Cycle Data & Modelling Developments

3.06 - Metals Fate, Speciation & Bioavailability

3.08 - Nanomaterials Fate & Toxicity

3.12 - In-Situ Measurement of Nanoparticles

11:00 am - 12:45 pm

AM2

AM1 8:30 am - 10:15 am

11:00 am - 12:45 pm

8:30 am - 10:15 am

PM

AM2

AM1

2:15 pm - 4:00 pm

Tuesday 9 May

Monday 8 May 11:00 am - 12:45 pm

AM2

5.07 - LCSA of Energy Technologies

5.04 - LCA in Policy & Decision Making

1.01 - OMICS

4.14 - Linking Chemicals Contamination & Biol. Effects

2.10 - Mechanistic Effect Modelling

4.01 - Soil ERA

6.08 - RA of Waterbodies

4.09 - ERA in Time and Space

4.19 - RA & Remediation of Mine Sites

2.04 - Big Data Analysis

4.07 - Oil & Gas Extraction

3.09 - Analytics Organic Micro-Pollutants

6.07 Endocrine Disruptors - ERA

4.13 - Complex Composition Substances

2.06 Population Relevance of Effects

6.03 ERA of Biocides

3.01 - Exposure Modelling

1.06 - Fish Model Species

6.02 Standards in Regulation

3.05 - Dose Metrics in ERA

1.03 - Invertebrate Models

4.16 - Linking Environmental Exposure & Biomonitoring Data for RA

8.07 Global Horizon Scanning - Open Session

5.02 - Increase Relevance Toxicity Assessment

4.11 - ERA of Chemical Mixtures

3.09 - Analytics Organic Micro-Pollutants

7.02 Clean Circular Economy

11:00 am - 12:45 pm

AM2

4.17 - Plastics Effects & Risks

8:30 am - 10:15 am

AM1

Thursday 11 May

4.17 - Plastics Effects & Risks

2:15 pm - 4:00 pm

PM

1.04 Endocrine Disruptors Effects

2.03 - Behavioural Toxicology

3.03 Fate & Effects of Hydrophobic Chemicals

5.08 - Metals in Circular Economies

4.20 (Eco)Tox & (E)RA of Engineered NanoMaterials

8.01 - Emerging Hazards & Risks

4.05 - Plastics Monitoring

8:30 am - 10:15 am

AM1

Wednesday 10 May

Platform Sessions

SETAC Europe Certification of Environmental Risk Assessors recognised by major government, industry and consultancy organisations in Europe.

Learn more about the programme Visit us at the SETAC Square Monday - Thursday during the Coffee Breaks (10:15 am−11:00 am & 4:00 pm−4:30 pm).

Build a strong international network

certification.setac.org

Visit lifelong and high-level training courses

Get a recognition of your skills and expertise

[email protected]

Student Activities at a Glance Sunday 7 May 5:00 pm−6:00 pm

Mentorship Programme | Free

Magritte Lounge | Level 0

Gather with your mentor and other mentees before the Opening Ceremony.

Monday 8 May 12:45 pm−2:15 pm

Student Mentor Lunch | Free

Panoramic Hall | Level +5

While enjoying lunch, get in touch with established scientists from all over the world. Join us to celebrate the 10 th anniversary of the Student Advisory Council (SAC)! Get your ticket Monday morning at the Registration Desk.

Tuesday 9 May 12:45 pm−2:15 pm

Student Lunch Seminar | Free In this interactive session, Iain Davies from the Personal Care Products Council will speak about the importance of the dissemination of environmental science to the public.

Meeting Studio 211 & 212 | Level +2

Get your ticket Tuesday morning at the Registration Desk. 9:00 pm−03:00 am

Student Party | 25€

The You-Nightclub

You are never too old to have fun and hit the dance floor! It is party time for students of all ages! There will be drinks, music and dancing at The You-Nightclub.

Rue Duquesnoy 18 1000 Brussels

Wednesday 10 May 3:00 pm−4:00 pm

SAC Open General Assembly All students are welcome to join! Discover what is happening in the world of Student Advisory Council (SAC) and students of SETAC.

Meeting Studio 211 & 212 | Level +2

Thursday 11 May 8:00 am−11:00 am

Job Event | SOLD OUT Students and companies come together during this speed dating event. After the speed dates there will be time to network during the breakfast.

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

SETAC Europe Mentorship Programme Are you looking for some help to find your way at the meeting? Want to be introduced to interesting colleagues? Or just want to chat with someone during lunchtime? The SETAC Europe Mentorship Programme makes a match between a newbie (mentee) and a mentor. The match has been made on the basis of your professional interest area and other preferences.

We gather at 5 pm on Sunday 7 May in the Magritte Lounge in a relaxed atmosphere. You missed to sign up during the registration? Contact Rebecca Bundschuh at the Registration Desk. facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

21

Sunday 7 May Daily Schedule

Location

7:30 am–8:00 pm

Registration Open

Entrance | Level -1

8:00 am–5:00 pm

Short Courses

see list below

12:00 pm–1:00 pm

Lunch Break

5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Mentorship Programme Gathering

Magritte Lounge | Level 0

6:00 pm–7:30 pm

Opening Ceremony featuring

Gold Hall | Level 0

Keynote Speaker Prof. Lora Fleming Award Ceremony 7:30 pm–9:30 pm

Welcome Reception

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

Satellite Meetings

Location

9:00 am–4:00 pm

SETAC Europe Council Meeting

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

9:00 am–5:00 pm

HESI Bioaccumulation Sediment Meeting

Meeting Studio 215 | Level +2

12:30 pm–4:00 pm

Long-Range Transport and the Stockholm Convention

Meeting Studio 316 | Level +3

1:00 pm–5:00 pm

Pharmaceuticals Symposium

Meeting Studio 211 & 212 | Level +2

Short Courses Morning Half-Day Courses | 8:00 am—12:00 pm SC1

Interpreting Surface Water Monitoring Data: Terminology Models and Tiered Schemes in Mixture Risk Assessment

Location Meeting Studio 314 | Level +3

Full-Day Courses | 8:00 am—5:00 pm SC4

Statistical Issues in the Design and Analysis of Ecotox Experiments

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

SC5

Statistical Methods in Ecotoxicology Using R

Meeting Studio 213 | Level +2

SC6

Getting started with next generation sequencing data: from experimental design to data analysis

Meeting Studio 214 | Level +2

SC7

Testing Methods for honey bees, bumblebees and solitary bees in the context of pesticide registration

Meeting Studio 216 | Level +2

SC8

Assessing exposure to chemicals in consumer products for LCA, alternatives assessment and high-throughput risk screening

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

Two-Day Course Saturday 6 May and Sunday 7 May SC10 & CRA specialised course

22

Evaluation of ecotoxicity and degradation studies for use in environmental risk assessment of chemicals

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

SUNDAY / MONDAY

Opening Ceremony 6:00 pm−7:30 pm | Gold Hall, Level 0

Seas, Oceans, and Public Health in Europe Prof. Lora Fleming University of Exeter, UK Professor Lora Fleming is the Director of the European Centre of Environment and Human Health and Chair of Oceans, Epidemiology and Human Health at the University of Exeter Medical School. She is a board certified occupational and environmental health physician and epidemiologist with over 30 years of experience and expertise in environment and occupational exposures and human health

research and training. With various international collaborators, Professor Fleming is involved in research and training in the new metadiscipline of Ocean and Human Health. She is the recipient of the 2013 Edouard Delcroix Prize and the 2015 Bruun Medal of the International Oceanographic Commission (IOC), for her research and other activities in Ocean and Human Health. Professor Fleming is a Member of the US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) to the NIEHS Gulf Oil Study, and the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Science Board.

Authors Wanted ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION SERIES SETAC is launching a series of books that will address issues and contaminants of emerging concern. Please consider contributing.

CONTACT [email protected]

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

23

SUNDAY / MONDAY

SAVE THE DATE

2 3 rd S E TA C E u r o p e LCA Case Studies Symposium Consequential LCA for Decision Support

27–28 November 2017 I Barcelona, Spain Organised in cooperation with the International Life Cycle Academy

24

lca2017.setac.org #SETACLCA2017

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Monday 8 May Daily Schedule

Location

7:30 am–6:30 pm

Registration Open

Registration Area | Level -1

7:30 am–8:30 am

Poster Setup

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

8:30 am–10:15 am

Platform Session Morning 1

10:15 am–11:00 am

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

11:00 am–12:45 pm

Platform Session Morning 2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Lunch Break

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Student Mentor Lunch

Panoramic Hall | Level +5

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

2:00 pm–6:00 pm

Reddit Ask Me Anything

SETAC Square | Level -2

2:15 pm–4:00 pm

Platform Session Afternoon

4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

4:30 pm–5:15 pm

Keynote Speaker Geert Dancet

Copper Hall | Level 0

5:30 pm–6:30 pm

Poster Social

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

Student Mentor Lunch 12:45 pm−2:15 pm | Panoramic Hall, Level +5 Sponsored by

Get in touch with established scientists and with other students from all over the world. Enjoy the informal atmosphere and enlarge your network while having a nice lunch!

Join us for a piece of the birthday cake to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Students Advisory Council (SAC).

Tickets are distributed Monday morning at the Registration Desk! First comes, first served!

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

Join the SETAC sponsored Reddit Ask Me Anything Monday 8 May I 2pm –6pm SETAC Square

Help answer questions to anyone curious about our science!

25

Monday 8 May Satellite Meetings

Location

9:00 am–10:30 am

Global Partners Committee

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

11:00 am–12:15 pm

SETAC Europe Regional Branch Committee

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

1:30 pm–2:15 pm

SETAC Interest Group Summit

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

2:00 pm–4:00 pm

SCIRIC Annual Business Meeting

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

2:00 pm–5:00 pm

wca Meeting

Meeting Studio 203 | Level +2

3:00 pm–4:00 pm

SETAC Europe Finance Committee

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

4:00pm–5:00 pm

Global Science Committee

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

4:30 pm–5:30 pm

Pharmaceuticals Interest Group

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Bioaccumulation Science Interest Group

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Plant Interest Group Steering Committee

Meeting Studio 203 | Level +2

5:30pm–6:30 pm

Global Ecological Risk Assessment Interest Group

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

5:00 pm–7:00 pm

IPCP General Assembly

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

5:30 pm–7:00 pm

Metals Interest Group

Meeting Studio 314&316 | Level +3

5:30 pm–7:30 pm

DOTTS Interest Group

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH AND SAFETY SERVICES Toxicological & ecotoxicological testing ▪ GLP compliant tests according to OECD guidelines Product emmission testing (ISO17025 accredited) ▪ Building materials, furniture and consumer products Safe by design ▪ Guidance for sustainable products and processes Occupational & personal exposure ▪ Human biomonitoring ▪ Modelling of human exposure ▪ Healthy indoor environment ▪ Safety of nanomaterials (nano test chamber!)

ContaCt us VITO NV - HQ Boeretang 200 26 BE-2400 MOL Belgium

Tel. + 32 14 33 55 11 www.vito.be [email protected]

VITO Health unit: [email protected]

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Keynote Speaker 4:30 pm−5:15 pm | Copper Hall, Level 0

10 years of REACH: Achievements, Scientific Challenges and Research Needs Geert Dancet Executive Director of European Chemicals Agency, Finland Geert Dancet became the first elected Executive Director of the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) in January 2008. Under his leadership, the Agency successfully managed all regulatory processes of the REACH and CLP regulations. ECHA has become one of the large-size regulatory agencies of the EU with over 500 staff members in charge of the EU chemicals legislations, including the new Biocidal Products and PIC regulations. His mandate was renewed in 2012 and will end on 31 December 2017. The Commission nominated him as interim Executive Director in January 2007 in order to set up the Agency in Helsinki as from 1 June 2007. From 2004 to 2007 he was the Head of the REACH Unit in the European Commission’s Directorate General for Enterprise

and Industry. The unit was co-responsible for taking the REACH proposal through the regulatory process in the Council and the European Parliament as well as for developing and coordinating the REACH implementation strategy, which included the preparations for the new Chemicals Agency. He first joined the European Commission in 1986 and worked for most of his Commission career in the competition policy field. Prior to working for the European Commission, Mr Dancet enjoyed a brief academic career in the University of Leuven (Belgium) and was a programme coordinator for the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) in Colombia. He studied economics, econometrics and philosophy at the University of Leuven, Belgium. Mr Dancet is married and has four children.

Environmental Quality Through Art & Science Exhibition Artists from Belgian universities and art schools, inspired by presentations of local SETAC members, are presenting their creations at the conference. A first of its kind at SETAC Europe!

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

27

Programme Highlights Special Session: Linking Oceans and Human Health: a new trans-disciplinary research challenge Monday 8 May, 8:30 am - 10:15 am, The Arc | Level +3 Colin Janssen Ghent University, Belgium

Lora Fleming University Exeter Medical School, UK

The marine environment contributes significantly to human health through the provision and quality of the air that we breathe, the food we eat, the water we drink and in offering health-enhancing economic and recreational opportunities. At the same time, the marine environment is under pressure from human activities. Evaluation of the impacts on both marine ecosystems themselves and on human health, have largely been undertaken as separate activities. Hence, our knowledge of the relationships between the marine environment and human health is limited and still relatively unexplored. To address these knowledge gaps, research in this new field termed 'Oceans and Human Health (OHH)' must be directed at elucidating key environmental processes, and providing a predictive capability for both biotic and abiotic environmental influences on human health and well-being. The establishment and implementation of this type of integrated research will ultimately allow us to: • Improve our understanding of the potential public health benefits from marine and coastal ecosystems; • Reduce the burden of human disease linked with marine environmental causes; and

Jan Mees Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ), Belgium

• Anticipate new threats to public health and marine environment before they become serious. During the last decade, there has been increasing research interest and investment in multi-disciplinary Oceans and Human Health research programmes in the USA. In Europe, however, there has been considerably less activity in this area. The European Marine Board (EMB) has recently stressed the urgent need for more research in this field and for the development of an oceans and human health research framework (Moore et al, 2013). Although it is clear that research issues such as wastewater, nutrient supply/ eutrophication, pollutants and acidification, HAB toxins and pathogens are in line with SETAC topics, the novelty trans-disciplinary nature of the session is that it will link these typical topics with ecosystem health (e.g. services) and human health and well being issues. This SETAC Special Session brings together academic scientists, industry representatives and regulators to (1) provide - through overviews/reviews presented by invited speakers - an overview of the current state of the science on important topics in the OHH field and (2) discuss - through an extended discussion slot - new ways forward.

Programme 08:30 am

Introduction: Oceans and Human Health? What and what´s new? | Jan Mees, Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ), Belgium

08:35 am

The ocean and human health: a European perspective on an emerging integrated metadiscipline | Niall McDonough, European Marine Board, Belgium

08:50 am

Red tides, Aerosols and Human Health | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

09:05 am

Microbial pollution, antibiotic resistant bacteria, and Surfers | Anne Leonard, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

09:20 am

Blue Gym/Blue Health! | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

09:35 am

Marine biogenic chemicals, cell signaling and human health | Michael Moore, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Plymouth University and ECEHH University of Exeter medical School, UK

09:50 am

Occurrence and effects of bio-active substances in marine aerosols |Emmanuel Van Acker, Ghent University, Belgium

10:00 am

Frequent multi-toxin (HAB) exposure through seafood consumption: an under-estimated risk to human health? |Maarten De Rijcke, Ghent University, Belgium

10:10 am

Discussion

10:15 am

End

28

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Programme Highlights Special Session: The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture Monday 8 May, 11:00 am - 4:00 pm, The Arc | Level +3 Marc Berntssen NIFES, Norway

Ketil Hylland University of Oslo, Norway

The marine environment is multifactorial and marine organisms are exposed to a multitude of potential stressors, including chemicals. Fisheries and aquaculture have large benefits to society, but both activities also strongly affect marine ecosystems. The environmental consequences of either are linked to chemicals in marine ecosystems, albeit in different ways. For fisheries there is an uncertainty as to whether chemicals may have an additional effect on already overfished fish populations. In addition, there is a concern that fishing practices such as trawling will mobilise sediment-associated contaminants. The use of

Craig Robinson Marine Scotland Science, UK therapeutic agents, such as antibiotics and de-lousing agents, is an integral part of modern aquaculture, potentially affecting both the farmed fish and the surrounding environment. In addition, intended and unintended residue chemicals in aquafeeds can affect both farmed fish and the environment. There are therefore clear ecotoxicological interests in relation to both fisheries and aquaculture. The aim of this session is to discuss the relevance of ecotoxicology in relation to fisheries and aquaculture. Experts from different research areas will present their perspective.

Programme 11:00 am

Introduction

11:05 am

Controlling the effect of aquaculture on the environment | Øyvind Oaland, Marine Harvest Group, Norway

11:25 am

The use of aquaculture medicines to control sea lice should not cost the earth | Adam Lillicrap, NIVA, Norway

11:45 am

Emerging contaminants and toxins in aquaculture: how modern analytical tools may aid to ensure food and environmental safety | Lynn Vanhaecke, Ghent University, Belgium

12:05 pm

Contaminant control and development in farmed salmon- industry data | Øyvind Oaland, Marine Harvest Group, Norway

12:25 pm

Sex steroids in common mussels: where do they come from and what risk do they pose to consumers? | Ioanna Katsiadaki, CEFAS, UK

12:45 pm

Lunch & Poster Viewing

02:15 pm

Introduction

02:20 pm

Do fisheries practices increase contaminant mobilisation from sediments? | Ian Allan, Norwegian Institute for Water Research, Norway

02:40 pm

Environmental contaminants in wild fish from the North East Atlantic | Amund Maage, NIFES, Norway

03:00 pm

Parameters influencing the levels of emerging contaminants in seafood from estuaries and open seas | Michiel Kotterman, IMARES, Netherlands

03:20 pm

Has tributyltin contamination reduced catches of the brown shrimp Crangon crangon? | Kris Cooreman, Research Institute for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Research (ILVO), Belgium

03:40 pm

Discussion

04:00 pm

End

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

29

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Programme Highlights Special Session: Toxicology and ecotoxicology: bridging the gaps Monday 8 May, 11:00 am - 4:00 pm, Silver Hall | Level 0 Dries Knapen University of Antwerp, Belgium

Dominique Lison Université Catholique de Louvian (UCL), Belgium

Recent advances in environmental toxicology and the use of new platforms, such as physiological measurements, genome wide information and metabolomics are reducing the gap between environmental risk assessment and human health assessment. The concepts, methods and procedures currently used for human and ecological risk assessment of chemicals show distinct differences but also some similarities. For example, typical human toxicology tools (e.g. in vitro cell lines) are routinely used in ecotoxicology and vice versa (e.g. zebrafish embryo as a model for exploring human toxicity). These practices are anticipated to change substantially over the next few decades. The roadmaps for these changes are expected to be different for ecological (e.g. trying to achieve increased environmental realism) and human health (e.g. paradigm shift from hazard-driven to exposure-driven processes) risk assessments, although the ultimate goal is similar, i.e.

Bruno Campos IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

Maurice Whelan European CommissionJoint Research Centre, Italy

increasing the level of protection for both humans and the environment. This session brings together ecotoxicologists and toxicologists to connect and to stimulate interaction between these two fields, and to explore possibilities for synergies in chemical risk assessment. The session will focus on a number of examples highly relevant to both toxicology and ecotoxicology: mixture toxicity, endocrine disrupting compounds, pathway approaches to understanding toxicity, and the zebrafish as a model species. The aim is to identify common issues and approaches, but also to discuss and understand the differences (e.g., in terminology and threshold definitions). These topics cover various interests of the typical SETAC and EUROTOX attendance. This session could therefore serve as a starting point for further collaboration between these two Societies. A similar session will be organised at the EUROTOX 2018 conference in Brussels.

Programme 11:00 am

Introduction

11:05 am

Harmonisation of Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of Combined Exposure to Multiple Chemicals: A Food Safety Perspective | Christer Hogstrand, Kings College London, UK

11:25 am

Ecological risk assessment of chemical mixtures | Ad Ragas, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands

11:45 am

Endocrine disruption: A toxicologist’s perspective | Sharon Munn, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy

12:05 pm

Endocrine disruption: An ecotoxicologist’s perspective | James Wheeler, Dow AgroSciences, UK

12:25 pm

Panel Discussion

12:45 pm

Lunch & Poster Viewing

02:15 pm

Introduction

02:20 pm

From Adverse Outcome Pathways to chemical risk assessment | Alan Boobis, Imperial College London, UK

02:40 pm

Application of Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOPs) in Human Health and Ecotoxicology Capturing Divergent Consequences of Conserved Molecular Initiating Events via AOP Networks | Daniel Villeneuve, USEPA, USA

03:00 pm

The zebrafish embryo model for human risk assessment: a SWOT analysis | Steven Van Cruchten, University of Antwerp, Belgium

03:20 pm

The fish embryo model for the environmental assessment of chemicals | Marc Leonard, L'Oréal, France

03:40 pm

Panel Discussion

04:00 pm

End

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

31

Monday 8 May 8:30 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1

8:35 am

8:55 am

Multigenerational, epigenetic and evolutionary effects in human and environmental toxicology: from… Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

001 | Genetics and evolution of tolerance to zinc pollution in the pseudometallophyte Arabidopsis halleri (Brassicaceae) | Maxime Pauwels, University of Lille1, France

002 | The evolution of resistance to a gradient of contaminants in Gulf killifish (Fundulus grandis) populations from Galveston Bay, Texas, USA | Elias Oziolor, Baylor University, USA

Advances on the assessment of environmental pollutants to amphibians and reptiles | Isabel Lopes, Peter Dohmen Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Introduction

006 | Bioaccumulation and tissue distribution of selenium in developing striped marsh frog tadpoles | Chantal Lanctot, Central Queensland University, Australia

007 | Common toad (Bufo bufo) and common frog (Rana temporaria) in agricultural landscapes in Germany - results of a monitoring study | Franziska Groezinger, BASF SE, Germany

Combined effects of chemical and environmental stressors: from local stressors towards… Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

011 | Unravelling the effects of multiple stressors on the aquatic invertebrate community in the region of Madrid (Central Spain) | Andreu Rico, IMDEA Water Institute, Spain

012 | A causal assessment approach that rapidly evaluates multiple stressors in stream systems | Jerome Diamond, Tetra Tech, Inc., USA

In situ measurement of nanoparticles | Geert Cornelis, James Ranville Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

016 | Single Cell ICP-MS: quantifying exposure and dose of gold and silver NPs to freshwater algae | Chady Stephan, PerkinElmer, Inc., Canada

017 | Predictability of silver nanoparticle speciation and toxicity in ecotoxicological media | Jan Koeser, University of Bremen, Germany

Metals in the Environment: Fate, Speciation and Bioavailability in Water, Soil and Sediment (I) | Copper Hall Level 0

Introduction

021 | A global overview on exposure levels and biological effects of trace elements in penguins | Winfred Espejo, Universidad de concepcion, Chile

022 | Opposing gradients for undesirable and essential elements in saithe from Skagerrak to Barents Sea - What goes around does not always come around? | Tanja Kögel, The National Institute of Nutrition and Seafood Research, Norway

Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs): Recent developments, sources, transport,… Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Introduction

026 | Assessment of PFAS in soil and groundwater: new analytical technologies for comprehensive analysis of PFAS including precursors | Ian Ross, ARCADIS, UK

027 | Determination of precursors of perfluoroalkyl acids in surface and wastewaters: application to some case studies | Sara Valsecchi, Water Research Institute - Italian National Research Council IRSA-CNR, Italy

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Wastewater effluents: How research can improve risk assessment and regulation | Introduction

031 | CONCAWE - A 53 year history developing knowledge and research to improve water management and environmental risk assessment of petroleum oil refinery effluents. | Graham Whale, Shell Health, UK

032 | Understanding the fate of active pharmaceutical compounds in surface waters receiving poorly or untreated sewage effluent and the development of appropriate environmental risk assessment approaches | Simone Bagnis, Plymouth University, UK

Life Cycle Data and Modeling Developments: challenges and solutions | Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

036 | Quantitative analysis of system models in an inventory database | Christopher Mutel, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

037 | Representativeness of environmental impact assessment methods regarding life cycle inventories of products | Antoine Esnouf, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Narbonne-France, France, Metropolitan

Higher tier approaches in the risk assessment of plant protection products and their links to… Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

041 | A new pulsed-exposure early life stage test design for rainbow trout on an insecticide. Refining OECD Guideline 210 to meet the needs of EFSA Aquatic Guidance 2013 | Christopher Ramsden, AgroChemex Environmental Ltd, UK

042 | Relative importance of waterborne vs. dietary exposure towards the neonicotinoid thiacloprid for leaf-shredders | Dominic Englert, Institute for Environmental Sciences, Germany

The Arc Level +3

Linking Oceans and Human Health: a new trans-disciplinary research challenge |

32

8:35 am

8:50 am

9:05 am

9:20 am

046 | The ocean and human health: a European perspective on an emerging integrated meta-discipline | Niall McDonough, European Marine Board, Belgium

047 | Red tides, Aerosols and Human Health | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

048 | Microbial pollution, antibiotic resistant bacteria, and Surfers | Anne Leonard, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

049 | Blue Gym/Blue Health! | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

Special Session

Monday 8 May

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1

9:15 am

9:35 am

9:55 am

003 | Transgenerational effects and epigenetic inheritance following a chronic external gamma irradiation in Daphnia magna | Marie Trijau, IRSN/ PRP-ENV/LECO, France

004 | Consequences of cadmiuminduced epigenomes on mutation and animal fitness | Joe Shaw, Indiana University, USA

005 | Poster spotlight: MO001, MO002, MO003, MO004

Meeting Studio 313&315 Level +3

Advances on the assessment of environmental pollutants to amphibians and reptiles | Isabel Lopes, Peter Dohmen 008 | Toxicity of chemicals to amphibians and reptiles. Assessment factors and comparative sensitivity | Manuel Ortiz Santaliestra, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

009 | Coverage of Amphibians and Reptiles by the Pesticide Risk Assessment for Birds and Mammals | Franz Streissl, EFSA, Italy

010 | Risk assessment proposal for plant protection products for terrestrial life stages of amphibians | Lennart Weltje, BASF SE, Germany

COFFEE BRE AK

Hall 300 Level +3

…mechanisms to risk assessment | Jana Asselman, Michael Eckerstorfer, Elias Oziolor, Arnaud Chaumot

Hall 400 Level +4

…climate change (I) | Andreu Rico, Matthias Liess, Paul van den Brink, Robby Stoks 013 | Predicting the synergy of multiple stress effects | Matthias Liess, UFZ Center for Environmental Research, Germany

014 | Combined environmental and chemical stress: impact on bioenergetics fluxes | Benoit Goussen, University of York, UK

015 | Fate and effect of sedimentassociated triclosan: Impact of T. tubifex, sediment characteristics, and temperature | Ronja Windfeld, Roskilde University, Denmark

018 | Degradation kinetics of C60 fullerene aggregates suspended and aged under realistic environmental conditions | Josep Sanchís, IDAEACSIC, Spain

019 | Flows of engineered nanomaterials through waste treatment to the environment | Véronique Adam, EMPA Technology & Society Lab, Switzerland

020 | Modelling nanoparticle fate in wastewater treatment plants | Geert Cornelis, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden

COFFEE BRE AK

Gold Hall Level 0

In situ measurement of nanoparticles | Geert Cornelis, James Ranville

Copper Hall Level 0

| Erik Smolders, Karel De Schamphelaere, Christopher Cooper 023 | Assessment of Exposure to Heavy Metals via ingestion, inhalation and dermal contact to Urban and Background Soils in Turkey | Perihan Kurt Karakus, Bursa Technical University, Turkey

024 | Predicting Arsenic Bioavailability in Contaminated Soils by Using In Vitro Gastrointestinal Bioaccessibility and Speciation for Site-Specific Risk Assessment | Nicholas Basta, The Ohio State University, USA

025 | Assessing the human bioaccessibility of automotive exhaust catalysts in urban road dust | Clare Wiseman, University of Toronto, Canada

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

…fate and toxicity (I) | Lutz Ahrens, Zhanyun Wang, Annegret Biegel-Engler, Ronald Bock 028 | Mass flows of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in a wastewater network and treatment plant | Lutz Ahrens, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden

029 | Transport and Profiles of PFASs in the Arctic Ocean | Rainer Lohmann, University of Rhode Island, USA

030 | Perfluoroalkyl substances in polar bears from Svalbard: Current knowledge on levels, trends and effects | Heli Routti, The Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway

034 | Occurrence, characterisation and fate of (nano)particulate Ti and Ag in two Norwegian wastewater treatment plants | Fabio Polesel, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Denmark

035 | Periphyton tolerance to micropollutant mixtures before and after upgrading of a wastewater treatment plant | Ahmed Tlili, Eawag, Switzerland

033 | Advanced wastewater treatment for removal of micro-pollutants - a cure for the Baltic Sea? | Emma Undeman, Stockholm University, Sweden

Hall 100 Level +1

| Simone Fazio, Bruce Vigon, Alessandra Zamagni 038 | Introducing the LCA data machine | Andreas Ciroth, GreenDelta, Germany

039 | Global sensitivity analysis in LCA of emerging technologies: Accounting for inputs' variability | Paula PerezLopez, Mines ParisTech, PSL Research University, France

040 | A second-generation life cycle inventory model for chemicals discharged in wastewater | Ivan Muñoz, 2.-0 LCA consultants, Denmark

COFFEE BRE AK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

| Dean Leverett, Mirco Bundschuh

Silver Hall Level 0

…protection goals | Frances Pickering, Eric Bruns, Veronique Poulsen 043 | Effects of imidacloprid on freshwater outdoor microcosms in Bangladesh | Kizar Ahmed Sumon, Wageningen University & Research Centre, Netherlands

044 | Proposal of a higher tier nontarget plant study design | Silvio Knaebe, EAS Ecotox GmbH, Germany

045 | Opportunities to advance flexible and effective spray drift mitigation: Continuity and progress from SETAC MAgPIE to SETAC DRAW | Anne Alix, Dow Agrosciences, UK

The Arc Level +3

| Colin Janssen, Lora Fleming, Jan Mees

9:35 am

9:50 am

10:00 am

10:10 am

050 | Marine biogenic chemicals, cell signaling and human health | Michael Moore, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Plymouth University and ECEHH University of Exeter medical School, UK

051 | Occurrence and effects of bio-active substances in marine aerosols | Emmanuel Van Acker, Ghent University, Belgium

052 | Frequent multi-toxin (HAB) exposure through seafood consumption: an under-estimated risk to human health? | Maarten De Rijcke, Ghent University, Belgium

053 | Discussion

Special Session

33

Monday 8 May 11:00 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2

11:05 am

11:25 am

Combined effects of chemical and environmental stressors: from local stressors towards climate change (II) | Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

054 | Strong delayed interactive effects of metal exposure and warming: latitude-dependent synergisms persist across metamorphosis | Robby Stoks, University of Leuven, Belgium

055 | The Interaction between environmental temperature and metal toxicity tolerance in zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Ali Pilehvar, Antwerp university, Belgium

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Wildlife ecotoxicology: cumulative effects through the food chain to the community | Introduction

059 | Modelling species sensitivity distributions for POP-contaminated wild birds using quantileregression | Renske Hoondert, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands

060 | Neurotoxic effect of mercury on Arctic Barnacle goslings assessed in a controlled field study | Nico van den Brink, Wageningen University, Netherlands

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Advances in the Environmental Fate of Down-the-Drain Chemicals, including Pharmaceuticals | Introduction

064 | 10 years experiences with fate assessment for human pharmaceuticals - new approaches available? | Daniela Gildemeister, Umweltbundesamt / Federal Agency of Environment, Germany

065 | Ten years' experience with the environmental risk assessment of human medicinal products | Jason Snape, AstraZeneca UK Ltd., UK

Copper Hall Level 0

Metals in the Environment: Fate, Speciation and Bioavailability in Water, Soil and Sediment (II) | Introduction

069 | Accumulation of cadmium in the brown crab Cancer pagurus from different routes by tracing multiple stable Cd isotopes | Martin Wiech, National Insttute for Nutrion and Seafood Research, Norway

070 | Use of reverse-isotopic labeling of Lymnaea stagnalis to understand dietborne Cu bioavailability in receiving waters affected by contamination and remediation of acid mine drainage | Elizabeth Traudt, Colorado School of Mines, USA

Modelling and monitoring of pesticides fate and exposure in a regulatory context (I) | Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

074 | Not relevant? The significance of non-regulated pesticide metabolites | Helena Banning, Federal Environment Agency (Umweltbundesamt), Germany

075 | Significant processes for calculating environmental concentrations of plant protection products in the sediment compartment of FOCUSsw scenarios | David Patterson, Syngenta, UK

Nanomaterial fate and toxicity - Implications of the environment as a global reactor for nanomaterials… Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

079 | Toxicokinetics of silver nanoparticles in the freshwater snail Physa acuta | Patricia Silva, University of Aveiro, Portugal

080 | Toxicokinetics of silver nanoparticles in the mealworm Tenebrio molitor | Zahra Khodaparast, University of Aveiro, Portugal

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs): Recent developments, sources, transport, fate and toxicity (II) | Introduction

084 | The burden of persistence: towards an understanding of ΣPFAS exposure | Carla Ng, University of Pittsburgh, USA

085 | The environmental emissions, global distribution and risk assessment of F-53B | Bowen Ti, Peking University, China

Input/output and Hybrid Life Cycle Assessment for supporting the assessment of production… Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

089 | Hybridizing Ecoinvent and Exiobase with streamlined methods and open-source software | Guillaume Majeau-Bettez, CIRAIG - Polytechnique Montreal, Canada

090 | Increasing the regional resolution of the Ecoinvent LCI database with GMRIO data | Adrian Haas, Institute of Environmental Engineering, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture (I) | Marc Berntssen, Ketil Hylland, Craig Robinson The Arc Level +3

Introduction

094 | Controlling the effect of aquaculture on the environment | Øyvind Oaland, Marine Harvest ASA, Norway

095 | The use of aquaculture medicines to control sea lice should not cost the earth | Adam Lillicrap, NIVA Norwegian Institute for Water Research, Norway

Silver Hall Level 0

Toxicology and ecotoxicology: bridging the gaps (Part I: contemporary toxicological challenges) |

34

Introduction

099 | Harmonisation of Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of Combined Exposure to Multiple Chemicals: A Food Safety Perspective | Christer Hogstrand, Kings College London, UK

100 | Ecological risk assessment of chemical mixtures | Ad Ragas, Radbound University, Netherlands

Special Session

Monday 8 May 11:45 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2 12:05 pm

12:25 pm

056 | Multi-generation toxicity of metal(loid) mining soils to Enchytraeus crypticus under the influence of climate change | M. Nazaret González-Alcaraz, Department of Biology & CESAM - University of Aveiro, Portugal

057 | Rapid thermal evolution shapes susceptibility to ZnO nanoparticles under global warming: a resurrection study of Daphnia magna | Chao Zhang, KU Leuven, Belgium

058 | Interactive effects between temperature and silver nanoparticles on microbial decomposers | Daniela Batista, University of Minho, Portugal

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

| John Elliott, Veerle Jaspers, Kim Fernie, Renaud Scheifler 061 | Using American dippers Cinclus mexicanus to investigate the influence of run-of-the-river dams on mercury exposure and mountain stream food webs. | John Elliott, Environment Canada, Canada

062 | Functional role of diet as conditioning dilution or amplification effect on trace metal exposure in mammals: the case of a generalist rodent, Apodemus sylvaticus | Shinji Ozaki, University of Franche-Comte, France

063 | Is rodenticide use disrupting the natural regulation of vole populations? A biomathematics modelling approach | Javier Fernandez-de-Simon, Laboratoire Chrono-environnement, France

LUNCH BREAK

Hall 400 Level +4

| Lizanne Janssens, Andreu Rico, Robby Stoks

066 | Using HPLC stationary phases to predict fate and behavior of non-ionic and anionic surfactants | Jort Hammer, University of Utrecht, Netherlands

067 | Quantifying the influence of technological and spatial variability on the removal efficiencies of chemicals in activated sludge treatment processes | Mélanie Douziech, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands

068 | Mapping risk assessment challenges for HPC ingredients: a chemical space analysis | Todd Gouin, Unilever, UK

Copper Hall Level 0

| Erik Smolders, Karel De Schamphelaere, Christopher Cooper 071 | From biodynamic modelling to the field: Cd and Cu availability for invertebrates in river floodplains | Vera Slaveykova, University of Geneva, Switzerland

072 | Are zinc sacrificial anodes a major source of zinc to the estuarine environment: A case study of the Hamble, UK | Aldous Rees, Southampton Solent University, UK

073 | Distribution of Trace Metals (Cu, Pb, Ni, Zn) between Particulate, Colloidal and Truly Dissolved Fractions in Wastewater Treatment | Andrew Hargreaves, Cranfield University, UK

077 | The potential of 'on-line' constructed wetlands for mitigating pesticide transfers from agricultural land to surface waters | Mick Whelan, University of leicester, UK

078 | Evaluation of Multi-year FOCUS Surface Water Calculations for Regulatory Purposes | Dieter Schaefer, Bayer Crop Science, Germany

LUNCH BREAK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

| Lisa Constantine, Duane Huggett, Ed Schaefer, Jens Schönfeld

Hall 300 Level +3

| Bernhard Gottesbueren, Christina Pickl 076 | Use of Pesticide Groundwater Monitoring data as higher tier for regulatory risk assessment | Arnaud Boivin, ANSES, France

081 | Toxicokinetic rate constants of particulate Ag and Ag+ differ in Eisenia fetida exposed under environmentally relevant conditions | Marta Baccaro, Wageningen University, Netherlands

082 | Exposure pathway depended impacts of silver and titanium dioxide nanoparticles on Gammarus fossarum | Mirco Bundschuh, Department of Aquatic Sciences & Assessment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden

LUNCH BREAK

Gold Hall Level 0

…along their life-cycle (I) | Susana Loureiro, Claus Svendsen, Kees van Gestel, Iseult Lynch 083 | Routes of uptake and bioaccumulation of cerium oxide and silver nanoparticles depend on their fate in sediments | Richard Cross, University of Exeter, UK

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

| Lutz Ahrens, Zhanyun Wang, Annegret Biegel-Engler, Ronald Bock 086 | Degradation of poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) from industrial wastewaters on BDD electrodes | Ane Urtiaga, Universidad de Cantabria, Spain

087 | Development and assessment of alternatives to long-chain PFAS | Ronald Bock, The Chemours Company, Switzerland

088 | TBD

091 | EU life cycle indicators - based on hybrid LCA | Jannick Hoejrup Schmidt, 2.-0 LCA consultants, Denmark

092 | BONSAI: from vision to implementation | Michele De Rosa, Arhus University, Denmark

093 | Regional and temporal variation in environmental impacts from household consumption | Vanessa Zeller, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium

The Arc Level +3

The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture (I) | Marc Berntssen, Ketil Hylland, Craig Robinson 096 | Emerging contaminants and toxins in aquaculture: how modern analytical tools may aid to ensure food and environmental safety | Lynn Vanhaecke, Ghent University, Belgium

097 | Contaminant control and development in farmed salmonindustry data | Øyvind Oaland, Marine Harvest ASA, Norway

098 | Sex steroids in common mussels: where do they come from and what risk do they pose to consumers? | Ioanna Katsiadaki, Cefas, UK

Silver Hall Level 0

| Dries Knapen, Dominique Lison, Bruno Campos, Maurice Whelan 101 | Endocrine disruption: A toxicologist's perspective | Sharon Munn, European Commission

Special Session

102 | Endocrine disruption: An ecotoxicologist's perspective | James R. Wheeler, Dow Agrosciences, UK

103 | Panel discussion

35

LUNCH BREAK

Hall 100 Level +1

…and consumption patterns | Michele De Rosa, Jannick Hoejrup Schmidt

Monday 8 May 2:15 pm

Afternoon Platform Presentations

2:20 pm

2:40 pm

Combined effects of chemical and environmental stressors: from local stressors towards climate… Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

104 | Influence of temperature and moisture on toxicity of propiconazole and chlorantraniliprole to earthworm Eisenia fetida | Davorka Hackenberger, Department f Biology, University of Osijek, Croatia

105 | Chlorpyrifos-induced oxidative damage is reduced under warming and predation risk | Lizanne Janssens, KULeuven, Belgium

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Polar ecotoxicology: hot issues in cold climates | Nico van den Brink, Katrine Borga Introduction

109 | Effects and uptake and excretion kinetics of 11 selected PAHs in Arctic lipid rich copepods | Iurgi Salaberria, NTNU University, Norway

110 | Contaminants and energy expenditure in an arctic seabird: Organochlorine pesticides and perfluoroalkyl substances are associated with basal metabolic rate in a contrasted manner | Pierre Blévin, CEBC CNRS & Université de la Rochelle UMR 7372, France

Metals in the Environment: Fate, Speciation and Bioavailability in Water, Soil and… Copper Hall Level 0

Introduction

114 | REEchangE-Rare Earth Elements in a Changing Environment | Henning Tien, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences/University of the West of Scotland, Germany

115 | Derivation of soil threshold concentrations for arsenic: evaluation of ecotoxicological data for several species in six German soils | Julia Brack, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany

Modelling and monitoring of pesticides fate and exposure in a regulatory context (II) | Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

119 | Probabilistic approach for a countrywide risk assessment of watercourses exposed to spray drift in fruit growing in Netherlands | Henk Jan Holterman, Wageningen University and Research, Netherlands

120 | Options for the spatial statistical population of the exposure assessment goal for aquatic organisms at EU level | Jos Boesten, Wageningen Environmental Research, Netherlands

Nanomaterial fate and toxicity - Implications of the environment as a global reactor for nanomaterials…

Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

124 | Toxicity of multi-walled carbon nanotubes on the invasive clam Ruditapes philippinarum | Lucia De Marchi, University of Aveiro, Department of Biology & CESAM, Portugal

125 | Modelling emissions and fate of engineered cerium oxide nanoparticles at high spatial resolution in urban environments | Maria del Prado Nuñez, University of York, UK

Persistence & Biodegradation Assessment | Thouand Gerald, Graham Whale, Jacques Lharidon, Arnaud Boivin Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Introduction

129 | The impacts of light and season on isopyrazam degradation in river microcosms | Rebecca Southwell, University of Warwick, UK

130 | Biodegradation testing of hydrophobic chemicals in mixtures at low concentrations - covering the chemical space of petroleum hydrocarbons | Heidi Birch, DTU Environment, Denmark

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Hazard and risk assessment of human pharmaceuticals in the environment | Introduction

134 | Emerging micropollutants in Kenya: a case study on the occurrence patterns of pharmaceutical residues during wastewater treatment and in river water | Kenneth K'oreje, Water Resources Management Authority, Kenya

135 | Prediction of Drug Target Conservation in Wildlife Species | Bas Verbruggen, University of Exeter, UK

LCA of territorial contexts: upscaling the Life Cycle Thinking to business clusters, neighborhoods, … Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

139 | Life Cycle Assessments applied to the urban scale: a review of selected literature and critical analysis of current trends and limitations | Nadia Mirabella, KU Leuven, Belgium

140 | Upscaling building LCA to neighbourhoods | Damien Trigaux, KU Leuven, Belgium

The Arc Level +3

The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture (II) | Marc Berntssen, Ketil Hylland, Craig Robinson Introduction

144 | Do fisheries practices increase contaminant mobilisation from sediments? | Ian Allan, Norwegian Institute for Water Research, Norway

145 | Environmental contaminants in wild fish from the North East Atlantic | Amund Maage, National Institute of Nutrition and Seafood Research, Norway

Toxicology and ecotoxicology: bridging the gaps (Part II: models and frameworks) Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

36

149 | From Adverse Outcome Pathways to chemical risk assessment | Alan Boobis, Imperial College London, UK

150 | Application of Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOPs) in Human Health and Ecotoxicology Capturing Divergent Consequences of Conserved Molecular Initiating Events via AOP Networks | Daniel Villeneuve, U.S. EPA, USA

Special Session

Monday 8 May 3:00 pm

Afternoon Platform Presentations 3:20 pm

3:40 pm

Hall 400 Level +4

106 | Strong differences between two congeneric species in sensitivity to pesticides in a warming world | Lin Op de Beeck, Laboratory of Aquatic Ecology & Evolutionary Biology - KU Leuven, Belgium

107 | Sequential pesticide exposure increases toxicological sensitivity of crustaceans | Renato Russo, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany

108 | Combined effects of water scarcity and an insecticide on freshwater zooplankton communities: a microcosm study | Alba Sanchez, IMDEA Water Institute, Spain

Polar ecotoxicology: hot issues in cold climates | Nico van den Brink, Katrine Borga Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

111 | Combined effect of sea ice retreat and pollutants on lipid metabolism in polar bears | Heli Routti, The Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway

112 | Are snow buntings (Plectrophenax nivalis) in Svalbard affected by local urban pollution? | Bjorn Munro Jenssen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway

113 | Causes and consequences of mercury exposure in an Antarctic seabird | Alice Carravieri, CEBC UMR 7372 CNRS-University of La Rochelle, France

COFFEE BRE AK

…change (III) | Robby Stoks, Matthias Liess, Andreu Rico, Paul van den Brink

…Sediment (III) | Erik Smolders, Karel De Schamphelaere, Christopher Cooper Copper Hall Level 0

116 | Improved comparative toxicity potentials of 23 metallic elements in soils: addressing solid- and liquidphase speciation in environmental fate, exposure, and effects | Mikolaj Owsianiak, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

117 | The effect of ageing on lead toxicity to the soil invertebrate Enchytraeus crypticus | Lulu Zhang, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands

118 | Laterite associated waters - What the lack of major ions means to trace element bioavailability and toxicity | Ross Smith, Hydrobiology Pty Ltd, Australia

| Bernhard Gottesbueren, Christina Pickl 122 | Comparison of aquatic exposure assessment models for pesticide use on rice | Gerco Hoogeweg, Waterborne Environmental, Inc., USA

123 | Mitigating pesticide runoff in an agricultural catchment | Ingeborg Joris, VITO, Belgium

…along their life-cycle (II) | Susana Loureiro, Claus Svendsen, Kees van Gestel, Iseult Lynch

Gold Hall Level 0

126 | Investigation on the mode of action of n-TiO2 with co-exposed Cd in the nematode test using Caenorhabditis elegans | Kamelia Samet, HAW- Hamburg, Germany

127 | High-resolution mass spectrometry applied to the study of metabolome modifications in filterfeeding organisms after nanomaterials and microplastics administration through the diet | Marinella FarréUrgell, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

128 | Nonlinear learning systems for predicting nanoparticle toxicity | Ester Papa, University of Insubria, Italy

COFFEE BRE AK

Hall 300 Level +3

121 | SETAC DRAW: Modelling pesticide spray drift for regulatory risk assessment | Clare Butler Ellis, Silsoe Spray Applications Unit Ltd, UK

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Persistence & Biodegradation Assessment | Gerald Thouand, Graham Whale, Jacques Lharidon, Arnaud Boivin 131 | Persistence of produced water compounds in seawater determined by two biodegradation methods | Odd Brakstad, SINTEF Materials and Chemistry, Norway

132 | Degradation of synthetic polymeric flocculants in land spreading of MWWTP sludge | Dieter Hennecke, Fraunhofer IME - Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology, Germany

133 | Poster spotlight: MO142, MO143, MO144, MO145

136 | Unexpected Endpoints: Pharmaceutical 5α-reductase inhibitors, designed to treat prostate cancer in men, disrupt gastropod morphogenesis during embryo development. | Alice Baynes, Brunel University, UK

137 | How biotransformation can make the heart beat - mixture effects of two pharmaceuticals (metoprolol and paroxetine) in the zebrafish embryo | Thorsten Reemtsma, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany

138 | Review of the EU guideline on ERA of HMPs | Ines Rönnefahrt, German Environment Agency - UBA, Germany

Hall 100 Level +1

…urban agglomerations and territorial entities | Nadia Mirabella, Karen Allacker, Serenella Sala 141 | Using and adapting the concept of eco-efficiency to assess land use planning scenarios in territorial LCA | Eleonore Loiseau, IRSTEA Montpellier, France

142 | LCA in support to urban planning policies | Adélaïde Mailhac, CSTB, France

143 | An application of Spatial Territorial LCA to agriculture in Luxembourg: use the TMML R package | Antonino Marvuglia, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology (LIST), Luxembourg

COFFEE BRE AK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

| Reinhard Laenge, Anja Coors, Alistair Boxall

The Arc Level +3

The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture (II) | Marc Berntssen, Ketil Hylland, Craig Robinson 146 | Parameters influencing the levels of emerging contaminants in seafood from estuaries and open seas | Michiel Kotterman, IMARES, Netherlands

147 | Has tributyltin contamination reduced catches of the brown shrimp Crangon crangon? | Kris Cooreman, ILVO, Belgium

148 | Discussion

Silver Hall Level 0

| Dries Knapen, Dominique Lison, Bruno Campos, Maurice Whelan 151 | The zebrafish embryo model for human risk assessment: a SWOT analysis | Steven Van Cruchten, University of Antwerp, Belgium

Special Session

152 | The fish embryo model for the environmental assessment of chemicals | Marc Leonard,L´Oréal SA, France

153 | Panel discussion

37

Monday 8 May Poster Corners Future challenges in sediment toxicity testing for environmental risk assessment (PC) | Daniel Faber, Theo Brock, Henry Krueger, Paul Sibley Discussion at 5:30 pm MOPC01 | Exposure of Plant Protection Products in Water-Sediment Systems Used for Toxicity Tests | Klaus Hammel, Bayer AG, Crop Science Division, Germany MOPC02 | Pore water - The relevant exposure pathway for sediment risk assessment? | Valerie Herno, Bayer AG Crop Science Division, Germany MOPC03 | Evaluating the Relative Sensitivity of Endpoints Generated During Midge LifeCycle Sediment Toxicity Tests for US Pesticide Registration | Henry Krueger, Wildlife International, USA MOPC04 | Recommendations to Improve, Harmonize and Standardize test designs for acute and chronic sediment toxicity tests with Hyalella, Chironomid, and Leptocheirus. | Henry Krueger, Wildlife International, USA MOPC05 | The use of 10 d sediment-spiked toxicity tests with benthic macro-invertebrates and the insecticide lufenuron as a Tier 2 effect assessment approach | Ivo Roessink, Alterra, Netherlands MOPC06 | Incorporation of sediment specific aspects in the CRED evaluation system: recommendations for sediment ecotoxicity data reporting | M. Carmen CasadoMartinez, Centre Ecotox, Switzerland

Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs): Recent developments, sources, transport, fate and toxicity (PC) | Lutz Ahrens, Zhanyun Wang, Annegret BiegelEngler, Ronald Bock Discussion at 6:00 pm MOPC08 | Seasonal variation of perfluoroalkyl substances in water, sediment and fish samples from Ebro Delta (Catalonia, Spain) | Emanuela Pignotti, Bologna University, Italy MOPC09 | Comparison of analytical methodologies for analysis of Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in Water | Tarun Anumol, Agilent Technologies Inc., USA MOPC10 | Fate and transport of perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) in soil and groundwater | Dauren Mussabek, LTH, Lund University, Sweden MOPC11 | Electrochemical treatment of perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluorooctane sulfonate: application to groundwater treatment | Ane Urtiaga, Universidad de Cantabria, Spain MOPC12 | Best Environmental Practices (BEP) guidance for the AFFF, textile and related FluoroTechnology industries | Stephen Korzeniowski, BeachEdge Consulting, LLC, USA MOPC13 | New Mechanisms in Assessing and Managing Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances? Current Needs and Our Recommendations | Zhanyun Wang, Swiss Federal institute of Technology, Switzerland

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Poster Presentations Fate, risk assessment and management of natural toxins: state-of-the-art, challenges and future prospectives (PC) | Gemma Giménez Papiol, Hans Christian Bruun Hansen, Karina Knudsmark Sjøholm Discussion at 5:30 pm MOPC14 | Plant toxins as groundwater contaminants - do we need to care? | Hans Christian B. Hansen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark MOPC15 | Establishing a Phytotoxin Database for Environmental Risk Assessment | Barbara Guenthardt, Agroscope, Switzerland MOPC16 | Carcinogenic ptaquiloside in stream water at base flow and during storm events | Bjarne Strobel, University of Copenhagen, Denmark MOPC17 | What is the aquatic toxicity of saponin-rich plant extracts used as biopesticides? | Xiaogang Jiang, University of Copenhagen, Denmark MOPC18 | Degradation of pterosin B in Danish forest soils | Lars Holm Rasmussen, Metropolitan University College, Denmark MOPC19 | Presence of ptaquiloside in Bracken based food, food supplements and alternative medicine (this poster has been presented at 2nd Plant Toxin Conference in 2016) | Lars Holm Rasmussen, Metropolitan University College, Denmark

In situ measurement of nanoparticles (PC) | Geert Cornelis, James Ranville Discussion at 6:00 pm MOPC20 | Mobility of metallic (nano)particles in leachates from landfills containing waste incineration residues | Denise Mitrano, Eawag - Swiss federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland MOPC21 | Exploring the nanoparticle ecocorona evolution with surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy | Iseult Lynch, University of Birmingham, UK

Poster Sessions 07:30 am–08:30 am 10:15 am–11:00 am 12:45 pm–2:15 pm 4:00 pm–4:30 pm 5:30 pm–6:30 pm 6:30 pm–7:00 pm

Poster setup Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster social Poster take-down

Multigenerational, epigenetic and evolutionary effects in human and environmental toxicology: from mechanisms to risk assessment (P) | Jana Asselman, Michael Eckerstorfer, Elias Oziolor, Arnaud Chaumot MO001 | Mechanisms of adaptation to metal pollution in the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus as detected by RNAseq | Ilze Rasnaca, NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, UK MO002 | A multiscale approach to decipher molecular mechanisms involved in intergenerational effects of ibuprofen on the mosquito Aedes aegypti. | Sophie Prud'homme, Edysan FRE 3498 CNRS - UPJV, France MO003 | Integrated transcriptomicsepigenomics modulations in Graphene oxide nanomaterials' mediated transformed cells | Nivedita Chatterjee, University of Seoul, South Korea MO004 | Epigenetic changes upon multiresidue exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons at environmental levels | Radu - Corneliu Duca, KU Leuven, Belgium MO005 | Copper induces expression and methylation changes of homeotic genes in Crassostrea gigas embryos | Rossana Sussarellu, IFREMER, France MO006 | Integration of Epigenomics in Systems Toxicology: Effects of BPA on DNA methylation of target promoters during early zebrafish development. | Benjamin Pina, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

MOPC22 | Development of methods for the detection of metallic nanoparticles in complex environmental and biological samples | Susana Pereira, University of Aveiro, Portugal

MO007 | Trans- and multigenerational impacts of micropollutants on life-history traits of the mosquito Aedes aegypti. | Sophie Prud'homme, Edysan FRE 3498 CNRS - UPJV, France

MOPC23 | Mapping of accumulated Y/ RhBITC-doped SiNPs and Cs in basil leaves by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) | Jung Ah Ko, Korea Institute of Korea (KIT), South Korea

MO008 | Trans-generational effect of Piperonyl butoxide (PBO) on Daphnia magna: An extended study of OECD TG 211 | Nivedita Chatterjee, University of Seoul, South Korea

MOPC24 | Quantification of pesticides in fungi and midge larvae in the presence of nanoparticles | Jorina Wicht, University of Tuebingen, Germany

MO009 | Transgenerational inheritance of reproductive defects in the crude oil exposed nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans: An epigenetic approach with various exposure scenarios | Youngho Kim, University of Seoul, South Korea

Advances on the assessment of environmental pollutants to amphibians and reptiles (P) | Isabel Lopes, Peter Dohmen MO010 | Using 1H NMR-based metabolomics to explore sub-lethal toxicity of a mixture of diabetic and lipid-regulating pharmaceuticals on amphibian larvae | Steven Melvin, Griffith University, Australia MO011 | May gold nanoparticles impair feeding and growth of Xenopus laevis tadpoles? | Isabel Lopes, University of Aveiro, Portugal

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Monday 8 May

Poster Presentations

MO012 | Effect of glyphosate and temperature on the growth of Pelophylax perezi tadpoles | João Romão, University of Aveiro, Portugal MO013 | Tolerance of amphibians and its skin symbiotic bacteria to increased salinity | Isabel Lopes, University of Aveiro, Portugal MO014 | Interactions of environmental stressors with the amphibian pathogen Saprolegnia australis | Isabel Lopes, University of Aveiro, Portugal MO015 | Current studies on ecotoxicity of accident preparedness substances in Korea | Yooeun Chae, Konkuk University, South Korea MO016 | SETAC Interest Group on Ecotoxicology of Amphibians and Reptiles | Catherine Aubee, US Environmental Protection Agency, USA

IG

Combined effects of chemical and environmental stressors: from local stressors towards climate change (P) | Robby Stoks, Paul van den Brink, Matthias Liess, Andreu Rico, Lizanne Janssens MO017 | Temperature-dependent effects of metal mixtures: behavioral changes in a freshwater invertebrate | Marjolein Van Ginneken, University of Antwerp, Dept. Biology, Belgium MO018 | Effects of titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles from sunscreen on coral symbionts, Symbiodinium spp., and their combined toxicity with global warming. | Alice Tagliati, Heriot Watt University, UK MO019 | Transgenerational interactions between a pesticide and warming in a vector mosquito | Thanh Tam Tran, University of Leuven, Belgium MO020 | Interaction between increased temperature and Cu excess induces differential antioxidant enzymes responses in the brown macroalga Ectocarpus siliculosus | Alex Santillán-Sarmiento, Plymouth University, UK MO021 | Combined effects of invasive species and insecticide exposure to freshwater benthic invertebrate community: a mesocosm approach | Andreia Rodrigues, University of Aveiro, Portugal MO022 | The common pollutant copper alters the physiological responses of the king ragworm Alitta virens to ocean acidification. | Clara Nielson, The University of Exeter, UK MO023 | The combined effects of zinc and phosphorus in a predator (D. magna) - prey (P. subcapitata) microcosm | Andreas Fettweis, KULeuven, Belgium MO024 | The effect of toxicant dispersal on the relationship between regional diversity and productivity | Jonathan De Raedt, Ghent University, Belgium MO025 | Contribution of natural factors and anthropogenic chemicals to the population dynamics of marine zooplankton | Gert Everaert, Ghent University, Belgium MO026 | Mixture of pesticides occurred in the Nakdong and Yeongsan River, Korea: The relevance to blooms of blue-green algae | Park Naree, Changwon National University, South Korea MO027 | Spatial and temporal relationships reveal the impact of dams on river ecosystem resilience: The Ebro river (NE Spain) as case study | Damià  Barceló, Catalan Institute

for Water Research ICRA - Department of Environmental Chemistry, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

Polar ecotoxicology: hot issues in cold climates (P) | Nico van den Brink, Katrine Borga MO028 | Toxicity of hexachlorobenzene to humpback whale cells - establishment of a passive dosing assay and in vitro toxicity testing | Jenny Maner, Eawag, Switzerland MO029 | Methylmercury in Arctic Seabirds - Seasonal inter-tissue differences | Anders Ruus, NIVA, Norway MO030 | Effect of remoteness and global fractionation on legacy contaminants in a top predator seabird across the Northeast Atlantic | Katrine Borga, Department of Bioscences, University of Oslo, Norway

Wildlife ecotoxicology: cumulative effects through the food chain to the community (P) | John Elliott, Veerle Jaspers, Kim Fernie, Renaud Scheifler MO031 | Historical mercury contamination in Belgian rivers; screening for suitable biomarker genes of the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus). | Vyshal Delahaut, University of Antwerp, Belgium MO032 | A little bird once told me: Health affects attributed to NO2 exposure in urban areas could be from confounding co-contaminants | Judit Smits, University of Calgary, Canada MO033 | Can autopsy measurements be used as health indices to provide early warning of population impacts? | Richard Shore, Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (NERC), UK MO034 | Blood concentrations of organochlorine compounds in an avian predator endemic to southern Africa: associations with habitat, electric transformers and diet | Rafael Mateo, U.C.L.M.-C.S.I.C., Spain MO035 | Blood levels of heavy metals and arsenic in black-necked grebe Podiceps nigricollis during the moulting period in the Odiel Marshes, SW Spain | Rafael Mateo, U.C.L.M.-C.S.I.C., Spain MO036 | Sublethal effects of neonicotinoids on farmland birds | Rosie Lennon, University of York, UK MO037 | Embedded lead-shots as a potential source of lead exposure in birds of prey | Philippe Berny, VETAGRO-SUP, France MO038 | Contamination status by persistent organic pollutants of the Atlantic spotted dolphin (Stenella frontalis) at the metapopulation level | Paula Mendez Fernandez, IOUSP, Brazil

Advances in the Environmental Fate of Down-the-Drain Chemicals, including Pharmaceuticals (P) | Lisa Constantine, Duane Huggett, Ed Schaefer, Jens Schönfeld MO039 | Uptake of emerging contaminants under hydroponic condition | Eulalia Beltrán, INIA - National Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain MO040 | Assessment of sources, occurrence and fate of the fungicide carbendazim in water | Sylvain Merel, University of Tuebingen, Germany

MO041 | Biodegradation of 3 pharmaceutical compounds in activated sludge | Carmen Fernández-López, UCAM Catholic University of Murcia, Spain MO042 | Psychiatric drugs bioaccumulation, metabolization and depuration in bivalves under climate change conditions | Sara Rodriguez-Mozaz, Institute for Water Research (ICRA), Spain MO043 | Transformation of diazepam and related benzodiazepines during chlorination | Rosario Rodil, University of Santiaga de Compostela, Spain MO044 | Comparison of two cell lines to select an effective method for the simultaneous determination of phototoxic and photogenotoxic potential of pharmaceutical pollutants. | Anna Zgadzaj, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland MO045 | Antibody Mimetics for the Detection of Environmental Contaminants | Eleni Koutsoumpeli, University of York, UK MO046 | Identification of micropollutants in surface water originating from sewage treatment facilities by using target and suspect screeening strategies based on regulatory databases | Pablo Gago Ferrero, IDAEA-CSIC, Sweden MO047 | Identification of micropollutants in sewage effluent and receiving seawater in Arctic region | Choi Younghun, Changwon National University, South Korea MO048 | Emission of synthetic musk fragrances in surface waters during rain events in urban environments | Sara Valsecchi, Water Research Institute - Italian National Research Council IRSA-CNR, Italy MO049 | Source determination of endocrine activity in the Zenne River, Brussels. Combining flux modelling with in vitro endocrine activity measurements | Kersten Van Langenhove, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium MO050 | Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Pharmaceuticals in the Humber Estuary, UK | Sarah Letsinger, University of Leeds, UK MO051 | Estimating sewer residence time at the national scale to enable probabilistic risk assessment of down-the-drain household consumer product ingredients | Christopher Holmes, Waterborne Environmental, Inc., USA MO052 | Photolysis of Piperacillin - Kinetics, Transformation Products and the Meaning for the Antibacterial Activity | Alexander Timm, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany MO053 | The role of wastewater irrigation on the introduction and fate of pharmaceuticals in soils | Katherine Lees, Plymouth University, UK

In situ measurement of nanoparticles (P) | Geert Cornelis, James Ranville MO054 | Single Particle ICP-MS (SP-ICPMS) For the Detection of Metal-Based Nanoparticles in Environmental Matrices | Chady Stephan, PerkinElmer, Inc., Canada MO055 | Multi-functional membranes for the removal of non-polar water pollutants and (bio)fouling prevention | Georgiana Amariei, University of Alcala, Spain MO056 | Photocatalytic decomposition of diclofenac sodium in aqueous solution by nanopowder mixture ZnO/TiO2 | Boris Obrovski, Faculty of Technical Sciences, Novi Saf, Serbia

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

39

Monday 8 May

Poster Presentations

MO057 | Investigation of nanomaterial behaviour in the end-of-life phase of emerging photovoltaic technologies: The case of organic and perovskite cells | Steffi Weyand, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, Germany

Geosciences and Natural Resources, Germany

MO058 | Degradation of solid state C60 fullerene by UV irradiation under environmentally relevant conditions | John Parsons, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands MO059 | Avoidance behaviour of Enchytraeus albidus (Oligochaeta) after exposure to AgNPs and AgNO3 at fluctuating temperatures | Patricks Voua Otomo, University of the Free State, South Africa MO060 | Eco-friendly profile of pegylated nanographene oxide synthesized for medical application | Sandra Goncalves, Department of Biology & CESAM - University of Aveiro, Portugal

MO071 | Bioaccessibility, mobility, and health risk assessment of cadmium in farmland pollution soil in Taiwan | Tzu-Shiow Hsu, Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering of National Taiwan University, Taiwan MO072 | Evolution of residual polluted soils after ecological restoration | Ana Romero, UGR (CIF Q1818002F), France MO073 | Lanthanide distribution across environmental compartments in a LREE enriched geological area in Quebec (Canada) | Ana Romero, UGR (CIF Q1818002F), France MO074 | Bioavailability of Cu, Cd and Zn toward Chlorella vulgaris in two Siberian rivers | Yury Grigorev, Siberian Federal University, Russian Federation MO075 | Metal complexation in sewage effluent | Carlos Constantino, Atkins, UK

MO061 | Environmental corona of metal oxide nanoparticles | Jan Koeser, University of Bremen, Germany

MO076 | Predicting copper and zinc speciation in estuarine waters | Sean Comber, Plymouth University, UK

Metals in the Environment: Fate, Speciation and Bioavailability in Water, Soil and Sediment (P) | Erik Smolders, Karel De Schamphelaere, Christopher Cooper

MO077 | A pH-controlled flow-through system exposing fathead minnows and rainbow trout to copper under soft water conditions with added dissolved organic carbon | Allison Cardwell, Oregon State University, USA

MO062 | Comparative analysis of the electrochemical behaviour of PGMs on modified SPCE and GCE surfaces for environmental matrices | Vernon Somerset, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa

MO078 | Effect of salinity on silver absorption in hemolymph of the marine amphipod (Parhyale hawaiensis) | Monizze VannuciSilva, UNICAMP, Brazil

MO063 | Concentrations of butyltins in Scottish marine sediments: improved detection using Isotope Dilution Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (IDGCMS) | Craig Robinson, Marine Scotland Science, UK

MO079 | Changes in trace metal concentrations and partitioning after the re-connection of a secondary channel to the main river channel during a floodplain restoration project | Vera Slaveykova, University of Geneva, Switzerland

MO064 | Transformation / Dissolution of Titanium Dioxide Grades in Environmental Media | Thorsten Klawonn, Fraunhofer IME - Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology, Germany

MO080 | Fate, speciation, and bioavailability of vanadium in sediments | Sara Nedrich, University of Michigan, USA

MO065 | The Development of an Efficient Methodology for the Matrix Separation of Environmental Nickel Samples in the Norwegian Arctic for Nickel Isotope Analysis | Marissa Gutsch, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Canada MO066 | Influence of the lead anions to plant growth in artificial soil condition | Pavel Uchanov, Institute of Ecology and Evolution RAS, Russian Federation MO067 | Metal Distribution and Bioaccessibility in Urban Garden Soils in Victoria, BC, Canada | Matt Dodd, Royal Roads University, Canada MO068 | Metal concentrations and chemical partitioning in topsoil and road dust affected by different industrial activities | Jose Martin Soriano Disla, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena, Spain MO069 | Plant growth and changes in redox potential modulate the effects of biochar for improving wetland soils polluted by mine wastes | M. Nazaret González-Alcaraz, Department of Biology & CESAM - University of Aveiro, Portugal MO070 | Derivation of soil threshold concentrations for arsenic, copper, and nickel: Results of chemical extraction methods | Daniel Rückamp, Federal Institute for

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MO081 | Bioaccumulation of mercury in river sediment and freshwater tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus | Chung-Min Liao, National Taiwan University, Taiwan MO082 | Influence of trace metal pollution on benthic macro-invertebrates in the Berg River Catchment, South Africa | Vernon Somerset, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa MO083 | Biogeochemical distribution of Cr, Cu and Zn in a riverbed contaminated by tannery effluents and pig farms | Jose Martin Soriano Disla, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena, Spain MO084 | Metal mobilization regulates pollution levels in anthropogenic impacted estuarine sediments | Anderson Abel de Souza Machado, Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, Germany MO085 | Aquatic bioaccumulation of lanthanides and yttrium: a bibliographical review in a regulatory context | Anne-Lise Mandrillon, SOLVAY, France MO086 | Bioavailability of metals: environmental compliance check via PNEC-pro V6 | Jos Vink, DELTARES, Netherlands MO087 | Bioavailable EQS for Lead for European Surface Waters: An Update on DOC- and BLM-based Approaches | Jasim Chowdhury, International Lead Association, USA

MO088 | A new field method for assessing chromium and nickel pollution immobization in soils of tropical urban low lands | Celestin Defo, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, India MO089 | Principal component analysis for choosing of barrier materials for groundwater treatment | Ivan Kozyatnyk, Department of Chemistry, Umeå University, Sweden MO090 | Application of Alginate-Clinoptilolite Beads for the Removal of Heavy Metals | Cigdem Moral, Akdeniz University, Turkey MO091 | Effect of mineral supplements on lead bioaccessibility in livestock: An integrated laboratory and field-based approach | Jennifer Pareja Carrera, IREC, Spain MO092 | Bioaccessiblity of selected trace elements in indoor dust from Istanbul-Turkey | Perihan Kurt Karakus, Bursa Technical University, Turkey MO093 | Levels of Selected Heavy Metals in Butter Samples Collected from Different Provinces in Turkey: An assessment of Human Exposure via diet | Perihan Kurt Karakus, Bursa Technical University, Turkey MO094 | Assessment of trace element contents in water, sediment and food web components along the ultramafic shoreline of Lake Ohrid (Albania) | Laetitia Minguez, LIEC (CNRS UMR 7360, Université de Lorraine), France MO095 | Analysis and risk characterization of arsenic species in food supplements based on clay. | Nadia Waegeneers, CODA-CERVA, Belgium MO096 | Modelling networks of causal relationships in stress ecology using Structural Equation Model: an example linking fate and impact of metals in contaminated soils | Lea Beaumelle, IRSN/PRP-ENV/SERIS/ LRTE, France MO097 | Synthesis, characterisation and application of chitosan beads-supported FeAg bimetallic nanoparticles for the removal of cadmium from wastewaters | Vernon Somerset, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa

Modelling and monitoring of pesticides fate and exposure in a regulatory context (P) | Bernhard Gottesbueren, Christina Pickl MO098 | Sorption-desorption of indaziflam in agricultural soils amended with different biochars | Kassio Mendes, University of São Paulo USP, Brazil MO099 | Glucose mineralization in soils of contrasting textures under application of S-metolachlor, terbuthylazine, and mesotrione alone and in a mixture | Kassio Mendes, University of São Paulo USP, Brazil MO100 | Estimation of DegT50matrix values from field dissipation studies: measured versus simulated soil moisture and soil temperature parameters | Gregor Spickermann, ADAMA Deutschland GmbH, Germany MO101 | Distribution of current use pesticides and personal care products in surface marine sediments from Vigo Estuary and Mar Menor Lagoon | Victor León, Instituto Español de Oceanografia, Spain MO102 | Step4ward - An Efate toolbox | Dirk Nickisch, Rifcon GmbH, Germany

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Monday 8 May MO103 | Evaluation of pesticide trapping efficiency equations for vegetative filter strips (VFS) using additional experimental data | Stefan Reichenberger, DR. KNOELL CONSULT GmbH, Germany MO104 | A case-study of pesticide risk assessment to aquatic biodiversity of kettle holes in Northeast Germany using SYNOPS-WEB (with integrated PRZM) | Jörn Strassemeyer, Julius Kuehn Institute, Germany MO105 | H2Ot-Spot Manager NRW, a web based tool to assess the risk on aquatic organisms and the impact of mitigation measures | Jörn Strassemeyer, ral Research Centre for Cultivated Plants, Germany MO106 | Risk Assessment for Protected Crops - Approaches Towards Harmonized Leaching Scenarios - GASP-S v 1.1 | Stephan Sittig, Dr Knoell Consult GmbH, Germany MO107 | A generic modeling of transport of plant protection product metabolites in the subsurface by coupling PEARL and OpenGeoSys | Wenkui He, DR. KNOELL CONSULT GmbH, Germany MO108 | Time of Flight Modelling in Support of Monitoring Studies | Paul Sweeney, Syngenta, UK MO109 | Are agricultural soils "contaminated sites" from the viewpoint of residues of currently used pesticides and release of them to water? | Jakub Hofman, Masaryk University, RECETOX, Czech Republic

Poster Presentations Panizzi, Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy MO120 | Good agricultural practice (GAP) in the light of meteorological constraints | Henk Jan Holterman, Wageningen University and Research, Netherlands MO121 | Modelling the fate of pesticides in European and French cropping systems: Integration of complex agricultural practices in the regulatory risk assessment | Arnaud Boivin, ANSES, France MO122 | New software development for automated environmental fate modeling and reporting | Ronnie Juraske, DR. KNOELL CONSULT GmbH, Germany

Nanomaterial fate and toxicity Implications of the environment as a global reactor for nanomaterials along their life-cycle (P) | Susana Loureiro, Claus Svendsen, Kees van Gestel, Iseult Lynch MO123 | Detection of CeO2 (nano) Particles in Sewage Sludge | Frank Von der Kammer, Vienna University, Austria MO124 | Toxicity of silver nanoparticles on two Lemna sp.: Effects on photosynthesis and growth | Carlos Pinheiro, University of Aveiro, Portugal

MO134 | Effects of silver nanoparticles on the freshwater snail Physa acuta | Carlos Pinheiro, University of Aveiro, Portugal MO135 | Maternal Effects of Silver Nanocolloids on Fish Reproduction using Medaka | Chisato Kataoka, Toyo University, Japan MO136 | Titanium dioxide nanoparticles induces changes in antioxidant system and histopathology on gills and kidneys of fish, Prochilodus lineatus | Marisa Fernandes, Univeridade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil MO137 | Interaction of oxidized industrial multiwalled carbon nanotubes and cadmium using zebrafish cell line: influence of coexposure protocols in toxicology studies in vitro | Marina Marques Bonomo, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Brazil MO138 | Effects of silver nanoparticles on Folsomia candida (Collembola) reproduction in different standard soils and in long-term aged sludge-treated soils | Maria Engelke, University of Bremen, Germany MO139 | In silico approaches for the prediction of the cytotoxic activity of heterogeneous nanoparticles | Ester Papa, University of Insubria, Italy

MO125 | Toxicity assessment of four phosphorus adsorbents used for lake restoration | María Inmaculada Salcedo, University of Granada, Spain

MO140 | Supporting the development of safer nano-based formulations for the restoration of modern and contemporary works of art | Elena Semenzin, Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy

MO110 | Assessing surface water vulnerability to pesticides from monitoring data: a territorial approach | Andrea Di Guardo, Universita degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Italy

MO126 | Differential effects of two metal binding proteins on the dissolution of citratecoated silver nanoparticles | Wei Liu, CEA Cadarache, France

MO141 | SETAC Nanotechnology Interest Group | Claus Svendsen, CEH, Wallingford, UK

MO111 | Modelling soil exposure to pesticides at territorial level | Andrea Di Guardo, Universita degli Studi di MilanoBicocca, Italy

MO127 | Development of a dynamic model (SWNano) to assess the fate and transport of engineered TiO2 nanoparticles in sewer networks | Ki eun Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea

MO112 | Effects of (nano)formulations on the fate of bifenthrin in soil and consequences for exposure assessment | Melanie Kah, University of Vienna, Austria MO113 | The effect of freezing and thawing on the transport of pesticides in soil | Roger Holten, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO), Norway MO114 | Evolution of ambient air concentrations of 46 pesticides in Wallonia, Belgium in summer 2015 | Arnaud Giusti, ISSeP, Belgium MO115 | Pesticide field fate studies to elucidate and quantify important sources and loss pathways | Tim Pepper, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK MO116 | Simultaneous air and water passive sampler modelling with ethylene-vinyl acetate: theory and experiment | Jonathan Parnis, Trent University, Canada MO117 | Export Crops and MRLs: Implications for Ecological Health in Low-Regulation Environments | Carla Ng, University of Pittsburgh, USA MO118 | Sorption and leaching behaviours of phenylurea herbicides in tropical soils: implication for modelling | Babatunde Agbaogun, University of Ibadan, Germany MO119 | Integrated risk assessment of pesticide, the use of MERLIN-Expo tool for combining exposure assessment with toxicological effects on the food web | Silvia

MO128 | Determining the effect of Cadmium/ Tellurium Quantum Dots on Staphylococcus aureus by comparing bacterial growth curves and xCELLigence as a potential real-time indicator for nanoparticle toxicity | Ilse Coetzee, Water Research Group, South Africa MO129 | The toxicity assessment of engineered nanoparticles in algal bioassays | Yury Grigorev, Siberian Federal University, Russian Federation MO130 | Iron oxide nanoparticles effects on Daphnia magna: Implications for environmental remediation | Veronica Gonzalez-Andres, Leitat Technological Center, Spain MO131 | Effects of silver nanoparticles from effluents of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) on the behaviour of Daphnia magna. | Sarah Hartmann, University of Siegen, Institute of Biology, Germany MO132 | Effects of Wastewater Borne Silver Nanoparticles on the Reproduction and Biochemical markers of Daphnia magna | Richard Zeumer, Fraunhofer IME - Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology, Germany MO133 | Multi-generational effects of silver nanoparticles in contaminated algae and from wastewater treatment plant effluent on reproduction and mortality in Daphnia magna. | Rebecca Louch, University of Siegen, Germany

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

IG

Persistence & Biodegradation Assessment (P) | Gerald Thouand, Graham Whale, Jacques Lharidon, Arnaud Boivin MO142 | Soil persistence of the anionic surfactant sodium lauryl ether sulphate in two different foaming agents used for a mechanized tunnelling | Anna Barra Caracciolo, National Research Council, Italy MO143 | Assessing chemical persistence in marine water using biodegradation screening and simulation tests: impact of the test conditions on the results and the regulatory decisions | Geneviève Deviller, SOLVAY, France MO144 | Persistence Assessment of Fragrance Ingredients in the Aquatic Environment through Photodegradation Studies | Jianming Lin, Firmenich Inc, USA MO145 | Combined MALDI-TOF MS Imaging and LC-HRMS study of biodegradation in solid polycaprolactonediol exposed to different wastewater environments | Daniel Rivas, CSIC/IDAEA, Spain MO146 | Regulatory assessment of environmental persistence: OECD biodegradability screening tests - need for improvements and possibilities for enhancements | Markus Schwarz, FoBiG GmbH, Germany MO147 | Ring test to improve the OECD 306 marine biodegradation screening test | Timothy Martin, Newcastle University, UK MO148 | Using EFSA Regulatory Data to Explore Pesticide Biodegradation Half-life Variability | Adelene Lai, ETH Zürich/Eawag, Switzerland

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Monday 8 May MO149 | The effect of aging seawater on microbial communities before preforming biodegradation tests according to OECD test guideline 306 | Adam Lillicrap, NIVA Norwegian Institute for Water Research, Norway MO150 | Assessing chemical persistence for "difficult substances" using latest developments in biodegradation screening and simulation tests" | Geneviève Deviller, SOLVAY, France MO151 | OECD 306: Investigation of alternative test designs for testing the biodegradability in seawater | Silke Fiebig, Noack Laboratorien GmbH, Germany MO152 | How important is sediment microbial diversity for degradation of pharmaceuticals? | Claudia Coll Mora, Stockholm University, Sweden MO153 | The impacts of light and flowing water on isopyrazam dissipation in river microcosms | Rebecca Southwell, University of Warwick, UK MO154 | Modification of the Standard Laboratory Water Sediment Study using Sunlight to Refine the Estimated Environmental Concentration | Chris Lowrie, Charles River, UK MO155 | Application of chemostat systems for adaptation of microbial communities in persistency testing | Baptiste Poursat, University of Amsterdam/IBED Institute, Netherlands MO156 | Investigations on microbiota composition of sludge inoculum in the presence and absence of carbon source in different OECD 301 series biodegradation screening tests | Alain Boschung, Firmenich, Switzerland MO157 | Impact of the inoculum composition on ready biodegradability tests behavior | Cyril Sweetlove, L´Oréal SA, France MO158 | Simultaneous biodegradation of water treatment additives: Transformation and crosslinked product formation, impact of biocide shockdosing and salinity | Thomas Wagner, University of Amsterdam/IBED Institute, Netherlands MO159 | Degradation of glyphosate in soil influenced by interaction between Collembola and soil microbial community | June Wee, Korea University, South Korea MO160 | The environmental fate of 14C-POEA in water-sediment systems | Georg von Mérey, Monsanto Europe S.A., Belgium MO161 | Biodegradation testing of chemicals with high Henry's constants - separating mass and effective concentration reveals higher rate constants | Heidi Birch, DTU Environment, Denmark MO162 | Concentration and mixture effects on biodegradation kinetics of petroleum hydrocarbons in surface water | Rikke Hammershøj, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs): Recent developments, sources, transport, fate and toxicity (P) | Lutz Ahrens, Zhanyun Wang, Annegret BiegelEngler, Ronald Bock MO163 | Quantification of sub ppt levels of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in various waters utilizing advanced ultra-high performance liquid chromatography and

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Poster Presentations triple quadrupole mass spectrometry | Peter Abrahamsson, Agilent Technologies, Sweden MO164 | Development and validation of a gas chromatography coupled in mass spectrometry in tandem method for the detection of fluorotelomer carboxylic acids in environmental samples | Marinella Farre, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain MO166 | Transformation of Polyfluorinated substances in natural waters by advanced oxidation processes | Tarun Anumol, Agilent Technologies Inc., USA MO167 | Non-invasive Samples as a Biomarker of Human Bio-monitoring to Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) | Jeong Eun Oh, Pusan National University, South Korea MO168 | PFAS-based Fire-Fighting Foams: a wolf in sheep's clothing? | Virginie Boiteux, ANSES, France MO169 | Distribution of perfluorinated compounds (PFAAs) in great tits (Parus major) along a pollution gradient in Antwerp, Belgium, and their effects on reproduction. | Thimo Groffen, Systemic Physiological and Ecotoxicological Research (SPHERE), University of Antwerp, Belgium MO170 | Degradation of Perfluorinated Alkyl Acids by Enzyme-catalyzed Oxidative Humification Reactions | Qingguo Huang, University of Georgia, USA MO171 | Implementing a physiologically based toxicokinetic (PBTK) model describing the bioaccumulation of three perfluorinated substances in rainbow trout (Onchorynchus mykiss) | Alice Vidal, Irstea Lyon, France MO172 | Oxidative and metabolic effects of PFOS and its replacement F-53B after in ovo exposure of domestic chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) | Nathalie Briels, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway MO173 | Perfluorohexanoic Acid Pharmacokinetics in Mouse, Rat, Microminipig, Pig, Monkey and Human | Robert Buck, The Chemours Company, USA MO174 | 6:2 Fluorotelomer Alcohol: Hazard Assessment, Human Exposure Assessment and Risk Characterization | Robert Buck, The Chemours Company, USA MO175 | The Evolution of Durable Water Repellent Technology | Robert Buck, The Chemours Company, USA MO176 | New Concawe / NICOLE technical report on the environmental fate and effects of PFAS, remedial options and legislative developments | Ian Ross, ARCADIS, UK MO177 | Effectiveness of Voluntary Programs at Controlling Emissions of Perfluoroalkyl Substances | Ronald Bock, The Chemours Company, Switzerland

Future challenges in sediment toxicity testing for environmental risk assessment (P) | Daniel Faber, Theo Brock, Henry Krueger, Paul Sibley MO178 | Impact of sediment-spiked fludioxonil on nematodes - Comparison of single-species and community responses | Sebastian Höss, Ecossa, Germany MO179 | Comparing the chemical and ecotoxicological persistence of sediment associated lufenuron | Michiel Kraak, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

MO180 | Practices and challenges in toxicity testing of mining affected fresh water sediments. | Kristiina Vaananen, University of Eastern Finland, Finland MO181 | Formulated metal-spiked freshwater sediments with different metal bioavailability for toxicity and bioaccumulation tests | Sara Valsecchi, Water Research Institute - Italian National Research Council IRSA-CNR, Italy MO182 | Occurrence of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in the sediments of the Umgeni and Msunduzi rivers in KwazuluNatal province, South Africa | Jeremiah Soji, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa MO183 | SETAC Sediments Interest Group | Tamara Sorell, Brown and Caldwell, USA

IG

Hazard and risk assessment of human pharmaceuticals in the environment (P) | Reinhard Laenge, Anja Coors, Alistair Boxall MO184 | Integrated ecotoxicological and epidemiological approach to evaluate the impact of Tamiflu metabolites on reproduction of medaka (Oryzias latipes) | Wei-Yu Chen, Kaohsiung Medical University, Taiwan MO185 | The potential effects of environmental levels of the HIV drug Nevirapine on the behaviour, growth and development of early life stages of the Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) | U. Marie Clementine Nibamureke, University of Johannesburg, South Africa MO186 | Evaluation of a metabolomics-based fish embryo assay for predicting drug induced long-term effects in fish | Anne Herrmann, Bayer Pharma AG, Germany MO187 | Environmental risk assessment of active pharmaceutical ingredients used in human medicinal products: Europe-wide variation in risk quotient. | Jason Snape, AstraZeneca UK Ltd., UK MO188 | pH-Dependence of Bacterial Toxicity: Role of Speciation for Ionisable Pharmaceuticals | Nils Klüver, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany MO189 | Factors influencing freshwater pharmaceutical uptake using in vitro gill cell culture | Elisabeth Chang, Kings College London, UK MO190 | Development of a zebrafish embryo test for the evaluation of endocrine disrupting pharmaceuticals with nano-injection as an alternative exposure route | Ellen Michiels, University of Antwerp, Belgium MO191 | Calcium channel blockers and antihistamines: specific and non-specific toxicity in Daphnia magna | Anna-Maria Falkenhain, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany MO192 | Impact of pharmaceuticals on aquatic invertebrates: an indoor study | Ivo Roessink, Alterra, Netherlands MO193 | Fate of pharmaceuticals in surface waters; a case study of the river Dommel, Netherlands | Ivo Roessink, Alterra, Netherlands MO194 | Long-term effects of the antiepileptic drug carbamazepine in Chironomus riparius - two multi-generation

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Monday 8 May

Poster Presentations

studies | Katharina Heye, Goethe University Frankfurt/ Main, Germany

assessment | Rebecca Brown, wca consulting, UK

and territorial entities (P) | Nadia Mirabella, Karen Allacker, Serenella Sala

MO195 | The environmental concentration of medicinal chemicals for human use in urban rivers in Japan | Tetsuji Nishimura, Teikyo Heisei University, Japan

MO210 | Effect assessment of complex mixtures on the thyroid axis of X. laevis. A case study with reclaimed waters and carbamazepine | Eulalia Beltrán, INIA National Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain

MO224 | Supporting LCA upscaling to neighborhoods by using BIM and GIS tools | Adélaïde Mailhac, CSTB, France

MO196 | Sorption and degradation potential of pharmaceuticals in stormwater ponds receiving wastewater contributions | Fan Liu, Aalborg University, Denmark MO197 | Development of threshold of ecotoxicological concerns (eco-TTC) for assessing the environmental safety of industrial chemicals and human pharmaceuticals | Takashi Yamada, National Institute of Health Sciences, Japan MO198 | Human health risk assessment of pharmaceuticals and other emerging contaminants in river Kokemäenjoki and artificial ground water in Finland | Päivi Meriläinen, National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland MO199 | Hazard assessment of human pharmaceuticals - a review of data on persistence, bioaccumulation, and toxicity | Sabine Konradi, Federal Environment Agency (Umweltbundesamt), Germany MO200 | Soil enzymes as biomarkers of pharmaceutical effluents' toxicity | Ikechukwu Onwurah, University of Nigeria, Nigeria MO201 | From PEC-based trigger to a reasonable decision tree: Revison of the Phase I in the environmental risk assessment of human pharmaceuticals | Ines Rönnefahrt, German Environment Agency - UBA, Germany MO202 | Non-clinical toxicological data and environmental risk assessment - A regulatory point of view | Kathi Westphal-Settele, German Environment Agency (UBA), Germany MO203 | Environmental risk assessment of human pharmaceuticals in the European Union: A review of the estimation of environmental exposure | Erick Nfon, Smithers Viscient, MO204 | SETAC Pharmaceuticals Interest Group | Mike Williams, CSIRO, Australia

IG

Wastewater effluents: How research can improve risk assessment and regulation (P) | Dean Leverett, Mirco Bundschuh MO205 | Characterization and exposure assessment of seasonal and weather dynamics in pollutant mixtures from wastewater discharge | Werner Brack, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ, Germany MO206 | Fate of hydrocarbons and other substances in petroleum refinery waste water treatment processes | Pim Leonards, VU University, Institute for Environmental Studies, Netherlands MO207 | Risk assessment of Danube River pollution by pesticide residues in the vicinity of Novi Sad | Boris Obrovski, Faculty of Technical Sciences, Novi Saf, Serbia MO208 | Persistent pollutant flux estimator tool: predicting recovery from legacy contamination in rivers | Elizabeth Nicol, Atkins, UK MO209 | Biological effects measures and adverse outcome pathways applied to effluent

MO211 | Evaluation of toxicological effects of drugs present in wastewater obtained from Bolzano water treatment plant (WWTP) on HepG2 and HT29 cells | Maria Carrara, University of Padova, Italy MO212 | Innovative ways to discern causative factors for toxic effects of refinery effluents | Pim Leonards, VU University, Institute for Environmental Studies, Netherlands MO213 | Toxicity assessment of acrylamide and epichlorohydrin from combined use of polyelectrolites in waste water treatment towards Daphnia magna and Caenorhabditis elegans | Emilio Di Ianni, University of Copenhagen, Denmark MO214 | Identification of recalcitrant toxic organics in oil refining wastewater effluents from Colombia as indicators of treatment efficiency | Angela Pinzon, Brunel University London, UK MO215 | Toxicological Evaluations of Effluents from Kara Cow Market, Ogun State, Nigeria on Guppy Fish (Poecilia reticulata) | Temitope Sogbanmu, University of Lagos, Nigeria MO216 | Impact of industrial waste water treatment plants on Dutch surface waters and drinking water impact | Annemarie van Wezel, KWR Watercycle Research Institute, Netherlands MO217 | Online Biomonitoring in wastewater treatment plants | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany MO218 | Environmental impact and health risk assessment of urban wastewater reclamation and reuse scenarios | Marta Ribera, Fundacio CTM Centre Tecnologic, Spain

Input/output and Hybrid Life Cycle Assessment for supporting the assessment of production and consumption patterns (P) | Michele De Rosa, Jannick Hoejrup Schmidt MO219 | Improving market activities in the ecoinvent LCI database with GMRIO data | Adrian Haas, Institute of Environmental Engineering, ETH Zurich, Switzerland MO220 | Uncertainty characterization in hybridised life cycle inventories - A case study on mobility scenarios in Luxembourg | Paul Baustert, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology LIST, Luxembourg MO221 | Parametric Hybrid Life Cycle Assessment of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFCs) for light-duty vehicles | Matteo Rocco, Politecnico di Milano, Italy MO222 | Towards an assessment of biodiversity impact of financial investments | Jori Coustillas, PRe Consultants, Netherlands MO223 | Development of a regional material flow model to account for solid waste generation and management | Edgar Towa, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium

LCA of territorial contexts: upscaling the Life Cycle Thinking to business clusters, neighborhoods, urban agglomerations

MO225 | Globally-differentiated land use flow inventories for life cycle impact assessment | Alexis Laurent, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark MO226 | Driving 'Beyond LCA' Metrics for Net Positive Cities | David Baggs, Global GreenTag International, Australia MO227 | Life Cycle Assessment of the social housing policy in Mexico from 2000 to 2012 | Leonor Patricia Güereca, Engineering Institute Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico MO228 | Comparative Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment of Urban Water Reuse Alternatives | Tamar Opher, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel MO229 | Promoting Sustainable CircularEconomy Regions through an integrated assessment of Energy, Water and Waste flows (Sant Feliu Llobregat project, SFLL) | Yago Lorenzo-Toja, CETaqua, Water Technology Centre, MO230 | The response relationship of surface water environmental quality to land use in the near field of rivers in Argun River basin of Sino Russian border area | Yufeng Xie, Nanjing Institute of Environmental Sciences of the Ministry of Environmental Protection, China MO231 | Environmental and economic life cycle assessment comparison between side-stream treatments for ammonium rich wastewaters | Rosalie Van Zelm, Radboud University, Netherlands MO232 | Economic and environmental impacts considering global scale supply chain of flood in Thailand 2011 | Yuya Ono, University of Tokyo, Japan

Life Cycle Data and Modeling Developments: challenges and solutions (P) | Simone Fazio, Bruce Vigon, Alessandra Zamagni MO233 | Circular economy: Recycling glass fibre reinforced composites (GRP) according to EN 15804 Module D (End-of-Life) through applied LCA scenarios | Victor Vladimirov, HOBAS, Austria MO234 | Activity-based footprinting: putting LCA at the center of company policy. | Niels Jonkers, Ecochain Technologies, Netherlands MO235 | The development of Life-cycle Health Impact Assessment methods for Indoor Air Quality Pollution and Urban Air Pollution | Akari Edahiro, Tokyo Christina University, Japan MO236 | Review schemes and reviewers' selection criteria for the Life Cycle Data Network | Simone Fazio, EC-JRC, Italy MO237 | Roadmap toward addressing and communicating uncertainty in LCA | Peter Fantke, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark MO238 | Glucose production: influence of the datasets and of the long term emissions on LCA results | Saïcha Gerbinet, Université de Liège, Belgium

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Monday 8 May

Poster Presentations

MO239 | Exploring prospective scenarios of water supply mix | Susana Leão, IRSTEA Montpellier, France

MO247 | Can red seeds become green? Refining exposure assessment to minimize risks of pesticide-treated seeds to farmland birds | Manuel Ortiz Santaliestra, Institute for Environmental Sciences University of KoblenzLandau, Germany

MO240 | Best Proxy: A New Methodology for Selection of LCI Dataset to Achieve Regionalized LCA | Noa Meron, Tel Aviv University, Israel

Fate, risk assessment and management of natural toxins: state-of-the-art, challenges and future prospectives (P) | Gemma Giménez Papiol, Hans Christian Bruun Hansen, Karina Knudsmark Sjøholm MO241 | Ecotoxicological risk assessment of microbial biopesticides under EU Regulation (EC) No. 1107/2009 | Elizabeth Collison, TSGE Consulting Ltd., UK MO242 | Quantification of the carcinogen ptaquiloside in complex matrices | Lars Holm Rasmussen, Metropolitan University College, Denmark MO243 | Determination of lipophilic and hydrophilic marine biotoxins in seawater with analytical methodologies based in HPLCHRMS | Josep Sanchís, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain MO244 | Uncertainty sources for a reliable quantification of Alexandrium species by molecular techniques | Gemma Giménez Papiol, Rovira i Virgili University, Spain

MO249 | Protection of field margin strips established as ecological focus areas in Germany | Christine Kula, Fed. Office for Consumer Protection & Food Safety, Germany MO250 | MAgPIE toolbox, practical examples of its application in aquatic risk assessment | Giovanna Meregalli, Dow AgroSciences Italia srl, Italy MO251 | Geraniol: case study of a substance approved under REACH, the Plant Protection Products, Biocides and Cosmetics Regulations | An Vanden Bosch, ARCHE, Belgium MO252 | The use of recovery endpoints in aquatic risk assessments: what about isolated waterbodies? | Amy Brooks, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK MO253 | Practical Experience of MDD Analyses for Mesocosm Studies: Challenges in Deriving Reliable Endpoints from Tricky Taxa | Frances Pickering, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK

Higher tier approaches in the risk assessment of plant protection products and their links to protection goals (P) | Frances Pickering, Eric Bruns, Veronique Poulsen MO245 | Enclosure set up: an old system as new semi-field approach for common voles to assess their risk on plant protection products | Jan-Dieter Ludwigs, Rifcon GmbH, Germany MO246 | Collection and analysis of pesticide residue data for pollen and nectar to be used for bees' risk assessment | Katerina Kyriakopoulou, Benaki Phytopathological Institute, Greece

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MO248 | Data collection for the estimation of ecological data and residues on food items to be used in pesticide risk assessment for birds and mammals | Veronique Poulsen, ANSES, France

MO254 | Effects of the fungicide fludioxonil on zooplankton in outdoor sediment-spiked microcosms | Xiaohui Yin, Wageningen Environmental Reseach, Netherlands MO255 | The Use of Probabilistic Assessment to Determine Risk of Aquatic Plants Exposed to a Herbicide | Giovanna Meregalli, Dow AgroSciences Italia srl, Italy

MO257 | Statistical power in higher tier studies. How much is enough? | Ligia B Azevedo, BASF SE, Agrarzentrum Limburgerhof, Germany MO258 | SETAC Ecological Risk Assessment Interest Group | Annemette Palmqvist, Roskilde University, Denmark

IG

Linking Oceans and Human Health: a new trans-disciplinary research challenge (P) | Colin Janssen, Lora Fleming, Jan Mees MO259 | Blue Health: linking Europe's aquatic environments with human health and wellbeing | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK MO260 | Harmful Algal Blooms, Climate Change and Human Health | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

The role of ecotoxicology in fisheries science and aquaculture (P) | Marc Berntssen, Ketil Hylland, Craig Robinson MO261 | Halogenated and organophosphorus flame retardants in aquaculture samples | Òscar Aznar-Alemany, IDAEA CSIC, Spain

Toxicology and ecotoxicology: bridging the gaps (P) | Dries Knapen, Dominique Lison, Bruno Campos, Maurice Whelan MO262 | Biotransformation of clofibric acid in zebrafish embryos (Danio rerio) as determined by liquid chromatography-high resolution-mass spectrometry | Thorsten Reemtsma, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany MO263 | Experiences with the Draft EFSA (2016) Guidance on Benchmark Dose Calculations: Reliability of BMD for bird and mammal reproductive risk assessment | Anja Guckland, WSC Scientific GmbH, Germany

MO256 | Using Laboratory Microcosms to Address Mesocosm Data Gaps | Frances Pickering, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Notes

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45

Notes

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

TUESDAY

Submit your abstract by 7 June!

SETAC NORTH AMERICA 38TH ANNUAL MEETING 12–16 NOVEMBER 2017 | MINNEAPOLIS, MN MSP.SETAC.ORG “Toward a Superior Future: Advancing Science for a Sustainable Environment”

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TUESDAY

Submit your abstract by 29 June at mixtures.setac.org.

SETAC North America Focused Topic Meeting 6–8 SEP T EM BER 2 017 | D EN V ER , COLO R A D O

Risk Assessment of Chemical Mixtures: From Scientific Evidence to Environmental Regulation

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SETAC Europe 27 Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

17-273004

● Reach an interdisciplinary audience of scientists studying

Tuesday 9 May Daily Schedule

Location

7:30 am–6:30 pm

Registration Open

Registration Area | Level -1

7:30 am–8:30 am

Poster Setup

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

8:30 am–10:15 am

Platform Session Morning 1

10:15 am–11:00 am

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

11:00 am–12:45 pm

Platform Session Morning 2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Lunch Break

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Student Lunch Seminar

Meeting Studio 211 & 212 | Level +2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

2:15 pm–4:00 pm

Platform Session Afternoon

4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

4:30 pm–6:00 pm

Science Slam

Copper Hall | Level 0

5:30 pm–6:30 pm

Poster Social

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

6:30 pm–8:00 pm

Cantillon Brewery and Museum of the Geuze

Cantillon Brewery

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

(ticket required) SOLD OUT 9:00 pm–3:00 am

Student Party (ticket required)

e urop E C h ETA 4t S Slam

ce n e i c S

Tuesday 9 May, 2017 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm I Copper Hall0

The You-Night Club

Science Slam Presenters Presenter | Louise-Emmanuelle Paris, Centre Eau Terre Environment, INRS, Canada Role of science and scientist in public perception | Michiel Kotterman, Wageningen Marine Research, Wageningen University and Reserach, Netherlands Seafood Tango: Flame retardants in seafood | Òscar Aznar Alemany, Department of Environmental Chemistry, IDEA-CSIC, Spain Finding Nemo… in a not so nice ocean! | Ana Luísa Maulvault, Marta Santos and Ricardo Alves, Division of Aquaculture and Seafood Upgrading, IPMA, Portugal

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Tuesday 9 May Satellite Meetings

Location

8:00 am–5:00 pm

Smithers Viscient

Meeting Studio 203 | Level +2

8:30 am–10:30 am

Publications Advisory Committee

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

9:00 am–10:00 am

International Programs Committee

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

9:00 am–10:00 am

Ecotox of Amphibs and Reptiles Interest Group

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

9:45 am–12:00 pm

Workshop on social and environmental LCA of energy scenarios for the European Union

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

12:00 pm–1:00 pm

Ecosystem Services Interest Group

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Agilent Technologies Lunch Seminar

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Metals Classification

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

1:15 pm–2:45 pm

CRA Committees

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

3:00 pm–4:00 pm

Chemistry Interest Group

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

3:00 pm–5:00 pm

wca Meeting

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

3:00 pm–4:00 pm

SETAC Italian Language Branch

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

4:00 pm–5:30 pm

The tiered approach and accounting for metal bioavailability

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

4:00 pm–8:00pm

LCAbsolute

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Indigenous Knowledge and Values Interest Group

Hall 300 | Level +3

4:30 pm–5:15 pm

Research for the Protection of Pollinators through Risk Assessment Interest Group (Founding Committee)

Meeting Studio 311&312 | Level +3

4:30 pm–6:00 pm

Animal Alternatives Interest Group

The Arc | Level +3

5:00 pm–6:30 pm

SETAC German Language Branch

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Plant Interest Group

Hall 100 | Level +1

5:00 pm–7:00 pm

LCA Steering Committee

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

5:30 pm–6:30 pm

IWA-SETAC Committee

Meeting Studio 313&315 | Level +3

5:30 pm–7:00 pm

Global Soils Interest Group

Meeting Studio 314&316 | Level +3

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Student Lunch Seminar 12:45 pm−2:15 pm | Meeting Studio 211 & 212, Level +2

Sponsored by:

Iain Davies Personal Care Products Council, USA Have you ever considered how accurately the mainstream media reports environmental science? How does this compare to the conclusions that we, as scientists, draw from primary sources? Accurate dissemination of environmental science to the public is an underrated skill, yet important service. Are we succeeding?

Iain is a senior environmental scientist at the Personal Care Products Council (PCPC), Washington, DC, where Iain manages PCPC’s environmental safety programme. His work involves environmental risk assessment of cosmetic and personal care ingredients. Iain holds a Ph.D. in environmental toxicology from the University of York, UK.

Tickets are distributed Tuesday morning at the Registration Desk! First comes, first served!

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

51

Programme Highlights Out-Of-The-Box-Session: Advancing science and application of planetary boundaries and related ecological limits concepts to enable absolute sustainability assessments Tuesday 9 May, 2:15 pm - 4:00 pm, Hall 100 | Level +1 Anders Bjørn Polytechnique Montréal, Canada

Mikolaj Owsianiak Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

The planetary boundaries concept, first proposed in 2009, has gained widespread attention by offering a new approach to understanding and analysing the biophysical dimension of sustainability at a global scale. The premise of the concept is that humanity as a whole only can be sustainable when staying within the "safe operating space" by avoiding exceeding planetary boundaries. Planetary boundaries are built on earlier science based boundary concepts, such as carrying capacity, maximum sustainable yield and critical loads, which are central to the field of ecology and have inspired the ecological footprint and other environmental indicators. An emerging research theme is now beginning to explore the integration of planetary and other sciencebased boundaries in various application areas and assessment techniques to allow absolute assessments of sustainability. That is, to answer the question "are the impacts of this object low enough to be considered (environmentally) sustainable, and if not, how much lower should they be?". In this session, we explore methodological developments beyond the session on planetary boundaries for chemical pollution at SETAC EU AM in Berlin in 2012. Moreover we will illustrate planetary boundaries application in various assessment techniques and contexts within as well as across impact categories, e.g. risk assessment, technology assessment, life cycle assessment, environmental impact assessment, national emission inventories and impact assessments.

Martin Scheringer ETH Zürich, Switzerland

Thomas Backhaus University of Gothenburg, Sweden

From the method developer perspective, the contributions cover (but are not limited to): • The modification of existing assessment models to accommodate integration of (planetary) boundaries and the development of entirely new models, • Discussions on where in the pollution impact pathway sequence the integration of (planetary) boundaries should take place, • Spatial and temporal differentiation of impacts and (planetary) boundaries and how to meaningfully aggregate indicator scores across space and time, • Ethical principles for deciding how much "safe operating space" a studied object is entitled to and how to concretely integrate the entitlement concept in the assessment, • Science-based boundaries beyond ecosystems, e.g. for human health, non-renewable resource use and social impacts, • Considerations of uncertainties in absolute sustainability assessments. From the practitioner perspective, contributions include the use and testing of existing and preliminary methods for absolute sustainability assessments in case studies. We encourage an emphasis on the interpretation of case study results to support communication with decision-makers.

Programme 2:15 pm

Introduction

2:20 pm

Dealing with variability in ecosystem vulnerability for environmental management | Michiel Zijp, RIVM, Netherlands

2:40 pm

One Planet Thinking: Towards companies that perform within the earth's regenerative capacity | Annemarie Kerkhof, Ecofys, Netherlands

3:00 pm

Absolute environmental sustainability assessment using new Planetary Boundaries based LCIA methodology: framework and a case study | Morten Ryberg, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

3:20 pm

Requirements for developing planetary boundaries impact categories and application to freshwater use | Anders Bjørn, Polytechnique Montréal, Canada

3:40 pm

Absolute sustainability assessment of product life cycles through calculation of carrying capacity entitlement at industry level | Guillaume Majeau-Bettez, CIRAIG - Polytechnique Montréal

4:00 pm

End

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Programme Highlights Special Session: Looking across organisational boundaries: exchanging ideas on mechanistic modelling between SETAC and the International Water Association (IWA) Tuesday 9 May, 08:30 am - 12:45 pm, The Arc | Level +3 Elke Zimmer ibacon, Germany

Ingmar Nopens Ghent University, Belgium

Todd Gouin Unilever, UK

Within SETAC, the Interest Group MeMoRISK deals with mechanistic modelling of effects at the level of the individual, the population, community and, finally, the ecosystem. Within the International Water Association (IWA), a specialist group on Modelling and Integrated Assessment (MIA) brings together global specialists in the field of (integrated) modelling in the broad sense related to water (sewer, treatment, river quality, drinking water,...). Next to building models, they also study modelling tools and methodologies and the integration also intends to seek for interdisciplinary collaboration. With this in mind, establishing the connection between both groups is a natural thing to strive for. Therefore, this joint session brings together academics, consultants, government and industry representatives from both Societies to discuss about common grounds and possible synergies. The Water Framework Directive (WFD) is an obvious starting point here as it calls for Integrated Urban Water Management (IUWS), in which integrated mechanistic modelling of fate and effects of chemicals can play a prominent role.

Kris Villez EAWAG, Switzerland

Coupling fate to effects modelling of chemicals • What are the missing links to couple the expertise of both groups? For example, given that water treatment plants effluents are a major point source for receiving waters, can both studied systems be connected? • Mechanistic modelling of biodegradation of specific compounds in municipal and industrial treatment plants and receiving waters, including micropollutants Differences/similarities in modelling approaches between SETAC and IWA • Type of models, their implementation, data requirements and model outputs. • Modelling methods, including techniques for optimisation, sensitivity analysis, uncertainty analysis, risk assessment, as well as modelling protocols that bind these techniques together. • Approaches for implementing mechanistic modelling in environmental policy and decision making at the regulatory level (discussing success stories, failures, current developments).

Programme PART I - Overview of Modelling Work 08:30 am

Overview of major topics from SETAC & IWA

IWA Modelling - Summary of state-of-the-art with respect to the urban drainage and water treatment 08:50 am

Developments on Integrated Urban Drainage | Luca Vezzaro, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

09:00 am

Developments in Wastewater Treatment | Ingmar Nopens, Ghent University, Belgium

09:10 am

Developments in Drinking Water Treatment | Bram Martijn, PWN Technologies, Netherlands

09:20 am

Discussion

SETAC Summary of state-of-the-art tools for exposure and chemical risk assessment 09:25 am

State-of-the-art tools for exposure and chemical risk assessment | Dik Van de Meent, Independent consultant, Netherlands

09:35 am

Mechanistic effect models for ecological risk assessment: where next? | Virginie Ducrot, Bayer CropScience AG, Germany

09:45 am

Discussion

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

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Programme Highlights Programme continued Receiving Water Quality Impacts - Developments and Success Stories 09:50 am

Integrating treatment facility and river network information to model spatially-explicit environmental concentrations of down-the-drain substances: iSTREEM | Christopher Holmes, Waterborne Environmental, Inc., USA

10:00 am

Cost-Effective and Integrated Optimisation of the Urban Wastewater System Eindhoven | Ingmar Nopens, Ghent University, Belgium

10:10 am

Discussion

10:15 am

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

PART II - Modelling for policy and the role of uncertainty 11:00 am

Introduction

Population/Effects/Food Web Modelling 11:05 am

Ecological modelling can link chemical exposure to effects on the population dynamics of aquatic invertebrate species for major European rivers | Andreas Focks, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

11:15 am

Modelling of population dynamics, food web and biostatistics | Elise Billoir, University de Lorraine, France

Chemical Risk Assessment 11:25 am

ChimERA: integrating fate and effect modelling | Karel Viaene, Arche Consulting, Belgium

11:35 am

Discussion

Dealing with Uncertainties in Models and Assessments 11:40 am

Balancing complexity and uncertainty in model-based estimation of micropollutant fluxes in integrated urban drainage-wastewater systems | Luca Vezzaro, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

11:50 am

How certain are we about uncertainty of modelling approaches in environmental risk assessment? | Thomas Preuss, Bayer CropScience AG, Germany

12:00 pm

Discussion

Communication/Documentation of Models and their Role in Regulation 12:00 pm

Communication Approaches to implement mechanistic modeling in decision making | Frederik Verdonck, Arche Consulting, Belgium

12:15 pm

Use of TK/TD models in pesticide risk assessment - Current situation and possible improvements | Véronique Poulsen, ANSES, France

Discussion and Forging Collaboration 12:25 pm

Discussion and Forging Collaboration

12:45 pm

End

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Programme Highlights Special Session: Bridging between ecology, ecotoxicology and ecosystems services Tuesday 9 May, 11:00 am - 4:00 pm, Meeting Studio 311&312 | Level +3 Gertie Arts Elisabeth Maria Gross Wageningen Environmental University of Lorraine, Research (Alterra), France Netherlands Ecosystems provide multiple services for humans, yet they are exposed to multiple stressors, such as habitat loss, climate change, invasive species, overexploitation and pollution, acting at various spatio-temporal scales, affecting all levels of biological organisation, from individuals to populations and communities. Ecosystem functioning is strongly dependent on plants, which are at the base of food webs and fundamental in maintaining biogeochemical cycles. Both ecology and ecotoxicology aim to define good indicators to assess direct and indirect effects of environmental change, disturbances or stressors at the population, community, ecosystem, and landscape level. The session begins by discussing methods used in plant ecology and ecotoxicology to measure effects of chemicals and other stress factors on plants. With examples from aquatic and terrestrial plant ecology,

Sabine Apitz SEA Environmental Decisions LtD, UK

Lorraine Maltby The University of Sheffield, UK

and by comparing undisturbed and highly impacted ecosystems, different measures and proxies used in both disciplines will be discussed. Our aim is to identify scientifically sound and economically effective indicators for ecosystem functioning and ecological risk assessment. The session goes on to explore how close we are to adopting an ecosystem services approach, increasingly the focus of environmental policy, to assessing and managing environmental risk. Do we have sufficient understanding to assess, predict and manage the effects of anthropogenic activities on ecosystem service delivery in multifunctional landscapes that are often exposed to multiple pressures? Are the monitoring, regulatory and decision frameworks that have developed over decades fit for purpose as we seek to apply this evolving knowledge? What are the key knowledge gaps that we need to address and what tools are required to address this?

Programme 11:00 am

Introduction

11:05 am

Bridging between ecology and ecotoxicology: what are suitable endpoints or response variables to detect effects on plants at different ecological levels? | Elisabeth Maria Gross, University of Lorraine, France

11:25 am

The performance of plant individuals, populations and species | Mark van Kleunen, University of Konstanz, Germany

11:45 am

Measuring changes in aquatic ecosystems after disturbance by pollution or invasion of alien plants |Iris Stiers, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Belgium

12:05 pm

What can ecosystem services and resilience considerations add to pesticide regulations and the sustainability of agriculture? | Annik Dollacker, Bayer CropScience AG, Germany

12:25 pm

Panel Discussion

12:45 pm

Lunch & Poster Viewing

2:15 pm

Introduction

2:20 pm

Ecosystem services from a regulatory/risk management prospective | Karin Nienstedt, European Commission DG Health and Food Safety, Belgium

2:40 pm

Chemicals: Assessment of Risks to Ecosystem Services (CARES). Where are we now and where are we going? | Lorraine Maltby, The University of Sheffield, UK

3:00 pm

Ecological production functions: key attributes and challenges of implementation | Lawrence Kapustka, LK Consultancy, Canada

3:20 pm

Ecosystem Services in Retrospective Risk Assessment, Remediation and Restoration: State of the Practice | Sabine Elisabeth Apitz, SEA Environmental Decisions Ltd, UK

3:40 pm

Panel Discussion

4:00 pm

End

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Tuesday 9 May 8:30 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1

8:35 am

8:55 am

Alternative approaches to animal testing for (eco)toxicity, and the regulatory application of… Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

154 | Development of an AOP describing effects of narcotics on membrane-bound mitochondrial processes in fish | Lucia Vergauwen, University of Antwerp, Belgium

155 | An improved spg1-gfp medaka assay for the detection of (anti-)androgens - the RADAR assay | Andrew Tindall, Watchfrog S.A., France

Gold Hall Level 0

Mechanistic ecotoxicology of engineered nanomaterials: lessons learnt from human models | Introduction

159 | Effectiveness of Dissolution and Bandgap paradigms to predict the toxicity of metal oxide nanoparticles in the marine environment: evidence from ZnO and Mn2O3 | Seta Noventa, University of Exeter, UK

160 | Releases from transparent blue automobile coatings containing nanoscale copper phthalocyanine and their effects on macrophages | Chengfang Pang, University CaFoscari Venice, Italy

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Aquatic and Terrestrial Plant State-of-the-art Research linking ecotoxicology and exposure of… Introduction

164 | Effects of the herbicide metsulfuronmethyl on a plant community, including seed germination success in the F1 generation | Gertie Arts, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

165 | Non-Target Terrestrial Plant Risk assessment - background of current proposals based on literature reviews and analyses for SETAC AG Plants | Heino Christl, Tier3 Solutions GmbH, Germany

Combined effects of chemical and environmental stressors: from local stressors towards climate change (IV) | Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

169 | Changes in pCO2 alter the uptake and effects of common chemical pollutants in marine worms | Cameron Hird, University of Exeter, UK

170 | Ocean Acidification Responses Lead to Altered Toxicities of Chronic Coastal Pollutants in Marine Invertebrates. | Ceri Lewis, University of Exeter, UK

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Insights and challenges concerning the bioavailability of organic chemicals and communication… Introduction

174 | Bioaccessibility of native PAH and derivatives in a fuel soot using an in vitro GI model | Joseph Pignatello, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Sta., USA

175 | Application of an antibody-based biosensor for rapid assessment of PAH fate and toxicity at contaminated sediment sites | Michael Unger, College of William & Mary, USA

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Antibiotics and Antibiotic Resistance in the Environment: Ecological Fate and Effects, Resistance… Introduction

179 | Analytical tools for the holistic assesment of antimicrobial distribution and associated risks in aquatic ecosystems | Alejandro Margareto Mato, CSIC-IDAEA, Spain

180 | Low-energy Downflow Hanging Sponge (DHS) bioreactors reduce antibiotic resistance genes for decentralised wastewater traetment applications | Mui Choo Jong, Newcastle University, UK

Copper Hall Level 0

Interpreting Biological Effects of Metals and Their Mixtures in the Aquatic and Terrestrial… Introduction

184 | Metal bioaccumulation assessment in macroinvertebrates and relationships to benthic community quality state in a mining region | Leire Méndez-Fernández, University of the Basque Country UPV EHU, Spain

185 | Combined effects of four antifouling compounds on two marine phytoplankton species | Valentin Dupraz, IFREMER, RBE-BE-EX, France

New developments in ecotoxicology for the risk assessment of single and multiple stressors in… Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

189 | Chronic and mixture toxicity of pesticides and environmental contaminants for solitary bees, honeybee and bumblebees : differential sensitivity and mixture interactions? | David Spurgeon, Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, UK

190 | Interspecific sensitivity of wild bee species and the relevance of the honey bee as a surrogate organism for pollinators | Philipp Uhl, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

Advancements in life cycle impact assessment and footprint method development (I) | Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

194 | Linking environmental water requirements to freshwater biodiversity damage at multiple scales | Mattia Damiani, IRSTEA Montpellier, France

195 | Assessing the impacts of hydroelectricity production on aquatic ecosystems in LCA: A multiscale approach | Katrine Turgeon, McGill University, Canada

The Arc Level +3

Looking across organisational boundaries: exchanging ideas on mechanistic modelling between SETAC and the…

56

8:35 am

8:50 am

9:00 am

9:10 am

9:20 am

199 | Overview of major topics from SETAC & IWA | Ingmar Nopens, Ghent University, Belgium

200 | Developments in Integrated Urban Drainage | Luca Vezzaro, DTU, Denmark

201 | Developments in Wastewater Treatment | Ingmar Nopens, Ghent University, Belgium

202 | Developments in Drinking Water Treatment | Bram Martijn, PWN Technologies, Netherlands

203 | Discussion

Special Session

Tuesday 9 May

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1

9:15 am

9:35 am

9:55 am

156 | In vitro function of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor predicts in vivo sensitivity to dioxins among all oviparous vertebrates | Markus Hecker, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

157 | Development of high-throughput in vitro bioassays for determination of the CYP450 -inducing potential using chemically-defined media and suspension cell culture | Beat Thalmann, EWOMIS, Germany

158 | In vitro hepatic and gastro intestinal biotransformation data for hydrophobic chemicals in fish: Consideration of gastrointestinal biotransformation in in vitro to in vivo extrapolation models | Leslie Saunders, Simon Fraser University, Canada

162 | TBD

163 | Poster spotlight: TU071, TU072, TU073, TU074

167 | Growth of Myriophyllum spicatum under semi-field conditions and the resulting key information for the environmental risk assessment of Plant Protection Products | Eric Bruns, Bayer AG, Division Bayer CropScience, Germany

168 | Linking time-variable exposure to effects - Effect modelling as a tool at different assessment levels. | Simon Heine, Bayer Ag, Germany

COFFEE BRE AK

Silver Hall Level 0

…the 3Rs in chemical risk assessments (I) | Adam Lillicrap, Marta Sobanska, Teresa Norberg-King, Marlies Halder

Level 0

Gold Hall

| Teresa Fernandes, Iseult Lynch 161 | Challenging sea urchin defense with aminated polystyrene nanoparticles: the evidence of newly acquired particle's biological identity | Giacomo Grassi, University of Siena, Italy

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

…chemicals | Joanna Davies, Silvia Mohr 166 | Monitoring of biomarkers of heavy metals stress during germination of date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) seeds exposed to copper treatment | Zayneb Chaâbene, Université of Lille 1, France

171 | Species-specific vulnerability of Arctic copepods to oil contamination and global warming | Khuong Van Dinh, DTU (Technical University of Denmark), Denmark

172 | Additive Effects of Multiple Pharmaceuticals on Tadpole Responses to a Natural Stressor | Michael Barry, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman

173 | Effect of the succession of endosulfan exposure and bacterial challenge on DNA integrity and non specific immunity of the three-spine stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus. | Adrien Marchand, INERIS, France

COFFEE BRE AK

Hall 400 Level +4

| Matthias Liess, Lizanne Janssens, Robby Stoks

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

…implementation in risk assessment | John Parsons, José-Julio Ortega-Calvo, Jörg Römbke, Joop Harmsen 176 | Bioavailability concentration of PAHs quantified with passive samplers in the same soil under ex situ, semi in situ and in situ conditions | Nora Bartolome, Agroscope ReckenholzTänikon Research Station ART, Switzerland

177 | How to consider bioavailability in the assessment of construction products | Nicole Bandow, Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing, Germany

178 | Advances in the Development of Procedures to Establish the Toxicity of Non-Extractable Residues (NER) in soil | Joop Harmsen, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

…Development and Implications for Human Health | Jason Snape, Joakim Larsson, William Gaze, Kristian Brandt 181 | How can we improve the environmental assessment for antibiotics? Considerations for species sensitivity, antimicrobial resistance and ecosystem function | Gareth Le Page, University of Exeter, UK

182 | Simple assay for determining MSCs of antibiotics | Aimee Murray, University of Exeter, UK

183 | Poster spotlight: TU141, TU142, TU143, TU144

186 | Sensitivity of Caenorhabditis elegans to mixtures of zinc, copper and cadmium | Sofie Moyson, University of Antwerp, Belgium

187 | Effect of temperature on chronic Ni toxicity to Daphnia magna along four generations | Cecilia Pereira, Ghent University, Belgium

188 | Does prior exposure to heavy metals protect future generations of plants to metal stress? | Eline Saenen, Belgean Nuclear Research Centre (SCKCEN), Belgium

COFFEE BRE AK

Copper Hall Level 0

…Environment (I) | Eric Van Genderen, Jose Paulo Sousa, Nicolas Bury, Jean Mathieu Renaud

Hall 300 Level +3

…insect pollinators: from the laboratory to the real world | Agnes Rortais, David Spurgeon, Guy Smagghe 191 | Summary of an ICPPR Non-Apis Workshop - Subgroup Higher Tier (Bumble bees and Solitary bees) with recommendations for a semi-field experimental design | Silvio Knaebe, EAS Ecotox GmbH, Germany

192 | Field and semi-field studies to evaluate the effects of foraging on thiamethoxam treated winter oilseed rape on the reproductive capacity of the red mason bee, Osmia bicornis | Natalie Ruddle, Syngenta Ltd, UK

193 | Example of an exposure field study handling three different pollinator species and several matrices of residue analysis | Stefan Kimmel, Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd., Switzerland

197 | A new indicator for product water availability footprint | Wenjie Liao, Sichuan University, China

198 | Poster spotlight: TU208, TU209, TU210, TU211

Hall 100 Level +1

| Tomas Rydberg 196 | Marginal or non-marginal contribution to water scarcity footprint: different approaches | Anne-Marie Boulay, CIRAIG - École Polytechnique de Montréal, Canada

The Arc Level +3

…International Water Association (IWA) (I) | Elke Zimmer, Ingmar Nopens, Todd Gouin, Kris Villez 9:25 am

9:35 am

9:45 am

204 | State-of-the-art tools for exposure and chemical risk assessment | Dik Van de Meent, Independent Consultant, Netherlands

205 | Mechanistic effect models for ecological risk assessment: where next? | Virginie Ducrot, Bayer CropScience AG, Germany

206 | Discussion

Special Session

9:50 am 207 | Integrating treatment facility and river network information to model spatially-explicit environmental concentrations of down-the-drain substances: iSTREEM | Christopher Holmes, Waterborne Environmental, Inc., USA

10:00 am

10:10 am

208 | Cost-Effective and Integrated Optimization of the Urban Wastewater System Eindhoven | Ingmar Nopens, Ghent University, Belgium

209 | Discussion

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Tuesday 9 May 11:00 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2

11:05 am

11:25 am

Alternative approaches to animal testing for (eco)toxicity, and the regulatory application of the 3Rs in chemical risk… Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

210 | Benchmarking study to support regulatory acceptance of the application of in vitro-in vivo extrapolation to predict bioaccumulation potential of chemicals | Heike Laue, Givaudan Schweiz AG, Switzerland

211 | Screening for low aquatic bioaccumulation: prediction potential for replacing BCF tests based on physicochemical properties | Monika Nendza, Analytisches Laboratorium, Germany

Marine and freshwater ecotoxicology (I) | Ketil Hylland, Ionan Marigomez Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

215 | Endocrine biomarkers in bivalves - lessons learned so far | Jane Ebsen Morthorst, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark

216 | Application of label-free shotgun proteomics to identify and quantify vitellogenin in marine mussels | Laura Emilia Gonzalez, University of Vigo, Spain

Engineered nanomaterial effects on soil and terrestrial communities | Moira McKee, Juliane Filser,… Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

220 | Exposure dynamics of metallic nanomaterials (Ag, ZnO, Cu and Pb) affect soil microbial functional diversity | Yujia Zhai, CML Leiden University, Netherlands

221 | Unraveling the effects of soil components on the toxicity of AgNP to F. candida (Collembola) - an acute toxicity test in aqueous medium | Moira McKee, University of Bremen, Germany

Experimental approaches and field studies to investigate ecosystem integrity under multiple stress | Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

225 | Pesticide effects in a standardized and repeatable aquatic tri-trophic Nanocosm | Verena Riedl, University of York, UK

226 | Pesticide toxicity is enhanced by pre-exposure to wastewater | Jochen Zubrod, Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Bioremediation and phytoremediation of contaminated environments | Anna Barra Caracciolo, Michel Chalot,… Introduction

230 | DEVELOPING ECO-INNOVATIVE CHEMICAL PROCESSES TO VALORISE PHYTOREMEDIATIONBORNE BIOMASSES : THE PHYTOCHEM INITIATIVE | Michel Chalot, Université de Bourgogne FrancheComté, France

231 | From bioavailability science to bioremediation of PAHs: where are the limits for risk reduction? | José-Julio Ortega-Calvo, Instituto de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiologia, Spain

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Environmental Fate, Effects, and Risk Assessment of Veterinary Medicines | Silke Hickmann,… Introduction

235 | Updates to the proposed Canadian regulatory framework for the environmental assessment of new active ingredients in human and veterinary drugs | Julie Chateauvert, Health Canada, Canada

236 | Estimating soil emissions and toxicity impacts from the application of livestock manure: application to heavy metals at national scale | Alexandra Leclerc, DTU, Denmark

Interpreting Biological Effects of Metals and Their Mixtures in the Aquatic and Terrestrial Environment (II) | Copper Hall Level 0

Introduction

240 | Chronic metal mixture toxicity to freshwater organisms: does the metal concentration ratio matter? | Charlotte Nys, University of Ghent, Belgium

241 | Context Matters: What Is Known about the Additivity of Toxicity in Ni-Containing Metal Mixtures | Joseph Meyer, Applied Limnology Professionals LLC, USA

Advancements in life cycle impact assessment and footprint method development (II) | Tomas Rydberg Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

245 | Evaluation of Product Impacts on Biodiversity: The Product Biodiversity Footprint project | Caroline Catalan, I Care & consult, France

246 | Forest Product LCA: Carbon Form, Fire, Fuel and Fate Rules | Mathilde Vlieg, The Evah Institute / Vlieg LCA, Australia

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Bridging between ecology, ecotoxicology and ecosystems services (I) | Gertie Arts, … Introduction

250 | Bridging between ecology and ecotoxicology: what are suitable endpoints or response variables to detect effects on plants at different ecological levels? | Elisabeth Gross, University of Lorraine, France

251 | The performance of plant individuals, populations and species | Mark van Kleunen, University of Konstanz, Germany

The Arc Level +3

Looking across organiational boundaries: exchanging ideas on mechanistic modelling between SETAC and the…

58

11:05 am

11:15 am

11:25 am

11:35 am

11:40 am

255 | Ecological modelling can link chemical exposure to effects on the population dynamics of aquatic invertebrate species for major European rivers | Andreas Focks, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

256 | Modelling of population dynamics, food web and biostatistics | Elise Billoir, LIEC - Université de Lorraine - CNRS, France

257 | ChimERA: integrating fate and effect modelling | Karel Viaene, Arche consulting, Belgium

258 | Discussion

259 | Balancing complexity and uncertainty in model-based estimation of micropollutant fluxes in integrated urban drainage-wastewater systems | Luca Vezzaro, DTU, Denmark

Special Session

Tuesday 9 May

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2

11:45 am

12:05 pm

12:25 pm

…assessments (II) | Adam Lillicrap, Marta Sobanska, Teresa Norberg-King, Marlies Halder 213 | The Effluent Toxicity Assessment Toolbox - International Perspective on Tools and Concepts and Opportunities for Animal Alternatives | Michelle Embry, ILSI Health & Environmental Sciences Institute (HE), USA

214 | Poster spotlight: TU001, TU002, TU003 LUNCH BREAK

Silver Hall Level 0

212 | Facilitating Mechanistically Based Grouping to Predict Acute Aquatic Toxicity Using Information from Molecular Initiating Events | Maria Sapounidou, Liverpool John Moores University, UK

Marine and freshwater ecotoxicology (I) | Ketil Hylland, Ionan Marigomez Hall 400 Level +4

217 | The effects of copper-cadmium mixtures on the development of zebrafish embryos | Katherine Cordery, Universiteit Antwerpen, Belgium

218 | Effects of environmental pollutant mixtures on immune function and disease susceptibility in wildlife | JeanPierre Desforges, Aarhus University (AU), Denmark

219 | UK MSFD assessment: spatial and temporal analysis of biliary 1-hydroxypyrene, ethoxyresorufinO-deethylase (EROD) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in flatfish | Clare Askem, Cefas, UK

223 | Copper toxicity in Collembola: a comparison between nano and nonnano agrochemicals | Susana Loureiro, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal

224 | Do we worry too much? Nanoparticle and other stressors' effects to a soil-grown legume at realistic exposure levels | Fabienne Schwab, CEREGE, Switzerland

228 | Effects of fungicides and nutrients on heterotrophic microbial communities under global change projections - the importance of exposure history | Alexander Feckler, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Sweden

229 | Cascading agricultural constraints on plant litter fueled trophic linkages | Ellard Hunting, CML Leiden University, Netherlands

…Maria Engelke, Patricks Voua Otomo Gold Hall Level 0

222 | Long-term ecotoxicological and genetic effects of engineered nanomaterial exposure in the springtail Folsomia candida | Jeroen Noordhoek, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands

Hall 300 Level +3

227 | Effects of fungicide exposure and feeding pressure on aquatic fungi across different biogeographical regions | Verena Schreiner, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

…Elisabeth Gross, José-Julio Ortega-Calvo Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

232 | Plant-assisted bioremediation as an effectiveness strategy to remediate a historically PCB and heavy metalcontaminated area in Southern Italy | Valeria Ancona, National Research Council, Italy

233 | Role of rhizoremediation in a complex PCB soil contamination gradient | Elisa Terzaghi, University of Insubria (Como), Italy

234 | Recycling of waste water treatment sludge as a substitute soil amendment for mine waste reclamation | Souhir SOUSSOU, FertilInnov Environnement, France

238 | A new approach for supporting the comparison of the benefits and environmental risks of veterinary medicinal products | Jennifer Chapman, Environmental Department University of York, UK

239 | Substitution in the context of the European authorization of veterinary pharmaceuticals | Thomas Backhaus, University of Gothenburg, Sweden

LUNCH BREAK

| Mirco Bundschuh, Jochen Zubrod

…Caroline Moermond, Jason Weeks Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

237 | Challenges in exposure modelling of fish veterinary medicines | Fabienne Ericher, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK

Copper Hall Level 0

243 | Understanding the effects of complex (and realistic) metal mixtures to soil invertebrates | Jean Mathieu Renaud, CFE Centre for Functional Ecology, Portugal

244 | Use of a biotic ligand model (BLM) to predict toxicity to the freshwater macrophyte Lemna minor exposed to uranium or to a mixture of uranium and cadmium. | Nele Horemans, Belgean Nuclear Research Centre (SCK-CEN), Belgium

Advancements in life cycle impact assessment and footprint method development (II) | Tomas Rydberg Hall 100 Level +1

247 | Is nitrogen considered properly in LCIA? Review on nitrogen assessment methodologies and their relevance for LCA. | Karoline Wowra, Technische Universitaet Darmstadt, Germany

248 | Market prices based valuation of abiotic resources in environmental assessment | Bernard De Caevel, RDC Environment, Belgium

249 | Poster spotlight: TU212, TU213, TU214, TU215

LUNCH BREAK

| Eric Van Genderen, Jose Paulo Sousa, Nicolas Bury, Jean Mathieu Renaud 242 | Are interactions between organisms relevant to assess toxicity of metal mixtures in wastes? A TME approach | Tiago Natal da Luz, University of Coimbra, Portugal

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

…Elisabeth Gross, Sabine Apitz, Lorraine Maltby 252 | Measuring changes in aquatic ecosystems after disturbance by pollution or invasion of alien plants | Iris Stiers, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

253 | What can ecosystem services and resilience considerations add to pesticide regulations and the sustainability of agriculture? | Annik Dollacker, Bayer Ag, Germany

254 | Panel discussion

The Arc Level +3

…International Water Association (IWA) (II) | Elke Zimmer, Ingmar Nopens, Todd Gouin, Kris Villez

11:50 am

12:00 pm

12:05 pm

12:15 pm

12:25 pm

260 | How certain are we about uncertainty of modelling approaches in environmental risk assessment? | Thomas Preuss, Bayer Ag, Germany

261 | Discussion

262 | Communication Approaches to implement mechanistic modeling in decision making | Frederik Verdonck, ARCHE, Belgium

263 | Use of TK/TD models in pesticide risk assessment Current situation and possible improvements | Veronique Poulsen, ANSES, France

264 | Discussion and Forging Collaboration

Special Session

59

Tuesday 9 May 2:15 pm

Afternoon Platform Presentations

2:20 pm

2:40 pm

Alternative approaches to animal testing for (eco)toxicity, and the regulatory application of… Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

265 | How to use Fish Embryo Acute Toxicity (FET) Test Guideline (OECD 236) to fulfil the information requirements of REACH Regulation | Romanas Cesnaites, European Chemicals Agency - ECHA, Finland

266 | Benefits of Using Read-Across and In Silico Techniques to Fulfill Hazard Data Requirements for Chemical Categories | Kathleen Stanton, American Cleaning Institute, USA

Interplay between nutritional factors and chemical toxicity | Patrick Kestemont Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

270 | Arsenic uptake by rice: Interactions with Silicon | Matt Limmer, University of Delaware, USA

271 | Do fatty acids and methylmercury impact the function of adipose tissue in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)? | Gilles Tinant, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium

Marine and freshwater ecotoxicology (II) | Ketil Hylland, Ionan Marigomez Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

275 | The importance of ecological processes and indirect effects in determining an aquatic ecosystem's response to ionising radiation | Tanya Hevrøy, NRPA, Norway

276 | Impacts of radiation on DNA damage and reproduction in marine and freshwater amphipods | Neil Fuller, University of Portsmouth, UK

Effects and ecological consequences of aquatic exposures to particulate materials from the… Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

280 | The dilemma of physical effects in aquatic toxicity tests | Edward Salinas, BASF SE, Germany

281 | An internationally benchmarked approach towards the standardised aquatic ecotoxicity testing of nanomaterials | Andy Booth, SINTEF Ocean, Norway

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Applying Bioaccumulation Data to Better Inform Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of… Introduction

285 | Use of mammalian toxicokinetic data in bioaccumulation assessment | Tiina Lantto, European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), Finland

286 | Development, testing and application of an in vitro to in vivo extrapolation approach for assessing biotransformation rates and bioaccumulation factors in fish and mammals: Lessons learned. | Frank Gobas, Simon Fraser University, Canada

Assessment of PBT and vPvB chemicals: Requirements, challenges and policy implications | The Arc Level +3

Introduction

290 | Prioritizing and Assessing Organic Chemicals: Are PBT Criteria Still Useful Today? | Mark Bonnell, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada

291 | What are bottlenecks in the current PBT assessment scheme and how can they be overcome? | Martin Scheringer, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

Fate and Effects of Metals: Regulatory and Risk Assessment Perspective | Copper Hall Level 0

Introduction

295 | Challenges to implementing bioavailable environmental quality standards for metals in Northern Europe | Matti Leppanen, Finnish Environment Institute, Finland

296 | Promoting "redox equality" in ecotoxicology: the case of Cr(VI) and Cr(III)" | Davide Vignati, CNRS, France

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Science communication and citizen science - strategies for successful stakeholder… Introduction

300 | Risk to What? Translating Environmental, Social and Economic Impacts of Remediation into Stakeholder Values | Sabine Apitz, SEA Environmental Decisions Ltd, UK

301 | Conceptualizing stakeholder engagement in the realm of tackling air pollution and nurturing environment-conscious citizens, in the context of sustainable, urban resilient cities | Evelin Matiaki, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

Advancing science and application of planetary boundaries and related ecological limits concepts to enable absolute… Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

305 | Dealing with variability in ecosystem vulnerability for environmental management | Michiel Zijp, RIVM, Netherlands

306 | One Planet Thinking: Towards companies that perform within the earth's regenerative capacity | Annemarie Kerkhof, Ecofys, Netherlands

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Bridging between ecology, ecotoxicology and ecosystems services (II) | Gertie Arts, Elisabeth Gross…

60

Introduction

310 | Ecosystem services from a regulatory/risk management prospective | Karin Nienstedt, European Commission - DG SANCO, Italy

311 | Chemicals: Assessment of Risks to Ecosystem Services (CARES). Where are we now and where are we going? | Lorraine Maltby, The University of Sheffield, UK

Special Session

Think-Outside-The Box-Session

Tuesday 9 May 3:00 pm

Afternoon Platform Presentations 3:20 pm

3:40 pm

Silver Hall Level 0

…the 3Rs in chemical risk assessments (III) | Adam Lillicrap, Marta Sobanska, Teresa Norberg-King, Marlies Halder 267 | The Environmental ReadAcross Assessment Framework for environmental hazard and fate endpoints | Bram Versonnen, European Chemicals Agency - ECHA, Finland

268 | Ecological Threshold for Toxicological Concern (eco-TTC) Assessing the potential of a new tool for environmental hazard assessment | Michelle Embry, ILSI Health & Environmental Sciences Institute (HE), USA

269 | Ecodatahub - Big data techniques to create trusted, actionable ecotox data | Amy Beasley, The Dow Chemical Company, USA

272 | Lipids modulate cadmium toxicity in aquatic organisms | Aline Ferain, UCLouvain, Belgium

273 | Do specific fatty acid enriched diets protect fish against Cadmium exposure and pathogen infection? | Valérie Cornet, Université de Namur ASBL, Belgium

274 | The HERACLES Waste study: unraveling the associations between exposure to metals through diet and children cognitive functions | Denis Sarigiannis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

Hall 400 Level +4

Marine and freshwater ecotoxicology (II) | Ketil Hylland, Ionan Marigomez 277 | Are invertebrate circulating cells inherently sensitive to oxidative DNA damage? | Andrea Sahlmann, University of Oslo, Norway

278 | Assessment of DNA integrity of Palaemonidae spermatozoa using the alkaline Comet assay: a pertinent tools for environmental biomonitoring | Alexandre ERRAUD, SEBIO UNIVERSITE LE HAVRE, France

279 | Poster spotlight: TU040, TU041, TU042, TU068

COFFEE BRE AK

Hall 300 Level +3

Interplay between nutritional factors and chemical toxicity | Patrick Kestemont

Gold Hall Level 0

…nano- to macro- scale | Edward Salinas, Yasir Sultan, Sebastian Beggel, Juergen Geist 282 | Short and long-term studies to ecotoxicological impacts of engineered nanoparticles in aquatic model systems | Marcus Lukas, Federal Environment Agency (UBA), Germany

283 | Exploring uptake and biodistribution of particles in biota | Marinda van Pomeren, CML Leiden University, Netherlands

284 | Indirect and direct adverse effects of fine particulate matter on filter-feeding aquatic organisms | Sebastian Beggel, Aquatic Systems Biology, Technische Universitaet Muenchen, Germany

287 | Investigation of accumulation of persistent bioaccumulative toxic organic substances into passive samplers and aquatic organisms | Foppe Smedes, RECETOX, Czech Republic

288 | Factors affecting bioaccumulation of cyclic volatile methyl siloxanes in a subarctic benthopelagic food web | Nicholas Warner, NILU Norwegian Institute for Air Research, Norway

289 | Exposure assessment of aquatic environment in Adige river to flame retardants | Monica Giulivo, Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy

The Arc Level +3

| Monika Nendza, Silke Gabbert, Stefan Hahn 292 | Hydrolysis and biotransformation -derived persistent and mobile organic contaminants potentially impacting raw and drinking waters | Daniel Zahn, Hochschule Fresenius, University of Applied Sciences, Germany

293 | Persistence assessment of plant protection products (PPP) in the context of PBT evaluation in the EU | Bernhard Jene, BASF SE, Germany

294 | Methodologies for the assessment of environmental impacts of PBT substances for input to socioeconomic assessments under the REACH Regulation. | Oliver Warwick, Peter Fisk Associates Limited, UK

298 | How does the long-term aging in the soil change terrestrial ecotoxic impacts of anthropogenic metal emissions? | Mikolaj Owsianiak, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

299 | Highlights for soil health assessment using earthworms: in vivo, in vitro and molecular tools | Manuel Soto, University of Basque Country, Spain

COFFEE BRE AK

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

…Chemicals | Jung-Hwan Kwon, Mark Bonnell, Beate Escher

Copper Hall Level 0

| Koen Oorts, Olivier Perceval 297 | Fate of an old mercury contamination: What are the natural background levels in sediments and benthic, marine organisms? | Poul Bjerregaard, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark 302 | Application of a Participative Methodology to Manage Multiple Pressures on Estuaries - Experiences with Stakeholder Communication in the Elbe Estuary | Ivonne Stresius, HAW Hamburg, Germany

303 | What can Non-scientists Contribute to Marine Pollution Research? | Jan Brant, Cefas, UK

304 | The use of photography in science communication - Its potential and its challenges | Andrea Bonisoli Alquati, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, USA

Hall 100 Level +1

…sustainability assessments | Anders Bjørn, Mikolaj Owsianiak, Martin Scheringer, Thomas Backhaus 307 | Absolute environmental sustainability assessment using new Planetary Boundaries based LCIA methodology: framework and a case study | Morten Ryberg, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

308 | Requirements for developing planetary boundaries impact categories and application to freshwater use | Anders Bjørn, Polytechnique Montreal, Canada

309 | Absolute sustainability assessment of product life cycles through calculation of carrying capacity entitlement at industry level | Guillaume Majeau-Bettez, CIRAIG Polytechnique Montreal, Canada

313 | Ecosystem Services in Retrospective Risk Assessment, Remediation and Restoration: State of the Practice | Sabine Apitz, SEA Environmental Decisions Ltd, UK

314 | Panel discussion

COFFEE BRE AK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

…engagements | Leonie Nuesser, Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, Jan Brant

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

…Sabine Apitz, Lorraine Maltby 312 | Ecological production functions: key attributes and challenges of implementation | Lawrence Kapustka, LK Consultancy, Canada

Special Session

Think-Outside-The Box-Session

61

Tuesday 9 May Poster Corners New developments in ecotoxicology for the risk assessment of single and multiple stressors in insect pollinators: from the laboratory to the real world (PC) | Agnes Rortais, David Spurgeon, Guy Smagghe Discussion at 5:30 pm TUPC01 | Preliminary results from lowvariability and low-uncertainty semi-field trials: A way towards an acceptable testpower | Magnus Wang, WSC Scientific GmbH, Germany TUPC02 | Sources of variability and uncertainty in honeybee field and semi-field trials and how to overcome them | Magnus Wang, WSC Scientific GmbH, Germany TUPC03 | Comparison of toxicity of selected insecticides to the red mason bee, Osmia rufa L. | Elżbieta Kulec-Płoszczyca, Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry Branch Pszczyna, Poland TUPC04 | A method for a solitary bee (Osmia spp.) first tier acute contact laboratory test: an update | Ivo Roessink, Alterra, Netherlands TUPC05 | Differentially expressed genes on brains of africanized Apis mellifera exposed to thiamethoxam | Pamela Decio, UNESP Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho, Brazil TUPC06 | Simple modelling approaches to refine exposure for bee risk assessment based on worst case assumptions | Mark Miles, Bayer CropScience UK, UK TUPC07 | Exposure of flower-visiting insects to pesticides in the European agricultural landscape | Philipp Uhl, University of KoblenzLandau, Germany

Fate and Effects of Metals: Regulatory and Risk Assessment Perspective (PC) | Koen Oorts, Olivier Perceval Discussion at 6:00 pm TUPC08 | Using field data to support the derivation of an EQS for zinc | Adam Peters, wca, UK TUPC09 | Bio-met: a user-friendly tool for bioavailability-based Environmental Quality Standard (EQS) assessments of metals | Stijn Baken, European Copper Institute, Belgium TUPC10 | How different can it be? Impact of region-specific methodology on the environmental quality standard of nickel. | Christian Schlekat, NiPERA, USA TUPC11 | Use of TICKET-UWM as a SiteSpecific Risk Assessment Tool | Richard Carbonaro, Mutch Associates, LLC, USA TUPC12 | Removal of Metals from the Water Column under Transformation/Dissolution Conditions for Chronic Hazard Classification. | Philippa Huntsman-Mapila, Natural Resources Canada, Canada TUPC13 | Structural and functional response of river sediment microbial communities to environmental concentrations of copper and arsenic, alone or in mixture | Ayanleh Mahamoud Ahmed, Universite Savoie Mont Blanc, France

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Poster Presentations Challenges in Assessment and Management of Cosmetics and Personal Care Products (PC) | Iain Davies, Ursula Klaschka, Erwan Saouter, Jacques Lharidon Discussion at 5:30 pm TUPC14 | A framework for dynamic estimation of aquatic environmental concentrations of microplastics via WWTP discharge | Christopher Holmes, Waterborne Environmental, Inc., USA TUPC15 | Determination of negative effects of Methylparaben on sea urchin (Paracentrotus lividus) by embryo and fertilisation toxicity tests. | Muhammet Karaaslan, University of Ege, Turkey TUPC16 | Dispersion, fate, and toxicity of aged titanium dioxide nanocomposite-based sunscreens in aqueous environments | Danielle Slomberg, Aix-Marseille Université, France TUPC17 | Fate of inorganic and organic UV filters | Armin Zenker, University of Appl. Sc. Northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland TUPC18 | Ecotoxicity of natural complex mixtures: raw material of plant extracts which are resin-like solids. A follow-up and a conclusion. | Paul Thomas, CEHTRA SAS, France TUPC19 | Environmental and consumer exposure to sensitizing fragrances in household products - a case study | Ursula Klaschka, University of Applied Sciences Ulm, Germany

Alternative approaches to animal testing for (eco)toxicity, and the regulatory application of the 3Rs in chemical risk assessments (PC) | Adam Lillicrap, Marta Sobanska, Teresa Norberg-King, Marlies Halder Discussion at 6:00 pm TUPC20 | Development and functional characterization of 3D spheroidal aggregate cultures of the rainbow trout liver cell line RTL-W1 | Tobias Lammel, INIA, Sweden TUPC21 | Usefulness of environmental RAAF in metals industry - example of the PGM Industry | Jelle Mertens, Precious Metals and Rhenium Consortium c/o EPMF, Belgium TUPC22 | A cross-sector review of global requirements for acute fish toxicity testing - opportunities for harmonisation and implementation of the 3Rs | Samuel Maynard, Syngenta, UK TUPC23 | Applicability of the in silico ecotoxicty prediction tool for pharmaceuticals in environment | Akihiko Hirose, NIHS, Japan TUPC24 | A tiered testing strategy for rapid estimation of bioaccumulation by a combined modelling - in vitro testing approach: identification of candidate test chemicals | Jon Arnot, ARC Arnot Research & Consulting, Canada TUPC25 | Reducing the number of fish used in acute toxicity testing: Incorporation of the Fish Embryo Acute Toxicity test into the threshold approach | Gilly Stoddart, PETA International Science Consortium Ltd., London, UK

Poster Sessions 07:30 am–08:30 am 10:15 am–11:00 am 12:45 pm–2:15 pm 4:00 pm–4:30 pm 5:30 pm–6:30 pm 6:30 pm–7:00 pm

Poster setup Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster social Poster take-down

Alternative approaches to animal testing for (eco)toxicity, and the regulatory application of the 3Rs in chemical risk assessments (P) | Adam Lillicrap, Marta Sobanska, Teresa Norberg-King, Marlies Halder TU001 | An intestinal fish cell barrier model to assess absorption of poorly soluble organic chemicals in vitro | Hannah Schug, Eawag - Swiss federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland TU002 | Effects of repeated exposures to fine particles (PM0.18-2.5) and ultrafine particles (PM0.18) on inflammatory chronic lung diseases exacerbation | Jules Sotty, University of Lille 2, France TU003 | New alternative carcinogenic prediction assay using flatworm stem cell proliferation patterns | Karen Smeets, Hasselt University, Belgium TU004 | Development of an alternative testing strategy for the fish early life-stage test using the AOP network ”thyroperoxidase and deiodinase inhibition leading to impaired swim bladder inflation” | Evelyn Stinckens, University of Antwerp, Belgium TU005 | In Vitro screening to assess biotransformation rates and bioaccumulation potential of volatile and hydrophobic fragrance ingredients | Frederic Begnaud, Firmenich, Switzerland TU006 | Toxic effects of pesticides used in vineyard on cell lines as well as embryos and larvae of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) | Melanie Blanc, Orebro University, Sweden TU007 | Abiotic Activation of Pro-Electrophiles to Assess their Skin Sensitization Potential in Chemico | Johannes Moldrickx, Helmoltz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany TU008 | Evaluation of toxic and neurotoxic effects of sediments from 6 coastal systems in Mexico | Alma Sobrino-Figueroa, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Mexico TU009 | Electrochemical activation of proelectrophilic skin sensitizers in a chemoassay approach | Benjamin Schwarz, UFZ-Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany TU010 | An alternative approach to Fish Embryo Toxicity (FET) test using the threespined stickleback | Marion Sebire, Cefas Weymouth Laboratory, UK TU011 | CON4EI: Consortium for in vitro Eye Irritation testing strategy | An Van Rompay, VITO NV, Belgium TU012 | Prediction of phenol ecotoxicity using an appropriate classification into Mechanisms of toxic action. | Franklin Bauer, KREATiS, France TU013 | Predictive QSAR models to assess the toxicity of pirperidine derivatives to Aedes aegypti mosquitoes | Ester Papa, University of Insubria, Italy

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Tuesday 9 May TU014 | Reducing animal products in metabolisation studies - S9 subcellular fractions produced from cells in chemicallydefined medium | Andreas Schiwy, RWTH Aachen University, Germany TU015 | Normalization of acute toxicity data to freely dissolved concentrations provides common basis for comparison between zebrafish and rodents | Aaron Redman, Exxon Mobil Biomedical Sciences, USA TU016 | A validated targeted approach for metabolic profiling of fathead minnow embryos | Anne Herrmann, Bayer Pharma AG, Germany TU017 | Nanoparticles: how safe are they? Schmidtea mediterranea as a model organism for toxicity assessment | Nathalie Leynen, Hasselt University, Belgium TU018 | The endocrine axes of fish and amphibians share common key events identified using the concept of Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOP) | Elke Eilebrecht, Fraunhofer IME, Germany TU019 | In silico molecular docking for EDC toxicity prediction in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans | Jae-Seong Jeong, University of Seoul, South Korea

Poster Presentations University of Antwerp, Belgium TU030 | Development and need of a new marine cyanobacteria test for the ecotoxicological risk assessment of antibiotics applied in the marine environment | Jens Heseding, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany TU031 | Evaluation of skin sensitisation potential of 4-tert-butylphenol and 4-(benzyloxy)phenol using in vitro skin sensitisation assays | Rahul Date, Jai Research Foundation (JRF) Global, India TU032 | Chemoassay Profiling to Characterize the Skin Sensitization Potential and Potency of Organic Electrophiles | Johannes Moldrickx, Helmoltz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany TU033 | Using a Database of Historical Control Avian Reproductive Performance to Enhance Evaluation of Agrichemical Product Toxicity | Kristen Hammett, EAG Laboratories, USA TU034 | Aldehydes, epoxides and carboxylic acids: what do they really do to aquatic organisms? | Franklin Bauer, KREATiS, France TU035 | SETAC Animal Alternatives Interest Group | Adam Lillicrap, NIVA Norwegian Institute for Water Research, Norway

IG

TU044 | Impact of the antidiabetic drug metformin and the artificial sweetener sucralose on brown trout | Stefanie Jacob, Universität Tübingen, Germany TU045 | Marine Species Testing | Guido Gonsior, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany TU046 | Acetylcholinesterase activity and degree of lipid peroxidation as biomarkers of the toxic effects of pesticide DDVP (2,2, -diclorovinyl-phosphate) on Artemia franciscana | Alma Sobrino-Figueroa, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Mexico TU047 | The aquatic life criteria for Endosulfan in the Yangtze River Delta Region of China | Junying Zhou, Nanjing Insitute of Environmental Sciences, China TU048 | Xenopus oocyte responses after cadmium and lead exposures: a cell biology investigation | Sylvain Slaby, Université de Lille, France TU049 | Ecotoxicity - miniaturized tools for microorganisms growth | Jacques-Aurelien Sergent, SOLVAY, Belgium

TU020 | Mode of Action (MOA) assignment classifications for ecotoxicology: Overlap and consistency of available schemes | Aude Kienzler, European. Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy

Interplay between nutritional factors and chemical toxicity (P) | Patrick Kestemont

TU050 | Environmental implications and potential human risk linked to Tributyltin contamination in Northern Chile | Italo Castro, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil

TU021 | Amiodarone and Terfenadine Induced Cardiotoxicity in Developing Zebrafish Embryos (Danio rerio) | Jigar Rana, Jai Research Foundation, India

TU036 | The role of nutritional status on tissue contaminant concentrations | Richard Shore, Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (NERC), UK

TU051 | Assessment of sperm quality in palaemonid prawns using Comet assay: methodological optimization. | Alexandre ERRAUD, SEBIO UNIVERSITE LE HAVRE, France

TU022 | Examination of the relevance of Hansen Solubility Parameters to prediction of ecotoxicity and bioconcentration | Peter Fisk, Saxon House, UK

TU037 | Development of a refined zebrafish feeding trial to evaluate food safety | Isabelle Gabriëls, University of Antwerp, Belgium

TU052 | Acute vs Chronic testing: What does this mean for protecting the marine environment? | Helen Walton, Cefas Lowestoft Laboratory, UK

TU023 | In vitro characterization of the toxicity of selected emerging contaminants to lake trout | Norina Pagano, RWTH Aachen, Germany TU024 | Challenges with Algae Growth Inhibition Test including Recovery based on OECD Guideline 201 with Non-Standard Algae Species | Stefan Höger, Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd, Switzerland TU025 | Evaluation of bioaccumulation potential of several pharmaceuticals based on log D/BCF data from the standard OECD 305 protocol and the OECD 305 minimised test designed | Lisa Constantine, Pfizer, Inc., USA TU026 | Toxic and Activation Effects of LowLevel Radiation via Bacterial Luminescent Assay. Description in Terms of Hormesis and Threshold Models | Nadezhda Kudryasheva, Institute of Biophysics SB RAS, Russian Federation TU027 | Use of an integrated testing strategy to fill data gaps for environmental risk assessment of iso-alcohols | Gail Bragin, ExxonMobil Biomedical Sciences, Inc., USA TU028 | OECD 201 - Comparison of Algae Growth Inhibition Reference Studies Conducted in a Conventional and Closed System | Stefan Höger, Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd, Switzerland TU029 | Development of a zebrafish embryo test for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals with different endocrine disrupting modes of actions | Ellen Michiels,

TU038 | Fatty Acid Characterisation of Nile Tilapia (Oreochromis Niloticus) in Fresh and Brackish Water | Ayojesutomi AbiodunSolanke, Federal College of Fisheries and Marine Technology, Nigeria TU039 | Direct effects of radiation on the biochemical composition of two primary producers | Anna-Lea Golz, Stockholm University, Sweden

Marine and freshwater ecotoxicology (P) | Ketil Hylland, Ionan Marigomez TU040 | Influence of abiotic and biotic parameters on eco-physiological responses across freshwater-marine continuum as a function of salinity and metallic contaminant | Carole Bertrand, Université de Lorraine, CNRS UMR 7360, France TU041 | Native (Mytilus galloprovincialis) versus non-indigenous (Xenostrobus securis) mytilids in Biscay Bay: Different sensitivity of biological responses against environmental pollution | Endika Gil-Uriarte, University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU, Spain TU042 | What fish have to face - Effects of anthropogenic pollution on fish health in a representative watercourse in a densely populated region of Central Europe | Mona Schweizer, University of Tuebingen, Germany TU043 | Incorporating avoidance and recolonization concepts in ecotoxicological risk assessment by using a non-forced exposure system | Julian Blasco, Inst. Ciencias Marinas de Andalucia, Spain

TU053 | Aquatic toxicity of biofuels acute toxicity, developmental toxicity and reproductive toxicity of four biofuels candidates | Sebastian Heger, Institute for Environmental Research, RWTH Aachen, Germany TU054 | Cross-species assay validation using the AOP deiodinase inhibition leading to impaired posterior chamber inflation | Evelyn Stinckens, University of Antwerp, Belgium TU055 | Comparing the acute sensitivity of growth and photosynthetic endpoints in three Lemna species exposed to four herbicides | Jihae Park, University of Incheon, South Korea TU056 | Inhibitory Effects of Ammonia on Filtering of Commensal and Pathogenic Escherichia coli by the Cladoceran Daphnia magna | Peter Roslev, Aalborg University, Denmark TU057 | Levels of POPS in Marine Farmed and Wild Fish From Tanzania, A Pilot Study | Eliezer Mwakalapa, Institute of Marine Sciences, Tanzania TU058 | Setting up aquatic toxicity testing using zebrafish, daphnia and algae | Iñaki Iturria, BioBide, Spain TU059 | Vertically-transmitted microsporidia parasite could disturb the endocrine disruption assessment in Gammarus sp. | Eric Gismondi, University of Liege, Belgium TU060 | Studies of temporal variations of fish biomarker expression in a Swedish coastal site | Lars Förlin, University of Gothenburg,

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

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Tuesday 9 May

Poster Presentations

Sweden TU061 | Effects of imidacloprid on the escape and agonistic behaviors of crayfish | Joachim Sturve, Goteborg University, Sweden TU062 | Environmental risk assessment of ionic liquid [omim][BF4]: the role of a chaotropic agent (Gnd HCl) in understanding ILs’ mode of action | Vasiliki Tsarpali, University of Patras, Greece TU063 | An experimental approach to improve the understanding of trophic transfer of selenium in freshwater environments and its potential hazard in fish | Kerstin Bluhm, University of Saskatchewan, Canada TU064 | Effects of the organic-UV filter, oxybenzone, on photobiology of the hexacoral Zoanthus sp. | Jessica Mota, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal TU065 | Changes of sinking rate and physiochemical composition of two marine diatoms exposed to diuron | Mst Ruhina Margia Khanam, Kyushu University, Japan

TU077 | Assessment of few layer graphene and graphene oxide effects at the skin level: the role of mitochondria | Marco Pelin, University of Trieste, Italy TU078 | Tissue specific differences of copper oxide nanoparticle toxicity in the marine mussel Mytilus edulis | Catherine Mouneyrac, Université Catholique de lOuest, France TU079 | Reproductive toxicity via JAK/STAT and TGF-ß pathways crosstalk as potential adverse pathway of UV activated TiO2NPs in the nematode C. elegans: Integrated transcriptomics and metabolomics analyses | Jae-Seong Jeong, University of Seoul, South Korea TU080 | Establishing an optimal culture medium and the most responsive viability assay to accurately assess Ag NPs toxicity in primary cultures of E. fetida coelomocytes | Manuel Soto, University of Basque Country, Spain

TU066 | Laboratory assays with non-forced exposure to predict the preferential spatial distribution of fish in two Ecuadorian rivers | Julian Blasco, Inst. Ciencias Marinas de Andalucia, Spain TU067 | Metatranscriptomic profiles of marine microbial communities responding to complex mixtures of organic pollutants in Arctic and Antarctic waters | Elena CerroGálvez, Institute of Environmental Assessment and Water Research (IDAEA-CSIC), Spain TU068 | Microbial responses to diffusive pollution in seawater | Maria Vila-Costa, Institute of Environmental Assessment and Water Research IDAEACSIC, Spain TU069 | EVALUATION OF WATER QUALITY IN RIVERS ON THE SANTA CATARINA ISLAND, BRAZIL, USING BENTONIC ORGANISMS | Carlos Soares, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil TU070 | EFFECTS OF URBANIZATION IN THE ESTUARINE REGION OF RIO BIGUAÇU, SC, BRAZIL | Carlos Soares, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil

Mechanistic ecotoxicology of engineered nanomaterials: lessons learnt from human models (P) | Teresa Fernandes, Iseult Lynch TU071 | Evaluating and predicting the respiratory hazard of particles used in Li-ion batteries for a safe and sustainable development | Violaine Sironval, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium

TU081 | The role of reactive oxygen species in the mediation of the toxicity induced by panel of nanomaterials on the freshwater microalgae Raphidocelis subcapitata | Faisal Alqahtani, Heriot-Watt University, UK TU082 | Addressing the challenges of emerging contaminants in aquatic systems | Teresa Fernandes, Heriot-Watt University, UK TU083 | The effects of biochar on the toxicity of Silver Nanoparticles (AgNPs) to the Annelid species Enchytraeus albidus (E. albidus) | Sthandiwe Kanyile, University of the Free State, South Africa TU084 | Sub-lethal effects of nanofullerene C60 on Cladocera quantified by liquid chromatography coupled in a hybrid quadrupole-Orbitrap | Eny Vieira, Sao Paulo University, Brazil TU085 | The use of proteome profiling to detect potential biomarkers for monitoring the immunotoxicity of engineered nanoparticle | Edmund Pool, University of The Western Cape, South Africa TU086 | Impact of acute and chronic inhalation exposure to PbO nanoparticles on mice | Jana Lebedova, Masaryk University, Faculty of Science, RECETOX, Czech Republic

Aquatic and Terrestrial Plant State-of-theart Research linking ecotoxicology and exposure of chemicals (P) | Joanna Davies, Silvia Mohr

TU072 | Interaction of gold nanoparticles and nickel(II) sulfate affects dendritic cell maturation | Peter Hoet, Catholic University Leuven, Belgium TU073 | Human absorption of silver ENM: through particles or ions? | Nadia Waegeneers, CODA-CERVA, Belgium TU074 | In vitro and in vivo uptake, fate and effects of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs) and 3,3’,4,4’-tetrachlorobiphenyl (PCB77) in rainbow trout | Tobias Lammel, INIA, Sweden TU075 | Evaluation of the toxic, cytotoxic and genotoxic activity of three composite nanomaterials (CLAY/CNTs, CLAY/ADMA, GO/ADMA) | Ioanna Efthimiou, University of Patras, Greece

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TU076 | Evaluation of the toxicity of graphene-related nanomaterials on fish cell lines | Judit Kalman, Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria, Spain

TU087 | Ecosystem services approach to pesticide risk assessment and management of non-target terrestrial plants: updated summary and recommendations from SETAC Europe workshops | Giovanna Meregalli, Dow AgroSciences Italia srl, Italy TU088 | Proceedings in the establishment of field studies as a potential higher tier option to refine risk assessment for non-target terrestrial plants | Rena Isemer-Kellner, Bayer AG Crop Science Division, Germany TU089 | Phytotoxicity Assessment of Methanol and Toluene Introduced into Paddy Field by Chemical Spill on Rice (Oryza sativa) | Minseok Park, Korea Univ., South Korea

TU090 | Phytotoxicity of endocrine disrupting chemical (Bisphenol A) on mungbean and rice | Dokyung Kim, Konkuk University, South Korea TU091 | Influence of nitrogen source on wheat plant rhizosphere pH and uptake of lamotrigine | Elizabeth Miller, University of Wisconsin - Madison, USA TU092 | De novo transcriptome sequencing and gene expression profiling of Phoenix dactylifera L. under cadmium stress | Zayneb Chaâbene, University of Sfax, Tunisia TU093 | Verifying the protection level for aquatic primary producers in the first tier of the risk assessment scheme for plant protection products | Magali Solé, German Federal Environment Agency UBA, Germany TU094 | Recovery of Lemna minor following an exposure to the sulfonylureas | Jurate Zaltauskaite, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania TU095 | A proposed ring-test protocol for the emergent macrophyte, Glyceria maxima, in a water-sediment system | Joanna Davies, Syngenta, UK TU096 | Suitability of several dicotyledonous macrophytes as additional test species for the risk assessment refinement | Michael Feibicke, German Environment Agency, Germany TU097 | Intraspecific variation in the sensitivity of two macrophyte species to copper contamination | Eva Roubeau, EcoLab CNRS, France TU098 | A proposal of novel ecotoxicity test method using automatic analysis of color change in the green alga Ulva pertusa Kjellman(Chlorophyta) | Hojun Lee, Incheon National University, South Korea TU099 | SETAC Plants Interest Group | Stefania Loutseti, DuPont De Nemour Hellas S.A., Greece

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Effects and ecological consequences of aquatic exposures to particulate materials from the nano- to macro- scale (P) | Edward Salinas, Yasir Sultan, Sebastian Beggel, Juergen Geist TU100 | Aquatic toxicity and bioaccumulation of sparingly soluble manufactured particulate substances | Jacques-Aurelien Sergent, SOLVAY, Belgium TU101 | Toxicity of nano metal oxides on two algae, Chlorella vulgaris and Scenedesmus demorphus | Fatemeh Shariati, Islamic Azad University, Islamic Republic of Iran TU102 | Effects of metal oxide nanoparticles on the aquatic plant Spirodela polyrhiza | Georgiana Amariei, University of Alcala, Spain TU103 | Combined effects of nanomaterials and pollutant mixtures - investigations on zebrafish embryos | Sarah Reithel, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany TU104 | Effects of ingestion of antimicrobial nanoparticles on gut health in rainbow trout. | Nanna Brande-Lavridsen, University of Tennessee, USA TU105 | Environmental behaviour, bioaccumulation and genotoxicity of iron oxide (maghemite) nanoparticle in Poecilia reticulata | Simone Sabóia-Morais, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Brazil

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Tuesday 9 May TU106 | Impacts of fine particle mine tailings on early life stages of cod | Helena Reinardy, The University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS), Norway TU107 | Toxicity of SPION in the aquatic environment | Gerardo Pulido-Reyes, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain TU108 | Toxicity of a novel anti-corrosion nanomaterial towards marine species | Roberto Martins, Department of Biology, University of Aveiro, Portugal TU109 | Hazard assessment of innovative anti-fouling nano-based solutions to marine species | Roberto Martins, Department of Biology, University of Aveiro, Portugal TU110 | Hazard assessment of an antifouling biocide encapsulated in silica mesoporous nanocapsules | Roberto Martins, Department of Biology, University of Aveiro, Portugal TU111 | TiO2 NPs as ”Trojan horse” in the bioaccumulation of personal care compounds in the clam Ruditapes philippinarum | Julian Blasco Moreno, CSIC Spanish National Research Council ICMAN, Spain

Engineered nanomaterial effects on soil and terrestrial communities (P) | Moira McKee, Juliane Filser, Maria Engelke, Patricks Voua Otomo TU112 | Oxidative potential of nanomaterials in the eluate of unsaturated quartz sand and natural soils? | Bryan Hellack, Institute of Energy and Envionmental Technology e.V. - IUTA, Germany TU114 | Toxicokinetics of zinc-oxide nanoparticles and zinc ions in the earthworm Eisenia andrei | Zuzanna Swiatek, Institute of Environmental Sciences, Jagiellonian Univeristy, Poland TU115 | Bioaccumulation patterns of copperbased pesticides in soil organisms: comparing nano- and non-nano agrochemicals | Maria Pavlaki, University of Aveiro, Portugal TU116 | A biodynamic understanding of dietborne and waterborne uptake of Ag from AgNO3 and Ag ENPs in a sedimentdwelling oligochaete | Stine Tangaa, Roskilde University, Denmark TU117 | Toxicity of ZnO nanoparticles in earthworm Eisenia andrei in two agricultural soils with different pH: lethal and reproduction, oxidative stress and coelomocytes assays | Sandra Gutiérrez, Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Tecnología Agraria y Alimentaria, Spain TU118 | Effects of freshly applied and aged silver nanoparticles on selected soil organisms | Andreas Duffner, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany TU119 | Effects of pristine and fragmented iron oxide nanomaterials on soil microorganisms - different testing approaches | Karsten Schlich, Fraunhofer IME - Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology, Germany TU120 | Multigenerational Exposure of the nematode, C. elegans, to Silver NanoparticlesWill it Change the Toxic Response? | Lisa Rossbach, Norwegian University of Life Sciences UMB, Norway TU121 | Investigating effects of silver nanoparticles on the soil community - An outdoor TME study | Monika Hammers-Wirtz, Research Institute gaiac, Germany

Poster Presentations Experimental approaches and field studies to investigate ecosystem integrity under multiple stress (P) | Mirco Bundschuh, Jochen Zubrod TU122 | Investigation of soil health assessment system and its application on field sites | Yooeun Chae, Konkuk University, South Korea TU123 | A semi-field study to evaluate the effects of sulfoxaflor on honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) in cucumber | Yan Cheng, Nanjing Institute of Environmental Science, MEP, China TU124 | Arthropods in off-crop meadows in Northern and Southern Europe: More comparisons of communities and responses to insecticides | Frank Bakker, Eurofins-Mitox, Netherlands TU125 | Shell alterations in Lottia subrugosa as putative biomarker for multi-impacted coastal areas | Italo Castro, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil TU126 | Effects of pulses of fungicides and herbicides on the food web structure of a benthic community and the fitness of the benthic omnivore Gammarus roeselii in a microcosm experiment | Bastian Bayer, German Environment Agency (Umweltbundesamt), Germany TU127 | Effects from pulses of fungicide and herbicide mixtures on the benthic community and emergence pattern of merolimnic insects in a microcosm experiment | Katharina Loersch, German E, Germany TU128 | Individual and combined effects of drought and the fungicide fluazinam on aquatic ecosystem structure and functioning. | Paul van den Brink, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands TU129 | Advanced sewage treatment as a kingly gift for aquatic ecosystems? | Rita Triebskorn, University of Tuebingen, Germany

Insights and challenges concerning the bioavailability of organic chemicals and communication implementation in risk assessment (P) | John Parsons, José-Julio Ortega-Calvo, Jörg Römbke, Joop Harmsen TU130 | Passive dosing of toluene increased the accessibility of PAHs and heterocyclic PAHs in industrially contaminated soil | Andreas Loibner, Boku, IFA-Tulln, Austria TU131 | Roles of DOM quality in bioavailability-oriented bioremediation strategies with PAHs | Rosa Posada, IRNAS CSIC, Spain TU132 | Characteristics of PAH tar oil contaminated soils - Black particles, resins and implications for treatment strategies | Matthias Kästner, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany TU133 | Enhanced vermiremediation of hydrocarbon contaminated lands with biosurfactants. | Solomon Popoola, Middlesex University, UK TU134 | The INSSICCA research project: INnovative Strategies to establish Safe livestock rearing systems In Chlordecone Contaminated Areas | Matthieu Delannoy, URAFPA-INRA, France TU135 | Comparison of the efficiency of in situ soil amendment and alimentary supplementation by activated carbons to limit

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Chlordecone transfer to piglets | Matthieu Delannoy, URAFPA-INRA, France TU136 | Toxicokinetic of chlordecone in small ruminants: linearity and half-life | Agnès Fournier, Université de Lorraine UL, France TU137 | Current-use pesticides: their fate in soil from the perspective of the bioavailability approach | Natália Neuwirthová, Masaryk University, Czech Republic TU138 | Fate (sorption/desorption and bioavailability) of DDE in sterile and nonsterile soils | Lucia Skulcova, Masaryk University, Czech Republic TU139 | Balancing toxicity mitigation and bioaccessibility in sludge biodegradation studies with cationic surfactants. | Niels Timmer, Utrecht University, Netherlands TU140 | Application of passive sampling measurements for determining compliance with EU WFD environmental quality standards | Yoonah Jeong, KIST Europe, Germany

Antibiotics and Antibiotic Resistance in the Environment: Ecological Fate and Effects, Resistance Development and Implications for Human Health (P) | Jason Snape, Joakim Larsson, William Gaze, Kristian Brandt TU141 | Hospital effluents, not an exclusive source of emerging contaminant spread in sub-saharian urban rivers | Amandine Laffite, University of Geneva, Switzerland TU142 | Fluconazole resistant Candida albicans from environmental water and associated clinically relevant efflux pump genes | Mzimkhulu Monapathi, North West University (Potchefstroom Campus), South Africa TU143 | Dissemination and spread of antibiotic resistance genes in benthic microbial biofilm communities in rivers: a mesocosm experiment | Philip Brown, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany TU144 | Determining the minimal selective concentrations of macrolides in complex microbial communities | Isobel Stanton, University of Exeter, UK TU145 | In vivo exposure of marine mussels to Sulfamethoxazole: uptake, bioconcentration and metabolization | Sara Rodriguez-Mozaz, Institute for Water Research (ICRA), Spain TU146 | Persistence of the antibiotic sulphametoxazole in river water microcosms | Paola Grenni, National Research Council of Italy (CNR), Italy TU147 | Antimicrobials modify decomposer detritivore interactions - the role of substances’ target microorganisms | Marco Konschak, University Koblenz-Landau, Germany TU148 | Assessment of priority antibiotics as a pharmaceutical pollutants for Ukraine | Larysa Ievsieieva, NGO Social and Environmental Safety, Ukraine

Applying Bioaccumulation Data to Better Inform Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of Chemicals (P) | Jung-Hwan Kwon, Mark Bonnell, Beate Escher TU149 | Application of trophic magnification factors (TMFs) under the Water Framework Directive: some practical advice on selecting and determining a TMF | Olivier Perceval, French National Agency for Water and Aquatic Environments, France

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Tuesday 9 May

Poster Presentations

TU150 | Bioaccumulation and Effects of Emerging Contaminants in the Aquatic Organism Brown Trout | Qiuguo Fu, Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland

TU165 | Assessment of an integrated system for the treatment of domestic wastewaters generated in rural areas: reduction of load parameters and toxicity | Carlos Lutterbeck, University of Santa Cruz do Sul, Brazil

TU151 | Derivation and Evaluation of Partitioning Properties for the Bioaccumulation Assessment of CMP Priority Ionogenic Substances | Steven Droge, Utrecht University, Netherlands

TU166 | Biochars and compost for in situ remediation of diffusely contaminated sites | Gabriel Sigmund, University of Vienna, Austria

TU152 | Guidance for using solid-phase microextraction in fish bioconcentration studies according to OECD TG 305 | Leonard Boehm, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany TU153 | Heavy metal contamination of vegetables planted in Lagos soils | Rose Alani, University of Lagos, Nigeria TU154 | In vitro to in vivo extrapolation of hepatic metabolism in fish: update on development of OECD Test Guidelines and Guidance Document | Michelle Embry, ILSI Health & Environmental Sciences Institute (HE, USA TU155 | PBDEs and legacy POPs in the Antarctic environment and biota | Rainer Lohmann, University of Rhode Island, USA TU156 | Prediction of in vivo biotransformation in fish and human for the refinement of bioaccumulation | Ester Papa, University of Insubria, Italy TU157 | Reporting of the relative affinity (M) constant of hemoglobin for carbon monoxide in animal world: an historic, systematic and meta-analysis review. | Nicolas Delvau, Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc, Belgium

Bioremediation and phytoremediation of contaminated environments (P) | Anna Barra Caracciolo, Michel Chalot, Elisabeth Gross, José-Julio Ortega-Calvo TU158 | Rhizoremediation of an historical contaminated site in Brescia (Italy): comparing the current emission of PCBs and PCDD/F to air from soil and other sources | Antonio Di Guardo, University of Insubria, Italy TU159 | Eco(toxico)logical effects of biochar in contaminated and non-contaminated soils | Sebastian Höss, Ecossa, Germany TU160 | Effects of DDE occurrence on the Solanum lycopersicum rhizosphere under different organic carbon sources | Anna Barra Caracciolo, National Research Council, Italy TU161 | Biochar addition improves edaphic conditions and favours root elongation and biomass production of Sarcocornia fruticosa growing in acidic mine wastes | Jose AlvarezRogel, Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería Agronómica. Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena, Spain TU162 | Integrated system combining microalgae and vertical flow constructed wetlands for the treatment of urban wastewaters | Carlos Lutterbeck, University of Santa Cruz do Sul, Brazil

TU167 | Degradation of estrogen hormones by fungi in wastewater | Elizabete de Lima, UFABC, Brazil TU168 | Set of screening assays as tool for evaluation of bacterial bioremediation potential for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) | Jelena Milic, Institute of Chemistry, Technology & Metallurgy, Serbia TU169 | Screening of mineral media components for enhancing carbazole degradation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa (RS1) using Plackett-Burman design | Prasenjit Ghosh, IIT Bombay, India

Challenges in Assessment and Management of Cosmetics and Personal Care Products (P) | Iain Davies, Ursula Klaschka, Erwan Saouter, Jacques Lharidon TU170 | Endocrine disrupting potentials of six benzophenones using combined in vitro assays | Jungeun Lee, Seoul National University, Graduate School of Public Health, South Korea TU171 | Reasons for Rapid Alert of Personal Care Products | Ursula Klaschka, University of Applied Sciences, Germany TU172 | IFRA Environemntal Standards And RIFM Program Advances update for 2017 | Aurelia Lapczynski, RIFM, USA TU173 | Multigenerational effects of organic UV-filters on the aquatic midge Chironomus riparius | João Pestana, CESAM & University of Aveiro, Portugal

Environmental Fate, Effects, and Risk Assessment of Veterinary Medicines (P) | Silke Hickmann, Caroline Moermond, Jason Weeks TU174 | Adsorption of Veterinary Medicines to Soil: Regulatory Limitations of the Koc | Amparo Haro Castuera, Spanish Medicines Agency, Spain TU175 | Developing Geographical Scenarios to Assess Environmental Risk of Veterinary Medicines in Europe | Claire McMillan, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK TU176 | Development and validation of a draft test protocol for studies on transformation of veterinary pharmaceuticals and biocides in manure | Thomas Junker, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany TU177 | Proposal for a ‘standard’ field study for the evaluation of the effects of parasiticides on dung and soil organisms | Jörg Römbke, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany

TU163 | Evaluation of the sulfonamide antibiotic persistence in the presence of the aquatic plant Lemna minor | Jasmin Rauseo, Italian National Research Council, Italy

TU178 | Higher-tier, modelling-based refinements for environmental impact assessments of veterinary medicinal products used as bath treatments in fish farms | Fabienne Ericher, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK

TU164 | Effect of rhamnolipid biosurfactant in biodegradation of slow-desorption PAHs in contaminated soils | Rosa Posada, IRNAS CSIC, Spain

TU179 | On the veterinary pharmaceuticals and crop protection substances: data availability, hazard identification and knowledge gaps | Stefan Kools, KWR

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Watercycle Research Institute, Netherlands TU180 | Risk based Environmental Assessment of groundwater ecosystems related to use of veterinary medicinal products | Antonio Finizio, University Milano Bicocca, Italy TU181 | SETAC Interest Group on Dung Organism Toxicity Testing | Jörg Römbke, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany

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Interpreting Biological Effects of Metals and Their Mixtures in the Aquatic and Terrestrial Environment (P) | Eric Van Genderen, Jose Paulo Sousa, Nicolas Bury, Jean Mathieu Renaud TU182 | Multiple Stable Isotope Analysis for the Assessment of Pollution Sources in a Mangrove Food Web | Marisa Fernandes, Univeridade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil TU183 | Biogeographic response of Emiliania huxleyi to Cu: the Humboldt Current System case | Pedro Echeveste, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Chile TU184 | Toxicity and bioconcentration of heavy metals on sea stars Asterias Rubens: Mechanistic approach and modeling | Vladimir Fedyunin, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Faculty of Biology, Russian Federation TU185 | Assessments of bioavailability and mixture toxicity of zinc, copper, and nickel in Japanese surface waters using modeling approaches | Takashi Nagai, Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, NARO, Japan TU186 | The investigation of the ecological vulnerability of aquatic organisms for cadmium | Jinhee Park, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea TU187 | Molecular Toxicity of Metal Mixture and Defense Mechanisms in Zebrafish (Danio rerio). | Sanah Majid, University of Antwerp, Dept. Biology, Belgium TU188 | Binary metals mixtures effects on spring barley Hordeum vulgare nutritional status | Jurate Zaltauskaite, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania TU189 | Cu and Cd affect distinctly the biochemistry of two ubiquitous tropical green algae | Pedro Echeveste, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Chile TU190 | Interaction between rare earths and phosphate in the aquatic environment and implications for toxicity testing with algae and aquatic hazard and risk assessment | Nele Deleebeeck, Arcadis, Belgium

New developments in ecotoxicology for the risk assessment of single and multiple stressors in insect pollinators: from the laboratory to the real world (P) | Agnes Rortais, David Spurgeon, Guy Smagghe TU191 | Are there differences in honey stomach extraction of nectar between two different pollinator species? | Silvio Knaebe, EAS Ecotox GmbH, Germany TU192 | Limited solubility of test items in regulatory honey bee (Apis mellifera) testing: potential use of solvents, solubilizers and viscosifiers with aqueous sugar solution | Nicole Hanewald, BASF SE, Germany TU193 | Estimating honeybee forager background mortality: a case study in Netherlands | Ivo Roessink, Alterra, Netherlands

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Tuesday 9 May TU194 | Assessment of forager mortality in bumblebees | Magnus Wang, WSC Scientific GmbH, Germany TU195 | Experiences made with bumble bee testing and the anthranilic diamide insecticide, cyantraniliprole | Axel Dinter, DuPont de Nemours GmbH, Germany TU196 | Bumble bee acute testing: Why not testing more than one endpoint? | Stefan Kimmel, Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd., Switzerland TU197 | Bumble Bee Semi-Field Studies Technical Advances In Data Collection Enable More Rigorous Assessments of Endpoints Including Queen Production Rate and Colony Life | Matt Allan, Atlantic Pollination Ltd, UK

Poster Presentations TU213 | Developing global characterisation factors for habitat fragmentation in LCIA | Pyrene Larrey-Lassalle, IRSTEA Montpellier, France

Assessment of PBT and vPvB chemicals: Requirements, challenges and policy implications (P) | Monika Nendza, Silke Gabbert, Stefan Hahn

TU214 | Framing the characterization of life cycle impacts of land use on ecosystem services: an integrated consequential approach | Benoit Othoniel, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology (LIST), Luxembourg

TU229 | A benchmark-level approach for evaluating PBT and vPvB chemicals in REACH authorisation and restriction procedures | Silke Gabbert, Wageningen University, Netherlands

TU215 | A new method to integrate noise impact from road mobility in life cycle assessment - preliminary results. | Rodolphe Meyer, LIST, Luxembourg TU216 | How Sustainable is Hydropower Really? | Stephan Pfister, ETHZ, Switzerland

TU198 | Methods to assess queen reproduction in semi-field trials with bumble bees | Silvio Knaebe, EAS Ecotox GmbH, Germany

TU217 | Advances in integrating the hydrological cycle in a multimedia assessment framework for LCIA of water consumption | Stephan Pfister, ETHZ, Switzerland

TU199 | First experiences and first steps towards a chronic bumble bee (Bombus terrestris) test design | Stefan Kimmel, Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd., Switzerland

TU218 | Water footprint assessment of wine production in Galicia (NW Spain) | Paula Quinteiro, University of Aveiro, Portugal

TU200 | On the way to a new guideline Results of three years of bumble bee semifield testing | Johannes Lueckmann, Rifcon GmbH, Germany TU201 | Experimental design for semi-field trials with solitary bees: Status quo after three years of development | Silvio Knaebe, EAS Ecotox GmbH, Germany TU202 | Fenoxycarb, a suitable reference item in semi-field testing on the solitary bee Osmia bicornis (Hymenoptera, Megachilidae)? | Johannes Lueckmann, Rifcon GmbH, Germany TU203 | Analysis of the effects of thiamethoxam in the brain of africanized honey bees through MALDI-imaging technique | Thaisa Roat, UNESP Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho, Brazil TU205 | Linking protection goals to trigger values using compound specific properties: Chronic risks to bees | Mark Miles, Bayer CropScience UK, UK

TU219 | A new generation of characterization factors for the life cycle impact assessment of land use on ecosystem services | Benoit Othoniel, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology LIST, Luxembourg TU220 | Harmonizing the assessment of resource use in LCA - First results of the task force on natural resources of the UNEP-SETAC global guidance on environmental life cycle impact assessment project | Markus Berger, Technische Universitaet Berlin, Germany TU221 | Making biotic resources count in the LCIA framework | Eleonora Crenna, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy TU222 | Soil carbon stock change after digestate application | Heinz Stichnothe, Thünen Institute, Germany TU223 | The development and application of a new characterisation method for enhanced exposure to Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORM) | Peter Joyce, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden

TU206 | Improving pesticide regulation by use of impact analyses: A case study for bees | Mark Miles, Bayer CropScience UK, UK

TU224 | How sustainable are renewable and green chemistry raw materials according to LCA ? | Patricia Martz, L´Oréal Research & Innovation, France

TU207 | Risk mitigation measures for the protection of flower visiting insects from effects of pesticides | Dirk Suessenbach, UBA, Germany

TU225 | Life cycle assessment on bio-based polymer 2,5 furandicarboxylic acid from sugar beet cultivation | Maria Nelly Garcia Gonzalez, Polytechnic of Milan, Italy

Advancements in life cycle impact assessment and footprint method development (P) | Tomas Rydberg

TU226 | Carbon footprint of municipal solid waste collection | Elena Semenzin, Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy

TU208 | Including freshwater in the Area of Protection Resources | Charlotte Pradinaud, IRSTEA Montpellier, France

TU227 | Estimating environmental impacts of mixed dishes: A case study on pizza | Katerina Stylianou, University of Michigan School of Public Health, USA

TU209 | LCA-based green water footprint | Paula Quinteiro, University of Aveiro, Portugal TU210 | The Challenges of Global Surface and Groundwater Scarcity | Stephan Pfister, ETHZ, Switzerland TU211 | ReCiPe2016: a harmonized life cycle impact assessment method at midpoint and endpoint level | Mark A.J. Huijbregts, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands

TU228 | Influence of vermicomposts of agroindustrial origin in the production of biomass and quality of essential oil of Ocimum basillicum L. | Maria Rezende, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil

TU230 | The Bioaccumulation Assessment Tool: An Organizational Framework for Bioaccumulation Assessment | Jon Arnot, ARC Arnot Research & Consulting, Canada TU231 | BCFmax as a new screening indicator for the bioaccumulation potential of organic chemicals - The case of linear alkylbenzenesulfonate (LAS) surfactants | Peter Von der Ohe, UBA - Federal Environment Agency, Germany TU232 | PBT assessment of substances - Proposal of a trigger value for bioaccumulation in terrestrial oligochaetes | Christian Schlechtriem, Fraunhofer IME, Germany TU233 | Impact of revision of the ECHA guidance on PBT assessment of chemicals | Bernhard Jene, BASF SE, Germany TU234 | Quality of Information Requirements in REACH Registration Dossiers of High Tonnage Chemicals and Implications on the Identification of PBT/vPvB-Substances | Angelika Oertel, Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, Germany TU235 | The UK Verification Laboratory Testing Programme of chemical hazard assessment for offshore chemicals - A summary of the first three years | Malgorzata Wilczynska, Cefas Lowestoft Laboratory, UK TU236 | Implementing the hydrocarbon block method for PBT assessment of petroleum substances | Miriam Leon Paumen, ExxonMobil Biomedical Sciences, Belgium TU237 | PBT Assessment of Pharmaceuticals Evaluation and Challenges | Astrid Wiemann, German Environment Agency UBA, Germany TU238 | Streamlining for relevant information on metabolites with regard to PBT criteria | Andrzej Szymoszek, DR. KNOELL CONSULT GmbH, Germany TU239 | Assessment of persistence and mobility of REACH-registered chemicals - The influence of input parameters, evaluation criteria and concepts | Urs Berger, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany TU240 | Screening for emerging persistent and mobile organic water contaminants by liquid chromatography and supercritical fluid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry | Stefanie Schulze, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany TU241 | Using REACH registration data for the identification of persistent, mobile and toxic (PMT) substances | Annegret Biegel-Engler, German Environment Agency - UBA, TU242 | An overall picture of Risk, Exposure and Hazards in a regulatory context | Xenia Trier, European Environment Agency, Denmark

TU212 | Assessing impacts of land use change using predictive, spatial modelling | Sarah Sim, Unilever, UK

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Tuesday 9 May

Poster Presentations

Fate and Effects of Metals: Regulatory and Risk Assessment Perspective (P) | Koen Oorts, Olivier Perceval TU243 | Health risks assessment from the exposure to trace metals in urban environments | Jose Martin Soriano Disla, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena, Spain TU244 | Health Risk Assessment of Heavy Metal Exposure to Street Dust in Mexico City | Violeta Mugica, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico TU245 | Consumers can lower their toxic arsenic intake by selecting appropriate kitchen practices | Karlien Cheyns, CODACERVA, Belgium

Germany

Assessment? | Jade Garcia, SCORE LCA, France

TU255 | The most dangerous chemicals in production is Serbia: Fight to know! | Jelena Milic, Institute of Chemistry, Technology & Metallurgy, Serbia

TU266 | Key challenges for developing a Planetary Boundaries based life-cycle impact assessment methodology | Morten Ryberg, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

TU256 | SciRAP: Reporting and evaluation methods for non-standard toxicity, ecotoxicity, and nanoecotoxicity studies | Marlene Agerstrand, Stockholm University, Sweden

TU267 | Position of existing footprints in the environmental sustainability landscape | Alexis Laurent, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

TU257 | Tox on Tap: Engaging the community in science | Sarah Crawford, Institute for Environmental Research, RWTH Aachen, Germany

TU268 | Positive LCA Factoring Planetary Boundaries | Delwyn Jones, Ecquate Pty Ltd, Australia

TU258 | Opening the black box: decision support systems and data mining for addressing uncertainty in ecological risk assessment | Agnieszka Hunka, Halmstad University, Sweden

TU246 | Incorporating Selenium in Mercury related Fish Advisories | Nilima Gandhi, University of Toronto, Canada TU247 | Mercury (Hg) concentrations in predatory bird livers and eggs as an indicator of changing environmental concentrations | Richard Shore, Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (NERC), UK TU248 | Hair as a matrix for assessing mercury concentrations in polar bears, Ursus maritimus: Variability along single hairs and location on the bear | Poul Bjerregaard, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark

TU259 | Institutional entrepreneurship for advancing toxicogenomics in ecological risk assessment: an interdisciplinary approach to bridging the gap between scientists and regulators | Steve Maguire, McGill University, Canada TU260 | SETAC Interest Group on Science and Risk Communication | Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

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TU249 | Trees and microbes at a Hg contaminated chlor alkali facility | Michel Chalot, Université de Bourgogne FrancheComté, France

TU261 | SETAC Interest Group on Indigenous Knowledge and Values | Ross Smith, Hydrobiology Pty Ltd, Australia

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TU250 | Mercury accumulation in freshwater surface and bottom biofilms | Séverine Le Faucheur, Institute F.-A. Forel, University of Geneva, Switzerland

Advancing science and application of planetary boundaries and related ecological limits concepts to enable absolute sustainability assessments (P) | Anders Bjørn, Mikolaj Owsianiak, Martin Scheringer, Thomas Backhaus

TU252 | Assessment of the toxic effects exerted by chromium in soils combining standardized OECD tests and cell-based approaches in earthworms (Eisenia fetida) | Manuel Soto, University of Basque Country, Spain

TU262 | Ecological Public Health and DPSEEA Tools towards the understanding of planetary health | Lora Fleming, University of Exeter Medical School, UK

Science communication and citizen science - strategies for successful stakeholder engagements (P) | Leonie Nuesser, Thomas-Benjamin Seiler, Jan Brant

TU263 | Towards understanding the environment’s carrying capacity of chemical pollutants | Anna Sobek, Stockholm University, Sweden

TU253 | The role of citizen science in monitoring small-scale pollution events | Jan Brant, Cefas, UK

TU264 | Searching for the right number: which are the most suitable reference values to be compared to the planetary boundaries? | Serenella Sala, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy

TU254 | Unbreak your science communication - public relations in environmental sciences are a matter of skilful marketing | ThomasBenjamin Seiler, RWTH Aachen University,

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TU265 | Could Planetary Boundaries be used as a basis for normalization in Life Cycle

TU269 | Absolute sustainability assessment of the pressures exerted on biodiversity by the food portfolio of a retailer | Anastasia Wolff, Mines Saint Etienne, France

Bridging between ecology, ecotoxicology and ecosystems services (P) | Gertie Arts, Elisabeth Gross, Sabine Apitz, Lorraine Maltby TU270 | Novel Cell Reproductive Patterns in the Green Alga Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata and their Variations under Exposure to the Typical Toxicants Potassium Dichromate and 3,5-DCP | Takahiro Yamagishi, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan TU271 | Searching for key parameters to increase the growth of Glyceria maxima under laboratory conditions | Guido Gonsior, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany TU272 | Aquatic plants: How to deal with different forms and consequences on endpoints? | Guido Gonsior, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany TU273 | What is the influence of natural dissolved organic matter on herbicide toxicity to two marine microalgae? | Sabine Stachowski, IFREMER, France TU274 | The effects of two different types of agricultural land use on aquatic macroinvertebrate and algal communities | Soha Alsolmy, King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia TU275 | Transcriptomic approach in microalga and macrophyte in-situ exposed in river impacted by chlor-alkali plant effluents | Claudia Cosio, Geneva University, Switzerland TU276 | SETAC Ecosystem Services Interest Group | Sabine Apitz, SEA Environmental Decisions Ltd, UK

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Notes

Scientific Institute of Public Service Sentinel of environmental quality in Wallonia for 25 years Risks and nuisances prevention RISKS AND NUISANCES PREVENTION

Environment monitoring Air ambient Modelling Atmospheric emissions Water quality Earth observation Remote sensing and geodata Mapping Ecotoxicology Contamined sediment Soil quality Waste and hazardous sites

ENVIRONMENT MONITORING

Research and development Equity based research

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

Reference laboratory for Wallonia Interface between public authorities and private providers

Chronic risks Geological risks Accidental risks Fire/explosion Equipment control Nanoparticles Ecological risk assessement

Walloon research programmes European programmes

REFERENCE LABORATORY

Interdisciplinarity that enabled to create synergies with numerous partners

Technical expertise to approvals granted by Wallonia Provide all those involved in the public and private sectors

Learn more about us : www.issep.be

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

69

Notes

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

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facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Wednesday 10 May Daily Schedule

Location

7:30 am–6:30 pm

Registration Open

Registration Area | Level -1

7:30 am–8:30 am

Poster Setup

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

8:30 am–10:15 am

Platform Session Morning Part 1

10:15 am–11:00 am

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

11:00 am–12:45 pm

Platform Session Morning Part 2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Lunch Break

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

SETAC Europe Annual General Assembly

Meeting Studio 211&212 | Level +2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

2:15 pm–4:00 pm

Platform Session Afternoon

4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

4:00 pm–4:30 pm

Celebration MAgPIE book

SETAC Square | Level -2

4:30 pm–5:15 pm

Keynote Speaker Dr. Michele Galatola

Copper Hall | Level 0

5:30 pm–6:30 pm

Poster Social

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

7:30 pm–12:00 am

Walking Dinner at the Belgian Comic Strip Centre

Zandstraat 20, 1000 Brussels

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

SETAC Europe Annual General Assembly Hear about the activities of SETAC Europe in 2016 and bring your vote to approve the financial report 2016, elect new members for the council and give directions for 2017. Not sure if you are a voting SETAC Europe member? Come and meet us at the Membership Desk.

Wednesday 10 May, 12:45 pm–2:15 pm | Meeting Studio 211&212

Walking Dinner at the Belgian Comic Strip Centre Enjoy a private visit to the museum! Dine with your favourite heroes while walking around and chatting with colleagues. Zandstraat / Rue des Sables 20, 1000 Brussels 1 km from the Meeting Centre - Bus Station Arenberg

Wednesday 10 May, 7:30 pm–12:00 am | 95€

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

73

Wednesday 10 May Satellite Meetings

Location

10:00 am–12:00 pm

SETAC Membership & PR Committee

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

SETAC Europe Annual General Assembly

Meeting Studio 211&212 | Level +2

12:45 pm–2:15 pm

Thermo Scientific Lunch Seminar - New strategies for streamlining environmental contaminants analysis

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

1:00 pm–4:00 pm

In Vitro Alternatives to Fish

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

2:15 pm–4:00 pm

SETAC Europe Council

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

3:00 pm–4:00 pm

SETAC Student Assembly

Meeting Studio 211&212 | Level +2

4:00 pm–5:00 pm

Local Organising Committee AM2018 Rome

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

4:00 pm–7:00 pm

UNEP-SETAC LCA Human Health Toxicity Characterisation

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

4:30 pm–5:30 pm

MeMoRisk Interest Group

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

5:00 pm–6:00 pm

Exposure Modelling Interest Group

Meeting Studio 311&312 | Level +3

5:00 pm–7:00 pm

OMICS Interest Group

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

5:30 pm–7:00 pm

SETAC Journals Editorial Reception (invitation only)

Meeting Studio 211&212 | Level +2

5:30 pm–7:30 pm

Scientific Committee Rome 2018

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

6:00 pm–7:00 pm

EDTRA Interest Group

Meeting Studio 314&316 | Level +3

6:00 pm–7:00 pm

Wildlife Toxicology Interest Group

Meeting Studio 313&315 | Level +3

6:00 pm–7:30 pm

Nanotechnology Interest Group

Hall 300 | Level +3

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Keynote Speaker 4:30 pm−5:15 pm | Copper Hall, Level 0

Product Environmental Footprint Dr. Michele Galatola Product Team Leader, European Commission - DG Environment, Belgium Dr. Michele Galatola has a master degree and doctorate in Environmental Sciences. Since 1996 he is professionally active in the area of environmental technologies, environmental management systems and, in particular, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). After having worked for several years for the Italian Research National Agency (ENEA), since 2005 Dr. Galatola is working for the European Commission. From 2005 till 2010

he has been Research officer being responsible for main research funding actions in the area of Life Cycle Assessment, eco-innovation and environmental technologies. Since July 2010, Dr. Galatola is working in the Environmental Department of the European Commission, being responsible of the EU Ecolabel from 2010 till 2013 and leading the development and then the pilot phase of the Environmental Footprint methods developed by the European Commission.

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Editors: Anne Alix, Colin Brown, Ettore Capri, Gerhardt Goerlitz, Burkhard Golla, Katja Knauer, Volker Laabs, Neil Mackay, Alexandru Marchis, Véronique Poulsen, Elena Alonso Prados, Wolfgang Reinert, Martin Streloke

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Programme Highlights Think-Outside-The-Box-Session: Clean circular economy: recycling while eliminating legacy toxics Wednesday 10 May, 2:15 pm - 4:00 pm, Silver Hall | Level 0 Niels Jonkers Ecochain Technologies, Netherlands

Heather Leslie IVM-VU University, Netherlands

Optimised reuse and recycling of materials are main requirements in order to reach a circular economy. The challenge is not only how to recycle as much material as possible, but also how to make sure these material streams are of sufficient quality to go through a new life cycle. The risk of contamination of material streams is seen by many as one of the key threats to a circular economy. Recycling substances we want to get rid of does not seem wise. Interest in this issue is "emerging" both in the media, the environmental science community, industry and policy. The substances involved are well known by the SETAC community: brominated flame retardants in recycled plastics, PAHs in recycled roofing material and mineral oil mixtures (MOSH/MOAH) in recycled paper. In the LCA community, modelling of recycling systems has been a research topic for decades as well. However, in the SETAC Europe meetings, no specific session has been devoted to the issue of toxic substances in recycling so far. Therefore, this session is organised to address toxic substances in recycling from a broad perspective, bringing together knowledge from analytical chemistry and toxicology, as well as Life Cycle Assessment and policy.

Specific topics that will be addressed are: • What is the problem? Which toxic substances are involved and to what extent are they found in recycled materials? Some examples are flame retardants in insulation materials and plastics from electronics, and endocrine disrupting plasticisers and metals (e.g. cadmium) in packaging plastics. • Challenges in analytical chemistry: the development of fast, selective and sensitive techniques for monitoring contaminants in waste streams, as well as smart sampling strategies. • How are policy makers dealing with the issue? Discussions on the Stockholm Convention are ongoing, and will have to lead to acceptable recycling protocols balancing material resource efficiency and consumer safety. • Life Cycle Assessment studies could play a prominent role in this discussion, by quantifying the environmental benefits of recycling, as well as the potential impact of toxic compounds being emitted. What developments are needed to allow LCA to also deal with the potential harm of toxics remaining in the materials, without direct release into the environment? • Which solutions are available for removing contaminants from recycling streams?

Programme 2:15 pm

Introduction

2:20 pm

Rubber granulates: proper recycling or toxic waste? | Sicco Brandsma, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands

2:40 pm

Ensuring chemical safety of food contact materials and articles in the circular economy | Jane Muncke, Food Packaging Forum Foundation, Switzerland

3:00 pm

Environmental assessment of presence of impurity materials and chemical pollutants in wood waste meant for recycling | Giorgia Faraca, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

3:20 pm

Cleaning the WEEE plastic loop in the Indian informal sector | Arthur Haarman, EMPA Technology & Society Lab, Switzerland

3:40 pm

A sustainable solution for HBCD containing PS foam via a dissolving technique with bromine recovery | Lein Tange, ICL-IP Europe, Netherlands

4:00 pm

End

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Programme Highlights Special Session: Do we have the right tools to identify emerging hazards and risks? Wednesday 10 May, 8:30 am - 12:45 pm, Silver Hall | Level 0 Georg Streck European Commission - DG GROW, Belgium

Yuri Bruinen de Bruin European Commission Joint Research Centre, Italy

European legislative frameworks, such as REACH, the Biocidal Product or the Plant Protection Products Regulation but also legislation on water, food and feed require risk assessments, while focusing to a varying degree on hazard vs. exposure. In general they focus on risks for which a relative good knowledge-base has been generated in the past. But do we have the right tools to identify and to react to emerging hazards and risks? This special session tackles this question in two parts, each consisting of four key presentations each followed by a panel discussion. Part I - The role of Exposure Science for identifying early warnings on new and emerging risks of chemicals (jointly organised by the International Society of Exposure Science (ISES) and SETAC: Many initiatives have been undertaken to design mechanisms to identify new and emerging risks of chemicals. Examples are the setting up of EFSA's Emerging Risk Unit, the project on Towards a Non-Toxic Environment during which a EU-wide Early Alert System has been proposed, the development of RIVM's NERCs system and the WHO Chemical Risk Assessment Network. In general, it was found that such systems all contain similar building blocks ranging from the picking up of signals related to observed effects, to evaluating and strengthening the signals, until prioritisation of risks and follow-up actions. During the prioritisation of signals, many cases exist where situations cannot be given an appropriate score due to the lack of information.

Programme

Jos Bessems European Commission Joint Research Centre, Italy

Joost Bakker RIVM, Netherlands

This part of the session aims to discuss options on how to: 1. Come to an effective and efficient procedure for the evaluation of signals and identifying NERCs; 2. Deal with data gaps and uncertainty in the NERC assessment; 3. Modify existing exposure and risk assessment procedures by incorporating additional and more specific end-points. Part II - Identifying emerging hazards - improving hazard assessments: Knowledge in (eco-)toxicology is evolving quickly. Regulatory authorities and policy makers are striving to incorporate new knowledge into the regulatory assessment, while balancing needs and possibilities. This is a challenging process, which necessitates the input from the scientific community. This part of the session aims to discuss the following questions: 1. Are there gaps in the assessment of chemical substances? Are we lacking suitable methods for specific toxicological endpoints? Which new approaches should be prioritised for further research? 2. Testing of chemicals can be cost-intensive. Are there methods which help to reduce costs while ensuring a high protection level? 3. What is the right strategy to identify and tackle emerging hazards/risks? How can the knowledge exchange between the research community and regulators be strengthened?

(10:15 am–11:00 am Coffee Break, 12:45 pm End of Session)

08:30 am Introduction 08:35 am WHO Chemical Risk Assessment Network - new and emerging risks | Richard Brown, World Health Organization, Switzerland 08:50 am A study preparing for a strategy for a non-toxic environment, according to the 7th Environmental Action Programme of the European Parliament and of the Council | Urban Boije af Gennäs, European Commission - DG Environment, Belgium 09:05 am Identification, prioritisation and evaluation of potential New Emerging Risk of Chemicals (NERCs) for the environment | Joost Bakker, RIVM, Netherlands 09:20 am Establishment of the European Exposure Strategy 2025: Common interests of SETAC Europe and ISES Europe for picking up, sharing and communicating signals | Yuri Bruinen de Bruin, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy 09:35 am Panel Discussion 11:00 am Introduction 11:05 am New approaches in regulatory science | Derek Knight, ECHA, Finland 11:20 am

Industry perspective on new developments and gaps in hazard and risk assessment | Stuart Marshall, Independent consultant, UK

11:35 am

Hazard assessment methods in ecotoxicology: present and future | José Tarazona, EFSA, Italy

11:50 am

Mechanism-based toxicity testing and risk assessment: the EU-ToxRisk strategy | Bob van de Water, Leiden University, Netherlands

12:05 pm Panel Discussion facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

77

Wednesday 10 May 8:30 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1

8:35 am

8:55 am

21st century Ecotoxicology and Human toxicology: Applications and perspectives for the use of OMICs data (I)… Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

315 | Zebrafish transcriptomes after chemical exposure - a quest for common grounds | Andreas Schuettler, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany

316 | Transcriptomic approach in microalga and macrophyte in-situ exposed in river impacted by chlor-alkali plant effluents | Claudia Cosio, Geneva University, Switzerland

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Behavioural ecotoxicology: Unravelling behavioural responses to aid environmental and regulatory toxicology (I)… Introduction

320 | Dietary exposure to selenomethionine impairs learning ability in zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Som Niyogi, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

321 | ENVIRONMENTAL LEVELS OF ANXIOLYTIC PHARMACEUTICALS ALTER MIGRATION OF ATLANTIC SALMON IN BOTH LAB AND FIELD | Tomas Brodin, Umea University, Sweden

Predictive models in ecotoxicology: bridging the gap between scientific progress and regulatory applicability (I)… Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

325 | Availability and organization of QSAR-s influences the higher understandability and acceptability of descriptive and predictive models | Uko Maran, Institute of Chemistry, University of Tartu, Estonia

326 | Data integration to increase quality and reliability of QSAR predictions | Davide Ballabio, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy

Highly Hydrophobic Chemicals: Reliable Investigations on Environmental Fate and Effects |

The Arc Level +3

Introduction

330 | Analysis and ecotoxicological investigations of poorly soluble cosmetic compounds | Felix Stibany, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

331 | Should regulatory short-term aquatic toxicity tests be waived for highly hydrophobic chemicals with slow bioconcentration kinetics? | Jung-Hwan Kwon, Korea University, South Korea

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Advances in Soil Ecotoxicological Risk Assessment of Chemical Stressors (I) | Juliska Princz,… Introduction

335 | Springtails: the canaries for soil pollution | Marlea Wagelmans, Bioclear earth, Netherlands

336 | Specifying the applicability boundaries of the Equilibrium Partitioning Method (EPM) within a regulatory context: A way to go forward | Dragan Jevtic, European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), Finland

Challenges and best practice in monitoring of micro- and nano-plastic abundance and environmental… Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

340 | Current methodologies for the isolation of microplastic pollution cannot account for all domestic microplastics | Thomas Stanton, University of Nottingham, UK

341 | The use of reference materials in microplastic research: general aspects | Anne-Kathrin Barthel, UBA Umweltbundesamt, Germany

Toxicology and Ecotoxicology, human and ecological risk assessment of engineered nanomaterials: needs, goals and… Copper Hall Level 0

Introduction

345 | Grouping of nanomaterials regarding their behaviour and fate in the environment - hypotheses and experimental results | Carmen Nickel, Institute of Energy and Envionmental Technology e.V. - IUTA, Germany

346 | Non-additive mixture effect decrease wastewater toxicity due to micropollutants adsorption on inorganic nanoparticles | Idoia Martín-de-Lucía, University of Alcala, Spain

The Role of Metals in Circular Economies: A Life Cycle Perspective | Eric Van Genderen, Chris Bayliss, Ladji Tikana Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

350 | Development of a new industry lead Life Cycle Inventory for cobalt and perspectives on the metal LCA harmonisation effort | Jonna Fry, ERM, UK

351 | Life Cycle Assessment of Primary Aluminium Production | Pernelle Nunez, International Aluminium Institute, UK

Risk assessment and management of waterbodies (ground, fresh, marine and drinking waters) | Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Introduction

355 | Active biomonitoring using the freshwater crustacean Gammarus fossarum: an operational tool to monitor chemical contamination and toxicity in continental surface waterbodies | Guillaume Jubeaux, BIOMAE, France

356 | Zebrafish larvae behaviour as a biological early warning system for aquatic systems | Leonie Nuesser, RWTH Aachen University, Institute for Environmental Research, Germany

Do we have the right tools to identify emerging hazards and risks? (I) | Yuri Bruinen de Bruin,…

Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

78

360 | WHO Chemical Risk Assessment Network new and emerging risks | Richard Brown, World Health Organization, Switzerland

361 | A study preparing for a strategy for a non-toxic environment, according to the 7th Environmental Action Programme of the European Parliament and of the Council | Urban Boije af Gennäs , European Commission - DG Environment, Belgium

Special Session

Wednesday 10 May 9:15 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1 9:35 am

9:55 am

Hall 300 Level +3

317 | Elucidating the toxicity of the flame retardant tris (2-butoxyethyl) phosphate (TBEP) by transcriptomics | Boris Krivoshiev, Systemic Physiological and Ecotoxicological Research group University of Antwerp, Belgium

318 | Daphnia magna transcriptomic profiling of chemically induced starvation responses highlights new molecular fingerprints with regulatory potential. | Bruno Campos, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

319 | Prediction of genes involved in silver toxicity in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii based on gene co-expression networks | Anze Zupanic, Eawag Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

| Alex Ford, Bryan Brooks, Minna Saaristo, Kathryn Arnold 322 | Developing high-throughput, multi-endpoint, behavioural assays for model crustaceans | Shanelle Kohler, University of Portsmouth, UK

323 | Male starlings fail to take a fancy to fluoxetine females | Sophia Whitlock, Environment Department, University of York, UK

324 | Arbitrary experimental methodologies are influencing study outcomes in behavioural toxicity testing | Steven Melvin, Griffith University, Australia

COFFEE BREAK

| Bruno Campos, Jinhee Choi, Xiaowei Zhang, Geoff Hodges

| Andreas Focks, Alpar Barsi, Marco Vighi, Francesca Grisoni Hall 400 Level +4

327 | CATALOGIC 301C model validation and improvement | Sabcho Dimitrov, University of Zlatarov, Bulgaria

328 | Towards more interpretable QSARs: Lessons Learned from Aquatic Bioaccumulation Models | Francesca Grisoni, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy

329 | Can in silico approaches increase confidence in environmental risk assessment methodology? Some case studies | Paul Thomas, CEHTRA SAS, France

| Felix Stibany, Philipp Mayer, Stefan Trapp, Kilian Smith 333 | Indirect measurements of organic carbon/water partitioning of volatile methyl siloxanes | Matthew MacLeod, ITM - Stockholm University, Sweden

334 | Simulation of bioremediation options by microbial degradation of aged (PAH) contaminations in soils | Matthias Kästner, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany

COFFEE BREAK

The Arc Level +3

332 | PCB and PCDD partition constants in mixed dissolved phases and the impact of the individual mixture constituents | Veronika Schacht, The University of Queensland, Australia

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

…Patrick Kabouw, Silvia Pieper, Mark Maboeta 337 | Considering the what, why, how and where in Soil In-Field Protection Goal derivation | Apostolos Koutsaftis, ADAMA Deutschland GmbH, Germany

338 | Scientific Opinion addressing the state of the science on risk assessment of plant protection products for in-soil organisms: specific protection goals and research needs | Maria Arena, EFSA European Food Safety Authority, Italy

339 | Framework of tiered risk assessment approach of pesticides for soil organisms in China | Jinlin Jiang, Nanjing Insitute of Environmental Sciences, MEP, China

…distribution (I) | Annemette Palmqvist, Catherine Mouneyrac, Kristian Syberg Gold Hall Level 0

342 | The influence of different sampling and extraction procedures when quantifying microplastics in beach sand | Thijs Bosker, CML Leiden University, Netherlands

343 | Analysis of microplastics by LC-QExactive Orbitrap in coastal areas of Catalonia | Gabriella Francesca Schirinzi, Institute of Environmental Assessment and Water Research IDAEACSIC, Spain

344 | Separation and identification of tyre debris in environmental samples | Philipp Kloeckner, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany

…tools/methods for safer-by-design strategies | Gerardo Pulido-Reyes, Simona Scalbi, Sonia Manzo, Georgiana Amariei 348 | Risk analysis and technology assessment in support of technology development; putting RRI in practice in a case study for nanotechnology | Annemarie van Wezel, KWR Watercycle Research Institute, Netherlands

349 | Poster spotlight: WE185, WE186, WE187, WE190

The Role of Metals in Circular Economies: A Life Cycle Perspective | Eric Van Genderen, Chris Bayliss, Ladji Tikana Hall 100 Level +1

352 | Cradle-to-gate inventories of primary metals: update and expansion of the ecoinvent database | David Turner, EMPA, Switzerland

353 | Comparison and improvement of life-cycle-modelling methods for recycling | Hongtao Wang, Sichuan University, China

354 | The versatility of attributional LCA - a case study on recycling of Rare Earth Elements | Dieuwertje Schrijvers, University of Bordeaux, France

COFFEE BREAK

Copper Hall Level 0

347 | Decision support system for nanotechnology risk assessment and management | Elena Semenzin, Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy

357 | Vulnerability of surface and groundwater drinking water sources in Netherlands to pesticides | Rosa Sjerps, KWR Watercycle Research Institute, Netherlands

358 | Metal accumulation and health risks for communities consuming Labeo rosae from the Olifants River, South Africa | Jeffrey Lebepe, University of Limpopo, South Africa

359 | Contaminant fate and effects in marine environment: distance of the French seas from Good Environmental Status (MSFD - D8 - 2nd cycle) | Aourell Mauffret, BRGM, France

Silver Hall Level 0

…Georg Streck, Jos Bessems, Joost Bakker 362 | Identification, prioritization and evaluation of potential New Emerging Risk of Chemicals (NERCs) for the environment | Joost Bakker, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Netherlands

Special Session

363 | Establishment of the European Exposure Strategy 2025: Common interests of SETAC Europe and ISES Europe for picking up, sharing and communicating signals | Yuri Bruinen de Bruin, European Commission - DG Joint Research Centre, Italy

364 | Panel discussion

COFFEE BREAK

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

| Mario Carere, Henner Hollert, Armelle Hebert

79

Wednesday 10 May 11:00 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2

11:05 am

11:25 am

21st century Ecotoxicology and Human toxicology: Applications and perspectives for the use of OMICs data (II) |

Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

365 | Peptidomics: a new omics-sibling in ecotoxicology? | Steven Husson, University of Antwerp, Belgium

366 | When proteogenomic helps ecotoxicology | Christine Almunia, CEA, France

Copper Hall Level 0

Environmental endocrine compound concentrations and human and ecosystem health effects | Joan Grimalt Introduction

370 | Assessment of chronic effects of chemicals and detection of potential endocrine-disruptors for a hermaphrodite mollusk: possible endpoints in a full life-cycle bioassay. | Annette de Vaufleury, University of Franche-Comte, France

371 | Steroid and thyroid gene transcription ontogeny during the first 32 days of zebrafish development improves our understanding of endocrine disruption | Jelena Periz Stanacev, University of Antwerp, Belgium

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Behavioural ecotoxicology: Unravelling behavioural responses to aid environmental and regulatory toxicology (II) | Introduction

375 | Larval VTG: reliable biomarker or deceptive molecular cue? | Keith Tierney, University of Alberta, Canada

376 |High throughput sequencing and behavioural endpoints highlight effects of antidepressants on crustaceans at environmentally relevant concentrations | Alex Ford, University of Portsmouth, UK

Predictive models in ecotoxicology: bridging the gap between scientific progress and regulatory applicability (II) |

Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

380 | Use of TK/TD models in pesticide risk assessment | Veronique Poulsen, ANSES, France

381 | Applying criteria for model evaluation to TKTD models | Tjalling Jager, DEBtox Research, Netherlands

Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations (I) |

The Arc Level +3

Introduction

385 | Using polyethylene passive samplers of varying thickness to measure dissolved organophosphate ester flame retardants in the North Atlantic Ocean | Carrie McDonough, University of Rhode Island, USA

386 | Toward the prediction of sampling rates: Sorption and permeation properties of membrane filters used for aquatic passive samplers | Satoshi Endo, Osaka City University, Japan

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Advances in Soil Ecotoxicological Risk Assessment of Chemical Stressors (II) | Juliska Princz,… Introduction

390 | Prioritisation and screening risk assessment of contaminants in sewage sludge for application to land | Edward Stutt, WCA Environment Limited, UK

391 | Ecotoxicity of Cu Substances in Soil Assessment of Moiety-based Approach | Rick Scroggins, Environment Canada, Canada

Gold Hall Level 0

Challenges and best practice in monitoring of micro- and nano-plastic abundance and environmental… Introduction

395 | Current status of plastics in European freshwater environments - results of a European survey | Beate Baensch-Baltruschat, German Federal Institute of Hydrology, Germany

396 | Monitoring of microplastics in blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) from the French Atlantic coast (Pays de la Loire, France) | Fabienne Lagarde, Institute of molecules and materials of Le Mans, France

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Integrated approaches for linking chemical contamination with biological effects | Introduction

400 | Chemical and toxicological profiling of large rivers using mobile passive sampling and comparison to large volume active sampling | Klara Hilscherova, Masaryk University, Faculty of Science, RECETOX, Czech Republic

401 | Effect-directed analysis (EDA) of Danube River water samples receiving untreated municipal wastewater from Novi Sad, Serbia. | Muhammad Hashmi, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental ResearchUFZ, Germany

LCA for supporting policy and decision making | Serenella Sala, Marco Cinelli, Paolo Masoni Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

405 | Applying LCA in decision making- the need and the future perspective | Yan Dong, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

406 | Conceptual framework for managing uncertainty in early design decision for sustainable aerospace | Xiaobo CHEN, University of Surrey, UK

Silver Hall Level 0

Do we have the right tools to identify emerging hazards and risks? (II) | Yuri Bruinen de Bruin,…

80

Introduction

410 | New approaches in regulatory science | Derek Knight, ECHA - European Chemicals Agency, Finland

411 | Industry perspective on new developments and gaps in hazard and risk assessment | Stuart Marshall, Independent Consultant, UK

Special Session

Wednesday 10 May 11:45 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2 12:05 pm

12:25 pm

367 | Proteome modulation as an early marker of gamma irradiation effect on Caenorhabditis elegans egg hatchability? | Cecile Dubois, IRSN LRE (LECO), France

368 | Developmental neurotoxic effects of pesticides, MeHg, and PFHxS combining behavior and cognitive studies in mice with metabolomic pathway analysis | Pim Leonards, VU University, Institute for Environmental Studies, Netherlands

369 | Multi-Omic approach to metabolic disruption: transcriptomic and metabolomic integration to analyze the effects of bisphenol A in zebrafish embryos | Benjamin Pina, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

Copper Hall Level 0

Environmental endocrine compound concentrations and human and ecosystem health effects | Joan Grimalt 372 | Combined exposure to EDCs resulting in neurodevelopmental disorders | Nafsika Papaioannou, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

373 | Using cats as model for indoor exposure of thyroidogenic compounds | Jana Weiss, Stockholm University, ACES, Sweden

374 | Exposure to persistent organic pollutants and risk of Metabolic Syndrome in the population of Catalonia | Mercè Garí, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

LUNCH BREAK

Hall 300 Level +3

| Bruno Campos, Jinhee Choi, Xiaowei Zhang, Geoff Hodges

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

| Alex Ford, Bryan Brooks, Minna Saaristo, Kathryn Arnold 377 | Persistent Organic Pollutants chronic dietary exposure disrupt behavioral and molecular responses over several generations in unexposed zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Sébastien Alfonso, IFREMER, France

378 | Pharmaceutical alters mate choice and gene expression of a fish | Minna Saaristo, Monash University, Australia

379 | Avoidance behavior: the weight in recovery and resilience of ecosystems under salt stress | Cátia Venâncio, Department of Biology, Portugal

387 | Passive samling as a screening tool for determining the influence of hospitals on emissions of pharmaceuticals | Erwin Roex, DELTARES, Netherlands

383 | Linking the Adverse Outcome Pathway to Dynamic Energy Budgets: A conceptual model and two case studies | Roger Nisbet, UCSB, USA

384 | An individual-based model for the three-spined stickleback to assess population-level effects of EDC-induced disruption of breeding behaviours | Kate Mintram, University of Exeter, UK

388 | Environmental forensics in seawater by coupling a divinylbenzene passive sampling device and high resolution mass spectrometry for the screening of organic micropollutants | Steve Huysman, Ghent University, Belgium

389 | In situ equilibrium passive sampling of hydrophobic organic hydrocarbons in coastal marine sediments Comparing in situ versus ex situ sampling | Mathias Reininghaus, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

| Kristof Demeestere, Lynn Vanhaecke

LUNCH BREAK

Hall 400 Level +4

382 | Using GUTS modelling in chronic effect assessment of a plant protection product on Americamysis bahia | Faten Gabsi, Rifcon GmbH, Germany

The Arc Level +3

| Andreas Focks, Alpar Barsi, Marco Vighi, Francesca Grisoni

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

…Patrick Kabouw, Silvia Pieper, Mark Maboeta 392 | Do microbes matter: metal mixture inhibition of microbial processes influence ecosystem services. | Steven Siciliano, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

393 | Juvenile soil invertebrate avoidance to soil contaminants | Robyn Akre, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

394 | Effect of chemical and biofumigants on ecotoxicology of earthworms (Eisenia andrei) and soil microbial communities | Tanya Fouche, UNISA, South Africa

397 | Release of Synthetic Microplastic Plastic Fibres From Domestic Washing Machines | Imogen Napper, Plymouth University, UK

398 | Microplastic in water, sediment, invertebrates and fish living in urban stormwater wet detention ponds | Jes Vollertsen, Aalborg University, Denmark

399 | Poster spotlight: WE131, WE132, WE139

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

| Werner Brack, Klara Hilscherova, Henner Hollert 402 | A novel fractionation approach using four columns in parallel for effectdirected analysis of antiandrogenic compounds in a river water extract | Matthias Muschket, UFZ- Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany

403 | Mutagenicity in Surface Waters: Is it complex mixtures or individual chemicals? | Melis Muz, UFZ - Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Germany

404 | Nationwide screening of herbicide risk to algae | Dorian Bas, University of Amsterdam/IBED Institute, Netherlands

LUNCH BREAK

Gold Hall Level 0

…distribution (II) | Annemette Palmqvist, Catherine Mouneyrac, Kristian Syberg

407 | Plastics in the circular economy: LCA based indicators to guide the waste management policy in Flanders | Steven De Meester, Ghent University, Belgium

408 | Unilever's framework for assessing impacts of bio-based raw materials. | Sarah Sim, Unilever RD Colworth, UK

409 | Downcycling vs Recycling of Construction & Demolition Waste: Combined LCA & LCC Analysis to Support Sustainable Policy Decision Process | Andrea Di Maria, KU Leuven, Belgium

413 | Mechanism-based toxicity testing and risk assessment: the EU-ToxRisk strategy | Bob van de Water , Leiden University, Netherlands

414 | Panel discussion

Silver Hall Level 0

…Georg Streck, Jos Bessems, Joost Bakker 412 | Hazard assessment methods in ecotoxicology: present and future | José Tarazona, EFSA, Italy

Special Session

LUNCH BREAK

Hall 100 Level +1

LCA for supporting policy and decision making | Serenella Sala, Marco Cinelli, Paolo Masoni

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Wednesday 10 May 2:15 pm

Afternoon Platform Presentations Part 2

2:20 pm

2:40 pm

21st century Ecotoxicology and Human toxicology: Applications and perspectives for the use of OMICs data (III) | Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

415 | Multiscale connectivity - a high dimension biology approach to unravel the exposome | Denis Sarigiannis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

416 | Stress response pathways in neurobehavioural and reproductive toxicity of graphene oxide in C. elegans : Integrative multi-OMICS approach | Jinhee Choi, University of Seoul, South Korea

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Big data analysis of monitoring data: what questions can be addressed? | Martina Vijver, Gert Everaert,… Introduction

420 | The Edaphobase Nationwide Field Monitoring - A survey of Lumbricidae and Enchytraeidae assemblages in soil of different habitat types in Germany | Stephan Jänsch, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany

421 | Assessing the condition of forests exposed to climate change and nitrogen deposition by use of big monitoring data | Winfried Schröder, University of Vechta, Germany

Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations (II) | The Arc Level +3

Introduction

425 | Impact of cleaning procedures and type of materials on the measure of 20 bisphenols in surface water samples | Fabrizio Botta, INERIS, France

426 | Enantiomeric fractionation for quantitative assessment of anaerobic biodegradation rates: The case of climbazole | Serge CHIRON, IRD, France

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Environmental consequences of oil and gas extraction and transport | Graham Whale, Richard Wenning Introduction

430 | Differences in exposure media profile and toxicity following preparation of wateraccommodated fractions along an energy continuum | Bill Stubblefield, Oregon State University, USA

431 | Development of a Generic Exposure Scenario for substances used in high volume hydraulic fracturing fluid products under the REACH regulation | Nathalie Vallotton, Dow Europe GmbH, Switzerland

Environmental risk assessment in time and space - To boldly go where no man has gone before | Thomas Preuss,… Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

435 | Molecular to Landscape, the integration of adverse outcome pathways into a regional scale pesticide driven risk assessment for Chinook salmon in Puget Sound watersheds. | Wayne Landis, Western Washington University, USA

436 | Integration of aquatic exposure and effect models at landscape scales: an example case study and some conceptual considerations | Andreas Focks, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

Microplastics, nanoplastics and co-contaminants: Fate, effects and risk assessment for biota, the environment … Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

440 | Associations of nanoplastic with freshwater algae traced using a novel fluorescence assay | Corin Liddle, Heriot Watt University, UK

441 | The presence of microplastics affects toxicity of the pesticides deltamethrin and dimethoate to Daphnia magna differently, based on differing hydrophobicities | Alice Horton, Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, UK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Risk assessment and remediation of mine sites and processing sites | Amiel Boullemant, Ronan Courtney Introduction

445 | Impact of landfill on the quality of mountain river water | Carmen Moinecourt, University of Geneva, Switzerland

446 | Effect of a major flood event on catchment metal flux in a catchment subject to mine water remediation | William Mayes, University of Hull, UK

The challenges of Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment (LCSA) of energy technologies | Daniel Garrain, …

Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

450 | Sustainability impacts of energy system scenarios in Spain | Yolanda Lechon, CIEMAT, Spain

451 | Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment for photovoltaic panels using soca | Franziska Eisfeldt, GreenDelta GmbH, Germany

Copper Hall Level 0

Regulatory Best Practices for Assessment of Endocrine Active Substances | Ellen Mihaich, Gerd Maack, … Introduction

455 | Comparing existing regulatory frameworks for endocrine disrupting chemicals across the globe | Amelie Ritscher, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

456 | Considerations for Developing, Validating and Implementing Performance Based Test Guidelines | Steven Levine, Monsanto Company, USA

Silver Hall Level 0

Clean circular economy: recycling while eliminating legacy toxics | Niels Jonkers, Heather Leslie

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Introduction

460 | Rubber granulates: proper recycling or toxic waste? | Sicco Brandsma, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands

461 | Ensuring chemical safety of food contact materials and articles in the circular economy | Jane Muncke, Food Packaging Forum Foundation, Switzerland

Special Session

Wednesday 10 May 3:00 pm

Afternoon Platform Presentations Part 2 3:20 pm

3:40 pm

Hall 300 Level +3

417 | Molecular targets of narcosis and acetylcholine esterase inhibitors: Applications for chemical screening and identification using omics readouts | Francesco Falciani, University of Liverpool, UK

418 | The integrated use of omics technologies to understand mechanisms of Daphnia's stress response to cyanobacteria. | Jana Asselman, Ghent University, Belgium

419 | A multi-omics approach for identifying key events using the Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) framework | Nadine Taylor, University of Birmingham, UK

423 | Compilation and analysis of monitoring data from eutrophied lakes across Europe: experiences from EU projects | Jannicke Moe, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Norway

424 | State-of-art and SWOT-analysis of existing fresh water monitoring approaches | Martina Vijver, CML Leiden University, Netherlands

428 | Technical and economic assessment of real-time control strategies for micropollutant removal by ozonation at pilot-scale | Michael Chys, Ghent University Campus Kotrijk, Belgium

429 | Poster spotlight: WE091, WE092, WE093, WE094

COFFEE BREAK

| Bruno Campos, Jinhee Choi, Xiaowei Zhang, Geoff Hodges

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

…Jörg Roembke 422 | Disentangling the effects of low pH and metal mixture toxicity on macroinvertebrate diversity | Riccardo Fornaroli, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy |Kristof Demeestere, Lynn Vanhaecke The Arc Level +3

427 | Chlorination and chloramination of phenazone-type drugs and metabolites | Rosario Rodil, University of Santiaga de Compostela, Spain

432 | Oil Sands: integrate natural processes in hazard assessment | Diogo Filipe Nunes Cardoso, CESAM, University of Aveiro, Portugal

433 | Fate and effects of oil in ice | Mathijs Smit, Shell Global Solutions Int., Netherlands

434 | Poster spotlight: WE144, WE145, WE146, WE147

438 | Ecological scenarios for prospective risk assessment of aquatic ecosystems | Sanne Berg, Wageningen University Research, Netherlands

439 | Influence of local habitat connectivity and isolation on plant community resilience | Jette Reeg, University of Potsdam, Germany

COFFEE BREAK

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Environmental consequences of oil and gas extraction and transport | Graham Whale, Richard Wenning

…Maria Arena, Ivo Roessink, Theo Brock Hall 400 Level +4

437 | Individual-based modelling as a population-level risk-assessment tool in the identification of emerging pollutants in European catchments | Hans Baveco, Wageningen Environmental Research, Netherlands

…and human health (I) | Matthew Cole, Ana I Catarino, Maria Cristina Fossi, Albert Koelmans Gold Hall Level 0

442 | Chronic effects of polystyrene microplastics on freshwater benthic macroinvertebrates | Paula Elisa Redondo Hasselerharm, Wageningen University, Netherlands

443 | Pollutants sorbed on environmental sample of microplastics are truly toxic to fish cell lines and Japanese medaka embryos and larvae | Pauline Pannetier, University of Bordeaux, France

444 | Nano-sized polystyrene impact on individual and embryo of fish and trophic transfer in freshwater food chain | Yooeun Chae, Konkuk University, South Korea

447 | Risk assessment and remediation of contamination in legacy mine sites: experiences from Cartagena-La Union (SE Spain) | Jose Martin Soriano Disla, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena, Spain

448 | When it has to be done again... challenges in the management of a decade old remediated" legacy site" | Ariane Ancel, Ramboll Environ, France

449 | Evaluating the success of different rehabilitation strategies of bauxite residues: a risk assessment of trace elements along the food chain | Elisa Di Carlo, University of Limerick, Ireland

Hall 100 Level +1

…Alessandra Zamagni, Vicente Franco Garcia 452 | Life Cycle Sustainability Analysis of an innovative configuration of Concentrated Solar Power technology | Blanca Corona, Technical University of Madrid, Spain

453 | Simplifying the integration of energy system models and LCA | Miguel F. Astudillo, Sherbrooke University, Canada

454 | Combining LCA and a prospective techno-economic energy model to assess the sustainability of emerging energy pathways: the case of integrated forest biorefineries | Annie Levasseur, CIRAIG - École Polytechnique de Montréal, Canada

458 | Medaka (Oryzias latipes) MultiGeneration Test with Triclosan; An Additional Piece of the Weight of Evidence Assessment Puzzle | Ellen Mihaich, ER2, USA

459 | Propiconazole: a case study for the practical implementation of the EU Commission ED criteria | Samuel Maynard, Syngenta, UK

COFFEE BREAK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Risk assessment and remediation of mine sites and processing sites | Amiel Boullemant, Ronan Courtney

457 | Applying high-throughput screening data to define early key events for impaired vitellogenesis | David Dreier, University of Florida, USA

Silver Hall Level 0

Clean circular economy: recycling while eliminating legacy toxics | Niels Jonkers, Heather Leslie 462 | Environmental assessment of presence of impurity materials and chemical pollutants in wood waste meant for recycling | Giorgia Faraca, DTU, Denmark

Special Session

463 | Cleaning the WEEE plastic loop in the Indian informal sector | Arthur Haarman, EMPA Technology & Society Lab, Switzerland

464 | A sustainable solution for HBCD containing PS foam via a dissolving technique with bromine recovery | Lein Tange, EFRA, Netherlands

COFFEE BREAK

Copper Hall Level 0

…Katherine Coady

83

Wednesday 10 May Poster Corners Nanoparticles and Microplastics: Harvesting Recent Findings to Fertilize a New Pressing Topic (PC) | Ralf Kaegi, Frank Von der Kammer, Thorsten Hüffer Discussion at 5:30 pm WEPC01 | Adverse effects of particles: 2017 state-of-the-art of engineered nanoparticles as a platform for micro-nanoplastics research | Anita Jemec, University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Fac., Slovenia WEPC02 | Mapping the flows of 5 plastics through society: a first step towards building an environmental release model for plastics | Delphine Wenger, EMPA, Switzerland WEPC03 | A potential for knowledge transfer: parallels and differences in aquatic ecotoxicology between engineered nanomaterials and micro- and nanoplastics | Sinja Rist, DTU (Technical University of Denmark), Denmark WEPC04 | Microplastic and nanoparticle fate in aquatic environments: learning from similarities and differences | Antonia Praetorius, University of Vienna, Austria WEPC05 | Electron microscopy methods for metallic nanoparticles applied to nanoplastics: Challenges and opportunities. | Maya AL SID CHEIKH, University of Plymouth, UK WEPC06 | Uptake of differently sized polystyrene nanoparticles by D. magna and influence of protein corona as a function of presentation mode | Iseult Lynch, University of Birmingham, UK WEPC07 | Synthetic textiles as a source of microplastics from households | Denise Mitrano, Eawag - Swiss federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Switzerland

The challenges of Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment (LCSA) of energy technologies (PC) | Daniel Garrain, Alessandra Zamagni, Vicente Franco Garcia Discussion at 6:00 pm WEPC08 | Life cycle comparative study of individual and collective systems for residential thermal energy production and distribution: a case-study from Tuscany Italy | Irene Bartolozzi, SantAnna School of Advanced Studies, Italy WEPC09 | Methodological implications on the greenhouse gas balance of 2nd generation biofuels - ISO vs. RED (2009/28/EC) | Karin Fazeni, Energy Institute at the Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria WEPC10 | Sustainability assessment of hybrid concentrated solar power/biomass mini power plant | Daniel Garrain, CIEMAT, Spain WEPC11 | Accounting for uncertainty in the assessment of material requirements and related climate change impacts of the energy transition | Antoine Beylot, Bureau de recherches géologiques et minières BRGM, France WEPC12 | Comparison of aggregated sitespecific flue gas emissions of global coal-fired power plants with a country-level life cycle inventory | Stephan Pfister, ETHZ, Switzerland WEPC13 | Priorities of fossil power plant flue gas abatement in Europe | Stephan Pfister,

84

Poster Presentations ETH Zurich, Switzerland

Big data analysis of monitoring data: what questions can be addressed? (PC) | Martina Vijver, Gert Everaert, Jörg Römbke Discussion at 5:30 pm WEPC14 | Re-organisation of a long-term monitoring network using moss as biomonitor for atmospheric deposition by example of Germany | Winfried Schröder, University of Vechta, Germany WEPC15 | Spatial patterns and temporal trends in contamination of Norwegian coastal biota | Anders Ruus, NIVA, Norway WEPC16 | Understanding the response of zooplankton dynamics to multiple stressors in the North Sea | Yana Deschutter, Ghent University (UGent), Belgium WEPC17 | Data science to link chemical contamination with biological effects in surface water in Flanders, Belgium | Frederik Verdonck, ARCHE, Belgium WEPC18 | Species Sensitivity Distributions for many substances used to provide a realistic estimate of ecological impact of mixture exposure in terms of the loss of aquatic biodiversity | Dick De Zwart, DdZ Ecotox, Netherlands

Environmental endocrine compound concentrations and human and ecosystem health effects (PC) | Joan Grimalt Discussion at 6:00 pm WEPC20 | Effects on thyroid signaling and early neurogenesis of pesticides amitrole and chlorpyrifos | Petra Spirhanzlova, MNHN, France WEPC21 | Urinary concentrations of major phthalate metabolites in pregnant mothers and newborns in relation to thyroid hormones | Sunmi Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea WEPC22 | Mixtures affecting neurodevelopment disrupt thyroid hormone signaling in Xenopus laevis. | Michelle Leemans, MNHN, France WEPC23 | Urinary concentrations of organophosphate and pyrethroid metabolites from two rural Spanish populations | Joan Grimalt, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain WEPC24 | Prolonged test scenarios are required for assessing the effects of endocrine disrupters | Hanna Maes, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany WEPC25 | Chronic Arsenic Exposure Impairs Pancreatic β-cell Function | Christopher Carmean, Kobe University, Japan

Poster Sessions 07:30 am–08:30 am 10:15 am–11:00 am 12:45 pm–2:15 pm 4:00 pm–4:30 pm 5:30 pm–6:30 pm 6:30 pm–7:00 pm

Poster setup Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster social Poster take-down

21st century Ecotoxicology and Human toxicology: Applications and perspectives for the use of OMICs data (P) | Bruno Campos, Jinhee Choi, Xiaowei Zhang, Geoff Hodges WE001 | Can living organisms be replaced on enzymes in ecotoxicology? | Valentina Kratasyuk, Siberian Federal University, Russian Federation WE002 | An integrative approach for understanding the adverse outcome pathways in algae: Method development towards anchoring molecular and apical endpoints | Stefan Schade, Birmingham University, UK WE003 | GEMTOX - predicting mixture toxicity from single chemical gene expression | Alexander Betz, Eawag, Switzerland WE004 | Developing Confidence in Adverse Outcome Pathway-Based Toxicity Predictions -Effects of the Fungicide Imazalil on Fathead Minnow Reproduction | Daniel Villeneuve, U.S. EPA, USA WE005 | Link of protein carbonylation and aging after chronic gamma irradiation of C. elegans glp-1 mutant | Mira Kuzmic, IRSN/ PRP-ENV/LECO, France WE006 | Proteome analysis of male gonads in Gammarus fossarum exposed to Pyriproxyfen: mining for endocrine disruption biomarkers | Duarte Gouveia, Irstea Lyon, France WE007 | Multigenerational effects of Daphnia magna exposed to organic contaminated stream water: A proteomic-global DNA methylation approach | Nivedita Chatterjee, University of Seoul, South Korea WE008 | High conservation in transcriptomic and proteomic response of white sturgeon to equipotent concentrations of 2,3,7,8TCDD, PCB 77, and benzo[a]pyrene | Markus Hecker, University of Saskatchewan, Canada WE009 | 3-Step Analytical Methodology for the determination of antidepressants and antipsychotics in human hair by LC- hybrid LTQ Orbitrap MS | Triantafyllos Albanis, University of Ioannina, Greece WE010 | Cytotoxic and genotoxic effects of contaminants present in a highly polluted estuary in multiple organs of rats | Caroline Cardoso, Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil WE011 | iNVERTOX: Rapid intelligent in silico prediction of sub-lethal ecotoxicological effects in invertebrates following pharmaceutical exposure | Thomas Miller, Kings College London, UK WE012 | Molecular Toxicity of Metal Mixture and Defense Mechanisms in Zebrafish (Danio rerio). | Sanah Majid, University of Antwerp, Dept. Biology, Belgium WE013 | Quantitative relationships between the structure of pharmaceuticals and the expression of genes involved in liver damage

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Wednesday 10 May | Ester Papa, University of Insubria, Italy WE014 | Influence of Toluene exposure on metabolomics responses of Oryza sativa (Asian rice) | Woojung Kim, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea WE015 | Reference genome of the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis, a multidisciplinary invertebrate model | Marie-Agnes Coutellec, INRA, France WE016 | SETAC Omics Interest Group | Bruno Campos, IDAEA-CSIC, Spain

IG

Environmental endocrine compound concentrations and human and ecosystem health effects (P) | Joan Grimalt WE017 | Estrogenic activity of waterbodies with water bloom and the potential contribution of natural and anthropogenic compounds | Tereza Prochazkova, Research Centre for Toxic Compounds in the Environment, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Czech Republic WE018 | Effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) to Caenorhabditis elegans and Folsomia candida | Dokyung Kim, Konkuk University, South Korea WE019 | Endocrine disruptors in soil: effects of Bisphenol A on growth, reproduction, immunity and gene expression in earthworms. | Marta Novo, UNED, Spain WE020 | Alteration of Phase I and Phase II genes by single exposure and binary mixtures of Octocrylene and OD-PABA on Chironomus riparius | Ana Belén González, UNED, Spain WE021 | Effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) to earthworm Eisenia andrei | Youn-Joo An, Konkuk University, South Korea WE022 | Prolonged test scenarios are required for assessing the effects of endocrine disrupters | Hanna Maes, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany WE023 | Effects of PFAS on the thyroid function of Perch (Perca fluviatilis) | Lina Birgersson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden WE024 | Commercial fish feed can contain sterols that are endocrine disruptors | Carlos Soares, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil WE025 | Toxicological evaluation of abietic acid in Tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) | Carlos Soares, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil

Poster Presentations environmental and regulatory toxicology (P) | Alex Ford, Gregory Pyle, Minna Saaristo, Kathryn Arnold WE030 | The use of high-throughput image analysis to cost effectively assess ecological relevant behavioural changes in Daphnia magna exposed to ng/l of psychiatric drugs. | Carlos Barata, CSIC, Spain WE031 | Using Danio rerio swimming behaviour as a standard high throughput technique for screening nanomaterial ecotoxicity. | Tarryn Botha, North-West University, South Africa WE032 | Behavioural effects of pesticides and pharmaceuticals on chironomid larvae (Diamesa zernyi) from a glacier-fed stream | Valeria Di Nica, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy WE033 | High throughput sequencing and behavioural endpoints highlight effects of antidepressants on crustaceans at environmentally relevant concentrations | Alex Ford, University of Portsmouth, UK WE034 | Determining the effects of antidepressants on multiple behaviours in crustaceans at environmentally relevant concentrations | Shanelle Kohler, University of Portsmouth, UK WE035 | Habitat preferences of linnets (Linaria cannabina) in vineyards | Silke Laucht, Rifcon GmbH, Germany WE036 | Behavioral responses to urban pollutants in a key bioturbator species, the oligochaeta Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri | Pigneret Mathilde, UMR 5023 LEHNA, University of Lyon 1, France WE037 | Behavioral tests with terrestrial crustacean Porcellio scaber as fast screening tool for agricultural application - an example of carbonized materials | Suzana Madzaric, CIHEAM - Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Bari, Italy WE038 | Running hot and cold: Integrating behavioural assays and thermal imaging to assess the effects of fluoxetine in birds | Kathryn Arnold, University of York, UK WE039 | Behavioral and Physiological Responses of the Cladoceran Daphnia magna after Exposure to Neuroactive Pharmaceuticals | Peter Roslev, Aalborg University, Denmark

South Korea WE044 | Application of Automated Biomonitoring in India | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany WE045 | Acute toxicity and recovery of a Cu-pulse: G. fossarum vs. N. casparyi and P. slavus | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany WE046 | Altered behavior and skewed sex ratio after developmental exposure of 17α-ethinylestradiol in the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) | Tove Porseryd, Södertörn University, Sweden WE047 | Move it! Pesticide avoidance behaviour in a predatory mite | Joanna Witton, University of York, UK WE048 | Toxicity of BPA: Are groundwater crustaceans N. casparyi and P. slavus more sensitive than G. fossarum? | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany WE049 | THE behavioral response of three aphid species to different biochemical compounds present in four different essential oils. | Mofokeng Samuel, University of the Free State, South Africa

Big data analysis of monitoring data: what questions can be addressed? (P) | Martina Vijver, Gert Everaert, Jörg Roembke WE050 | Metabarcoding of eDNA from Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM) for fish population monitoring | Elke Eilebrecht, Fraunhofer IME, Germany WE051 | Inventoring biodiversity: the strengths and limitations of DNA barcoding and DNA metabarcoding for environmental monitoring | Jörg Römbke, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany WE052 | The Edaphobase Nationwide Field Monitoring - an approach to determine reference values for soil organism communities of different habitat types | Andreas Toschki, gaiac Research Institute for Ecosystem Analysis and Assessment, Germany WE053 | The use of the Edaphobase datawarehouse in soil risk assessment | Johanna Oellers, gaiac Research Institute for Ecosystem Analysis and Assessment, Germany WE054 | Relationships between forest ecosystem conditions and ecosystem services on the national scale in Germany | Winfried Schröder, University of Vechta, Germany

WE026 | Effects of Mercury and Pesticides on Thyroid function in juvenile fish | Dayanthi Nugegoda, RMIT University, Australia

WE040 | Chlorpyrifos effects at different levels of ecological hierarchy: link between changes in biomarkers (sub-organism level) and behavioral changes in Daphnia magna (organism level) | Claudia Ferrario, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy

WE027 | Floodhydrotox - an interdisciplinary approach to assess the endocrine-disrupting potential of sediments during flood events | Anne-Katrin Mueller, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

WE041 | Assessing the Ecotoxicological Potential of Carbamazepine - Evaluation of a Behavioural Parameter in the Embryogenesis of Zebrafish | Fabian Weichert, HAW Hamburg, Germany

WE056 | Effect of PCBs on the virulence of Gallid herpesvirus 2 (GaHV-2) in chicken fibroblasts: a model in vitro system | Veerle Jaspers, Norwegian University of Science & Technology, Norway

WE028 | Chronic Arsenic Exposure Impairs Pancreatic β-cell Function | Christopher Carmean, Kobe University, Japan

WE042 | Behavioral responses of marine vertebrate (Solea senegalensis) early life stages after exposure to Carbendazim, 4MBC and UV-B radiation | Mario Araujo, CESAM & DeBio, Portugal

Predictive models in ecotoxicology: bridging the gap between scientific progress and regulatory applicability (P) | Andreas Focks, Alpar Barsi, Marco Vighi, Francesca Grisoni

WE029 | Data Integration and Gene Network Analysis for Identifying EDCs in Personal Care Products Associated with Breast Cancer | Hyeri Jeong, KIST Europe, Germany

Behavioural ecotoxicology: Unravelling behavioural responses to aid

WE043 | The critical window of exposure of mixture toxicity of benzene, toluene and formaldehyde in Danio rerio: A systems toxicology approach with behavioral analysis | Nivedita Chatterjee, University of Seoul,

WE055 | Optimization and Accessibility of an Ecotoxicological Threshold of Concern (ecoTTC) Database | Michelle Embry, ILSI Health & Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI), USA

WE057 | Investigating the application of artificial neural networks to predict the bioconcentration of xenobiotics in fish and invertebrates | Thomas Miller, Kings College London, UK

facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

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Wednesday 10 May WE058 | MOSAIC in support of statistical analyses from standard bioassay data | Sandrine Charles, University Lyon 1, France WE059 | TK-TD modelling of Lymnaea stagnalis survival under chemical pressure | Sandrine Charles, University Lyon 1, France WE060 | Review, ring-test and guidance for TKTD modelling | Roman Ashauer, University of York, UK WE061 | A mechanistic modelling approach to link mortality and feeding inhibition | Andre Gergs, gaiac - Research Institute for Ecosystem Analysis and Assessment, Germany WE062 | Temperature dependency of chemical effects predicted by physiological rate measures | Andre Gergs, gaiac - Research Institute for Ecosystem Analysis and Assessment, Germany WE063 | Toxicokinetic-toxicodynamic model predictions of the survival of two aquatic macroinvertebrates for a mixture of an insecticide and a fungicide compound | Andreas Focks, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands WE064 | Modelling the toxicity of organic chemicals on aquatic invertebrates: maximizing applicability based on minimal data | Andreas Focks, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands WE065 | EasyGUTS - Running R GUTS scripts in a window based software | Dirk Nickisch, Rifcon GmbH, Germany WE066 | Evaluation of effect models in the environmental risk assessment of plant protection products | Matthias Liess, UFZ Center for Environmental Research, Germany WE067 | How to address the complexity of environmental risk assessment - calling for a modular approach instead of large black box models | Thomas Preuss, Bayer Ag, Germany WE068 | Modelling laboratory standard biotests with Daphnia magna | Tido Strauss, Research Institute gaiac, Germany WE069 | Harpacticoid copepods in risk assessment - Combining life cycle experiments with population modelling | Josef Koch, GhEnToxLab (Ghent University), Belgium WE070 | DEB(tox) models - Can we predict under different environmental conditions? | Benoit Goussen, University of York, UK WE071 | Population Models for Use in Baynesian Networks and Adverse Outcome Pathways | John Stark, Washington State University, USA WE072 | Conceptual model for implementing community model output in Ecological Risk Assessments of chemicals | Annemette Palmqvist, Roskilde University, Denmark WE073 | The use of population models in copper risk assessment: a case study with Lymnaea stagnalis | Karel Vlaeminck, Ghent University, Belgium WE074 | Modeling the interactions between Daphnia growth and algal density under different environmental conditions using Dynamic Energy Budget theory | Yongeun Kim, Korea University, South Korea

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Poster Presentations WE075 | SETAC Interest Group on Mechanistic Effect Models for Ecological Risk Assessment | Udo Hommen, Fraunhofer IME, Germany

IG

Highly Hydrophobic Chemicals: Reliable Investigations on Environmental Fate and Effects (P) | Felix Stibany, Philipp Mayer, Stefan Trapp, Kilian Smith WE076 | Application of passive dosing in the standardized aquatic toxicity test of hydrophobic organic chemicals for regulatory chemical assessment | Haruna Watanabe, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan WE077 | Passive dosing for the study of hydrophobic environmental contaminants CPs in ecotoxicological studies | Mafalda Castro, Stockholm University, Sweden WE078 | Passive dosing via the headspace: A simple method for controlling exposure of volatile hydrophobic organic compounds in aquatic toxicity tests | Lam Trac, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark WE079 | Challenges of the Aquatic Risk Assessment of Pyrethroids: A Case Study for the Insecticide Deltamethrin | Dieter Schaefer, Bayer Crop Science, Germany WE080 | Understanding Bioavailability of Pyrethroid Insecticides in Aquatic Environments | Jay Gan, University of California, Riverside, USA WE081 | Spatial distribution of POPs in fish from Argentina: relationship with the surrounding land uses | Karina Miglioranza, Laboratorio de Ecotoxicología y Contaminación Ambiental, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras, CONICET-Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, Argentina WE082 | EPA's Expanded-List PAHs in Environmental Media | Brian Magee, ARCADIS, USA WE083 | Passive sampling in kinetic mode: Determining dissolved concentrations by using the concentration ratio of passive samplers with different thicknesses. | Hanna Fuchte, Institut fur Umweltforschung, Germany WE084 | Measuring dissolved-phase hydrophobic halogenated flame retardants in the water of the US Great Lakes using polyethylene passive samplers | Carrie McDonough, University of Rhode Island, USA WE085 | Sorption studies of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) between aqueous solution and soil particle grain sizes: Effects of temperature and ionic strength. | Gbadebo Adeyinka, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa WE086 | Quantification of PCB and PCDD partitioning constants between water and dissolved phases by polymer depletion techniques | Veronika Schacht, The University of Queensland, Australia WE087 | Measuring and Modeling Membrane-Water Partitioning Coefficients for Cationic Surfactants | Steven Droge, Utrecht University, Netherlands WE088 | Environmental risk assessment of poorly soluble substances: Improved tools for assessing biodegradation, (de)sorption, and modeling (project RABIT) | Maximilian Müller, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

WE089 | Prediction of the Formation of Biogenic Non-Extractable Residues | Stefan Trapp, DTU Environment, Denmark WE090 | Testing of viscous liquid mixtures | David Thomas, Smithers Viscient, UK

Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations (P1) | Kristof Demeestere, Lynn Vanhaecke WE091 | Low-cost pharmaceutical removal from water using activated carbon prepared from cherry/sweet cherry kernels | Boris Obrovski, Faculty of Technical Sciences, Novi Saf, Serbia WE092 | Applying high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-Orbitrap-MS/MS) to evaluate the efficiency of wastewater treatment | Zhe Li, Stockholm University, Sweden WE093 | Influence of Cambi Thermal Hydrolysis/Anaerobic Digestion Treatment on Concentrations of Plasticizers in Wastewater Sludge | Dana Armstrong, University of Maryland College Park, USA WE094 | Transport mechanisms of biocides in renders | Elise Rudelle, Aalborg University, Denmark WE095 | Passive sampling technique with ELISA assay detection to monitor neonicotinoid insecticides in surface water | Yutaka Kameda, Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan WE096 | Using polyethylene passive samplers of varying thickness to measure dissolved organophosphate ester flame retardants in the North Atlantic Ocean | Carrie McDonough, University of Rhode Island, USA WE097 | Equilibrium Sampling indicates Increased PAH Exposure during Digestion of Sewage Sludge | Karina Knudsmark Sjøholm, University of Copenhagen, Denmark WE098 | Application of a novel compact autonomous sampler to monitoring of micropollutant time-weighted average concentrations in particulate phase | Yutaka Kameda, Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan WE099 | The role of sampling artefact in gas-particle phase characterization of orgnophosphate esters (OPEs) | Joseph Okeme, University of Toronto, Canada WE100 | Optimisation of the experimental conduct to accurately determined Kd / KF values of low adsorbing compounds | Tanya Ertunc, BASF SE Agrarzentrum Limburgerhof, Germany WE101 | Proposed biocatalytic treatment for degradation of hormones and antibiotics as emerging contaminants | Lourdes Andrea Hernández Rojas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla., Mexico WE102 | Study of the Degradation of Bisphenol A (BPA) by basidiomycetes via HPLC in urban reservoir waters | Elizabete de Lima, UFABC, Brazil WE103 | Sorption of nitro explosives to polymer/biomass-derived biochar: Affecting factors and toxicity | Yong-Deuk Seo, University of Ulsan, South Korea WE104 | Removal of recalcitrant hydrocarbons present in Diesel-contaminated soil by serial processes of oxidation and

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Wednesday 10 May biodegradation | Seung-Woo Jeong, Kunsan National University, South Korea WE105 | SETAC Chemistry Interest Group | Alan Jones, DuPont Crop Protection, USA

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Advances in Soil Ecotoxicological Risk Assessment of Chemical Stressors (P) | Juliska Princz, Patrick Kabouw, Silvia Pieper, Mark Maboeta WE106 | Ecotoxicological assessment of wastewater soil (sludge) on survival and reproduction of Enchytraeus albidus (Oligochaeta) in the Maluti-A-Phofung municipality | Portia Mosolloane, University of the Free State, South Africa WE107 | Biochar amendment in dimethoate contaminated soils: toxicity assessment using the collembolan Folsomia candida and the dicotyledonous plant Brassica rapa | Catarina Malheiro, Department of Biology, University of Aveiro, Portugal WE108 | Leaching of weathered polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) obtained from a contaminated site: role of dissolved organic carbon and saturation conditions in a soil column experiment | Chiara Maria Vitale, University of Insubria, Italy WE109 | Soil risk assessment for glyphosate and AMPA | Georg von Mérey, Monsanto Europe S.A., Belgium WE110 | Statistics in Earthworm Field Testing | Tobias Vollmer, Eurofins Agroscience Services EcoChem GmbH, Germany WE111 | Stratified activity based sampling of soil micro-arthropods | Frank Bakker, Eurofins-Mitox, Netherlands WE112 | General framework for assessing the risks for in-soil organisms exposed to Plant Protection Products (PPP) | Silvia Pieper, German Federal Environment Agency (UBA), Germany WE113 | Species sensitivity distributions for soil organisms: experiences for metals | Koen Oorts, ARCHE, Belgium WE114 | Effects of Bacillus cereus inoculum on the ecotoxicity of metal-based fungicides towards Eisenia andrei | Mark Maboeta, North-West University, South Africa WE115 | Placing arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on the risk assessment test batery of plant protection products | Jose Paulo Sousa, University of Coimbra, Portugal WE116 | Microbial respiration of added 13C-labelled sugar in the field - A step towards a non-invasive assessment of ecological functions of polluted sites of high ecological value | Ingrid Rijk, MTM Research Centre, Orebro University, Sweden

Poster Presentations WE120 | Impact of three neonicotinoids on the collembolan Folsomia fimetaria, in agricultural soils | Gilda Dell\\\'Ambrogio, Centre Ecotox, Switzerland

Raman micro-spectroscopy | Florian Storck, DVGW-Technologiezentrum Wasser, Germany

WE121 | Toxicity of Neonicotinoids Towards Two Soil Invertebrates | Claudia Lima, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands

WE137 | Qualitative and quantitative analysis of microplastics in the marine environment pyrolysis-GC/MS as a sensitive analytical tool | Marten Fischer, Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Germany

WE122 | Does the fate, persistence and toxicity of a semi volatile hydraulic lubricating oil vary across Canadian soil types? | Robyn Akre, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

WE138 | Modelling the fate and transport of plastic debris in fresh waters - review and guidance | Merel Kooi, Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands

WE123 | Recovery of Earthworm Populations in Field Test Plots through Migration? | Tobias Vollmer, Eurofins Agroscience Services EcoChem GmbH, Germany

WE139 | To what extent are wastewater treatment systems a gateway for microplastic particles in the aquatic environment and in soil? | Alessio Gomiero, International Research Institute of Stavanger, Norway

WE124 | Which are the key soil parameters driving the toxicity of chemicals to soil organisms? | Pia Kotschik, Umweltbundesamt / Federal Agency of Environment, Germany WE125 | Derivation of species sensitivity distribution for bisphenol A for the protection of soil ecosystem | Jin Il Kwak, Konkuk University, South Korea WE126 | Terrestrial toxicity of silver nanoparticles using soil alga | Jin Il Kwak, Konkuk University, South Korea WE127 | Assessment of effects of PAHs on soils functions in contaminated soils | Jana Weiss, Stockholm University, ACES, Sweden WE128 | Assessing the effects of biochar on the toxicity of the agrichemical imidacloprid on potworms (Enchytraeus albidus) | Ngitheni Nyoka, University of the Free State, South Africa WE129 | SETAC Soils Interest Group | Marlea Wagelmans, Bioclear earth, Netherlands

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WE130 | The gut wall of the earthworm Eisenia fetida harbours a closely associated bacterial community distinct to the soil community | Elmer Swart, Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, UK

Challenges and best practice in monitoring of micro- and nano-plastic abundance and environmental distribution (P) | Annemette Palmqvist, Catherine Mouneyrac, Kristian Syberg WE131 | Abundance and characteristics of microplastics in bivalves and lugworms from urban, aquafarm and rural areas of the Korean coasts | Mi Jang, Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology, South Korea WE132 | Spatiotemporal Distribution and Source of Microplastics on Korean Sand Beaches | Soeun Eo, Korea Institutue of Ocean Science and Technology (KIOST), South Korea

WE117 | Impact of pesticides on non-target fungi in soils and sediments | Fritz Oehl, Agroscope Wädenswil, Switzerland

WE133 | Microplastics and their Alternatives for Intentional Use in Products - An Application for FT-IR Micro-Spectroscopy | Bettina Liebmann, Umweltbundesamt (Environment Agency Austria), Austria

WE118 | The effects of neonicotinoid pesticides on non-target soil invertebrates in soil | Juliska Princz, Environment Canada, Canada

WE134 | Characterising physical- and photodegradation of polystyrene and polyethylene microplastic particles | Andy Booth, SINTEF Ocean, Norway

WE119 | Validation of a New Ecotoxicity Test Method for Assessing the Effect of Contaminants in Soil using Orbatid Mites | Juliska Princz, Environment Canada, Canada

WE135 | Determination of plastic loads in an urban river | Stephan Wagner, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH - UFZ, Germany WE136 | Advanced microplastic clean-up for

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

WE140 | Ascidians as bio-indicators of micro-plastic and phthalates in marine environments | Gal Vered, Tel Aviv University, Israel WE141 | Microplastic contamination in gudgeons (Gobio gobio) from Flemish rivers | Bart Slootmaekers, Systemic Physiological and Ecotoxicological Research (SPHERE), University of Antwerp, Belgium WE142 | Visual sightings of floating debris in the Mediterranean Sea | Claudia Campanale, Italian National Research Council, Italy WE143 | Dispersion of microplastic in different media and quantification in peripyhton using flow cytometry and viSNE data analysis | Stephanie Merbt, Eawag, Switzerland

Environmental consequences of oil and gas extraction and transport (P) | Graham Whale, Richard Wenning WE144 | Impact of hydrocarbon on coastal microbial communities | Robert Duran, Pau University, France WE145 | Exploring inter-species sensitivity to a model hydrocarbon, 2-Methylnaphtalene, using a process-based model | Adriana Sardi, Akvaplan-niva, Norway WE146 | ERA Acute - A multi-compartment environmental oil spill risk assessment model | Cathrine Stephansen, Akvaplan-niva AS, Norway WE147 | Oil and Gas field decommissioning: Application of Net Environmental Benefit Analysis (NEBA) to Comparative Assessment to determine the best decommissioning approach | Samantha Deacon, Ramboll Environ UK Limited, UK WE148 | Biological effects of crude oil and chemically dispersed crude oil in Baltic blue mussels (Mytilus trossulus) | Raisa Turja, Finnish Environment Institute, SYKE, Finland WE149 | Biomarker responses to chemically dispersed crude oil in the Baltic Sea sediment dwelling bivalve, Macoma balthica | Aura Nousiainen, Finnish Environment Institute SYKE, Finland WE150 | Toxicity assessment of a naphtenic North Sea crude oil using multi-level endpoints in zebrafish early live stages | Sarah Johann, Institute for Environmental Research Biology V, Germany WE151 | Application of time variable toxicity model to single hydrocarbons and petroleum substances | Aaron Redman, Exxon Mobil Biomedical Sciences, USA

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Wednesday 10 May WE152 | Transcriptome analysis reveals disruption in gene networks related to membrane integrity and metabolic processes in Silurana (Xenopus) tropicalis embryos exposed to mixtures of naphthenic acids | Juan Manuel Gutierrez Villagomez, University of Ottawa, Canada WE153 | EU H2020 project GRACE: Experimental design for assessing the impact of oil and oil-dispersant exposure on Norwegian Sea and Baltic Sea mussels (Mytilus spp.) under "natural" conditions | Xabier Iturrioz, Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, Spain

Poster Presentations Rico, IMDEA Water Institute, Spain WE167 | Individual-based analysis of mayfly meta-population dyna | Andre Gergs, gaiac - Research Institute for Ecosystem Analysis and Assessment, Germany

WE181 | Ecological impacts and ecosystem response in an old mining area of SE Spain: learning lessons for phytomanagement | Jose Alvarez-Rogel, Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería Agronómica. Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena, Spain

WE168 | A general modelling framework for environmental risk assessment - sublethal effects and starvation | Elke Zimmer, IBACON GmbH, Germany

WE182 | Contribution of active biomonitoring in environmental risk assessment on a former mining site | Annette de Vaufleury, University of Franche-Comte, France

WE169 | Testing the BEEHAVE landscape module - complexity comes at a price | Elke Zimmer, IBACON GmbH, Germany

WE183 | Determination of pollution levels of some heavy metals in the coal mining environment of Udi, Akwuke and Ngwo communities of Enugu state, Nigeria | Chukwuka Uhama, Anambra State University, Nigeria

WE154 | Using GUTS to explain dynamic mortality patterns for a marine copepod exposed to dimethylnaphthalene | Tjalling Jager, DEBtox Research, Netherlands

WE170 | Spray-drift Exposure at Landscapelevel - A Spatiotemporally Explicit Module and its Use in Ecological Risk Characterisation | Thomas Preuss, Bayer AG Crop Science Division, Germany

WE155 | Alteration of nuclear excision repair pathway by crude oil exposure revealed by C. elegans transcription factor RNAi screening and zebrafish toxicity test | Youngho Kim, University of Seoul, South Korea

WE171 | Comparison of methodologies for ecological risk assessment: an application to different chemicals (PFASs, alkylbenzene sulphonate and triclosan) in the river Po, Italy | Andrea Gredelj, University of Padua, Italy

WE156 | Adverse effects of WAFs of crude oil on the Antarctic copepod Tigriopus kingsejongensis and the temperate congeneric copepod Tigriopus japonicus and identification of 30 cytochrome P450 genes | Jae-Seong Lee, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea

Integrated approaches for linking chemical contamination with biological effects (P) | Werner Brack, Klara Hilscherova, Henner Hollert

WE157 | Direct Impact of Oil Pollution on Benthic Communities | Luana Monteiro, Bielefed/Gent University, Belgium WE158 | Screening methods for assessing toxicity and fate of produced waters | Graham Whale, Shell Health, UK WE159 | Comparative Risk Assessment (CRA) of Response Options for a Deepwater Oil Well Accident | Richard Wenning, Ramboll Environ, USA WE160 | Spill Impact Mitigation Assessment (SIMA) for Oil Spill Response Planning in the Arctic Environment | Richard Wenning, Ramboll Environ, USA WE161 | Chemical and biological assessment of tight sand gas fracturing related waters | Ann-Helene Faber, Copernicus Institute Utrecht University, Netherlands WE162 | Oil spill and response impacts on biota in cold climates - effect-based tools and ecological risk assessment | ThomasBenjamin Seiler, RWTH Aachen University, Germany WE163 | Migration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in vertical profile of alluvial sediments of the Sava River, Serbia | Tatjana Solevic Knudsen, IChTM, Serbia WE164 | Vertical migration of oil pollutant in profile of alluvial sediments of the Sava River, Serbia | Mila Ilic, IChTM, Serbia

Environmental risk assessment in time and space - To boldly go where no man has gone before (P) | Thomas Preuss, Maria Arena, Ivo Roessink, Theo Brock WE165 | Living Lab: A novel research facility to connect ecotoxicological and ecological research | Martina Vijver, CML Leiden University, Netherlands WE166 | Traits-based analysis of macroinvertebrate community responses to insecticides using mesocosm data | Andreu

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WE172 | In situ effects of untreated sewage discharged into the River Danube: expression of selected genes in livers of caged common carp | Dina Tenji, University of Novi Sad Faculty of Sciences, Serbia WE173 | Rapid identification of neuroendocrine-disrupting chemicals in fish using a biomarker - virtual effect-directed analysis (vEDA) approach | Emanuela Finessi, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH - UFZ, Germany WE174 | Physiological biomarkers of an anthropic pollution on a bioturbator key species Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri | Pigneret Mathilde, UMR 5023 LEHNA, University of Lyon 1, France WE175 | Screening of Dutch surface water quality using Daphnia magna bioassays | Milo de Baat, University of Amsterdam IBED Institute, Netherlands WE176 | Smart Monitoring: Application of innovative tools in nationwide water quality assessment | Milo de Baat, University of Amsterdam IBED Institute, Netherlands WE177 | Risk drivers in wastewater-impacted streams | Nicole Munz, Eawag, Switzerland WE178 | Skylarks nesting in pesticide-treated crop fields compared to those nesting in nontreated agricultural land and main reasons for complete nest loss | Jan-Dieter Ludwigs, Rifcon GmbH, Germany

Risk assessment and remediation of mine sites and processing sites (P) | Amiel Boullemant, Ronan Courtney WE179 | Metal cycling in constructed wetlands receiving highly alkaline steel slag leachate | William Mayes, University of Hull, UK WE180 | Exposure-based risk assessment of historic aluminium smelters in France to inform continued water monitoring responsibilities | Olivia Tran, wca consulting, UK

WE184 | Long term coal mining activities in Enugu metropolis; could it be responsible for bioavailability of heavy metals in plants? | Arinze Onwurah, University of Nigeria, Nigeria

Toxicology and Ecotoxicology, human and ecological risk assessment of engineered nanomaterials: needs, goals and tools/ methods for safer-by-design strategies (P) | Gerardo Pulido-Reyes, Simona Scalbi, Sonia Manzo, Georgiana Amariei WE185 | High dimension biological analysis of carbon nanotube toxicity | Denis Sarigiannis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece WE186 | Proposal for a framework to calculate the environmental, safety and Health impacts of nanofertilizers | Maria Oliviero, University Parthenope, Italy WE187 | NanoCRED: A transparent framework to assess the regulatory adequacy of ecotoxicity data for nanomaterials - relevance and reliability revisited | Nanna Hartmann, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), Denmark WE188 | Grouping of nanomaterials regarding their ecotoxicity - are hypotheses based on literature data robust enough? | Dana Kühnel, Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research, Germany WE189 | Grouping of nanomaterials regarding aquatic ecotoxicity - hypotheses for selected NMs and experimental proof | Kerstin Hund-Rinke, Fraunhofer IME, Germany WE190 | Does encapsulation of the biocide DCOIT in silica nanocontainers reduces its toxicity? Effects on the photophysiology and cell cycle of the endosymbiotic algae Symbiodinium sp. | Violeta Ferreira, Unversity of Aveiro, Portugal WE191 | NANOGRA: TiO2, CNT and Al nanoparticles risk assessment for sedimentdwelling organisms | Matthieu Hemart, ISSeP, Belgium WE192 | Effects of coating agents on ecotoxicity of silver nanoparticles | Sam Lekamge, RMIT University, Australia WE193 | Safe-by-design in practice: Met@Link project | Reinhilde Weltens, VITO, Belgium WE194 | The influence of media components on the observed antibacterial effect of silver ions on Bacillus subtilis - a different approach to research silver toxicity | Ilse De Leersnyder, Ghent University, Belgium WE195 | Chlorophyll fluorescence of the aquatic macrophyte Spirodela polyrhiza for rapid response of exposure to toxicants |

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Wednesday 10 May Soyeon Choi, Incheon National University, South Korea WE196 | Needs and challenges for developing an Integrated (eco)toxicological Risk Assessment of engineered nanomaterials | Francesca Pacchierotti, ENEA, Italy WE197 | Human Health and Ecological Risk Assessment and Management of nanoenabled products through the life-cycle | Elena Semenzin, Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy WE198 | Human Health Risk Assessment along the life-cycle of nano-enabled products | Elena Semenzin, Ca Foscari University of Venice, Italy WE199 | Supporting the environmental risk assessment of nanomaterials with qualityapproved information - the DaNa Literature Criteria Checklist | Dana Kühnel, HelmholtzCentre for Environmental Research, Germany WE200 | Are there significant acute ecotoxicological effects of nanoparticles? | Willie Peijnenburg, RIVM, Netherlands

LCA for supporting policy and decision making (P) | Serenella Sala, Marco Cinelli, Paolo Masoni WE201 | Consumer Survey and Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of Pharmaceutical Waste Disposal Practices in the UK | Siti Syuhaida Mohamed Yunus, University of York, UK WE202 | Life cycle Assessment of freight transport in Belgium | Angelique Leonard, University of Liege, Belgium WE203 | Life Cycle Assessment of an integrated system combining microalgae and constructed wetlands for the treatment of domestic wastewaters | Carlos Lutterbeck, University of Santa Cruz do Sul, Brazil WE204 | Combined use of UVV and UVC photochemical reactors for the treatment of the hospital laundry wastewaters: life cycle assessment as a support tool for selection of the system's configuration | Carlos Lutterbeck, University of Santa Cruz do Sul, Brazil WE205 | Life cycle thinking for the Brussels' circular economy transition | Wouter Achten, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium WE206 | The connection of life-cycle thinking with the European Commission's Circular Economy Strategy in the Central Eastern European region | Klara Szita Toth, University of Miskolc, Hungary WE207 | Recent advances in Life Cycle Assessment for soil and sediment remediation | Valerie Cappuyns, KU Leuven, Belgium WE208 | Using LCA for decision-making about a sustainable energy production: A case study from forest residues in Portugal | Tamiris da Costa, University of Aveiro, Portugal WE209 | Human well-being as single endpoint in life cycle sustainability assessment, facilitating policy support | Thomas Schaubroeck, Ghent University, Belgium / Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology (LIST), Luxembourg WE210 | Sustainable recycling in the industrial production of foam glass | Rosangela Spinelli, University of Modena & Reggio Emilia, Italy

Poster Presentations WE211 | Embedding Sustainable Strategy into Innovation: L'Oréal's sustainable product assessment tool | Patricia Martz, LOréal Research & Innovation, France WE212 | Efficiently performing a consequential Life Cycle Assessment on site remediation alternatives | Lies Huysegoms, KU Leuven, Belgium WE213 | Life Cycle Assessment approach in prefabricated-wood-frame buildings | Alejandro Padilla-Rivera, Université Laval, Canada WE214 | Life Cycle in Practice - Helping SMEs to integrate life cycle approach into their policy | Sylvie Groslambert, University of Liège - Chemical Engineering, Belgium

The challenges of Life Cycle Sustainability Assessment (LCSA) of energy technologies (P) | Daniel Garrain, Alessandra Zamagni, Vicente Franco Garcia WE215 | Sustainability issues of a new building integrated PV system | Daniel Garrain, CIEMAT, Spain WE216 | Exploratory analysis of the potential effects of criticality on solar and wind energy technologies in Spain | Daniel Garrain, CIEMAT, Spain WE217 | Sustainability assessment of biofuels production in Uruguay | Yolanda Lechon, CIEMAT, Spain WE218 | SETAC Sustainability Interest Group | Hanna Breunig, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA

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The Role of Metals in Circular Economies: A Life Cycle Perspective (P) | Eric Van Genderen, Chris Bayliss, Ladji Tikana WE219 | Granularity in Structural Steel Life Cycle Assessments | Kirstine Schiebel, ERM, UK WE220 | Comparative Life Cycle Assessment of the Production of SmCo and NdFeB Rare Earth Permanent Magnets | Gwendolyn Bailey, KU Leuven, Belgium WE221 | How to integrate resources in LCA based on the real life of metals? Case of photovoltaics panels | Angelique Leonard, University of Liege, Belgium WE222 | Comparison of methods for dealing with multi-functionality in a recycling context | Ellen Bracquene, KU Leuven, Belgium WE223 | Assessing selected metals flows in France and their recycling potential | Amelie Thevenot, Université de Bordeaux, France WE224 | Integrated economic and environmental assessment as driver for innovation of metallurgical systems for the recovery of metals from low grade input materials | Vincent Dunon, Arche consulting, Belgium WE225 | Environmental assessment of rare earth elements recycling: The case of recycling of end-of-life fluorescent lamps | Dionysios Kontoulis, KU Leuven, Belgium

Regulatory Best Practices for Assessment of Endocrine Active Substances (P) | Ellen Mihaich, Gerd Maack, Katherine Coady

WE226 | Applying Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOPs) to Derivation aquatic PNECs for Two Typical Phenolic EDCs | Ying Wang, National Marine Environmental Monitoring Center, China WE227 | Testing and assessment of endocrine disrupting effects of chemicals under Japanese programs: from EXTEND2010 to EXTEND2016 | Kunihiko Yamazaki, Ministry of the Environment, Japan WE228 | SYRINA - A proposed framework for the systematic review and integrated assessment of endocrine disrupting chemicals | Marlene Agerstrand, Stockholm University, Sweden WE229 | Assessing the Potential Impact of an Amine Oxide Surfactant on Estrogenic, Androgenic and Aromatase Endpoints in a Fish Endocrine Screening Assay | Georg von Mérey, Monsanto Europe S.A., Belgium WE230 | Tier 1 Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program (EDSP) Assays and Regulatory Safety Studies Provide a Weight of Evidence that Glyphosate is not an Endocrine Disruptor | Steven Levine, Monsanto Company, USA WE231 | The Importance of Weight of Evidence Considerations for Assessment of Potential Endocrine Activity: A Case Study for Carbaryl | Duane Huggett, EAG Laboratories, USA WE232 | Metals are indispensable, they define the health status of mammals and wild life. Can they also be endocrine disruptors? | Rita Cortvrindt, Arche consulting, Belgium WE233 | SETAC Interest Group on Endocrine Disrupter Testing and Risk Assessment | Annegaaike Leopold, Independent Consultant/ Researcher, Netherlands

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Risk assessment and management of waterbodies (ground, fresh, marine and drinking waters) (P) | Mario Carere, Henner Hollert, Armelle Hebert WE234 | Use of macroinvertebrates and fish to determine priority substances concentrations in Walloon Rivers: biota monitoring network and caging techniques. | Delphine Leroy, ISSeP, Belgium WE235 | Assessing contaminant risk at Areas of Concern in Lake Superior | Nilima Gandhi, University of Toronto, Canada WE236 | Beyond guidelines: the benefits of applying aquatic sediment toxicant weightof-evidence assessment to environmental regulation | Paul Leahy, EPA Victoria, Australia WE237 | Development of a triad assessment method for brackish sediments in Flanders | Kristine De Schamphelaere, University of Antwerp, Belgium WE238 | Ecological risk assessment of Lake Mondsee, Austria: ecotoxicological line of evidence | Sandra Goncalves, Department of Biology & CESAM - University of Aveiro, Portugal WE239 | Multi-actor strategy for the management of an industrial effluent impacting a sensitive waterbody: use of bioassays to assess the efficiency of the management measures. | Yves Marneffe, Inst. Scientific de Service Public, Belgium WE240 | Non-linear relationship between estrogenic activity and sample dilution |

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Wednesday 10 May Karina Hettwer, QuoData GmbH, Germany WE241 | New insights on active biomonitoring using the freshwater amphipod Gammarus fossarum: various cases of impact assessment measuring micropollutants bioaccumulation and ecotoxicological effects. | Guillaume Jubeaux, BIOMAE, France WE242 | Study on the biochemical markers of Dreissena polymorpha and Coregonus lavaretus from two freshwater Austrian lakes: a spatio-temporal monitoring approach | Victor Galhano, Department of Biology & CESAM - University of Aveiro, Portugal WE243 | Which Environmental threshold values to evaluate the Good Environmental Status of the European Union marine waters in the context of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive? | Sandrine ANDRES, INERIS, France WE244 | A novel evaluation of the loads of nitrate and phosphate in rivers by using passive samplers and compact continuous samplers | Yutaka Kameda, Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan WE245 | Submerged aquatic vegetation as an indicator and focus of risk assessment and management in a shallow hypereutrophic lake | Thomas Augspurger, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, USA WE246 | EU Regulatory requirements for surfactants - challenges and opportunities | Agnieszka Kowalczyk, SC Johnson EurAFNE Limited, UK

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Poster Presentations WE247 | Concentrations of bisphenol A in European surface waters: Estimating summary statistics used in deterministic and distributional risk analyses | Jan Woelz, Currenta, Germany

WE254 | INTCATCH: Development and application of novel, integrated tools for monitoring and managing catchments | Lesley Parsons, Environmental Sustainability Associates limited, UK

WE248 | Single substance and mixture toxicity of emerging polar micropollutants detected in the marine environment | Samuel Moeris, Ghent University (UGent), Belgium

WE255 | Assessing and valuing environmental damage and compensation in UK water bodies | Samantha Deacon, Ramboll Environ UK Limited, UK

WE249 | Development of a rapid screening methods for pathogenic bacteria by using chemical contaminants in Olympic Triathlon swimming courses at Tokyo bay | Yutaka Kameda, Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan

WE256 | A source apportionment model for regulated chemicals | Laura Nieuwenhoven, Aktins Ltd, UK

WE250 | Spatial analysis of human health risk through drinking groundwater in Taiwan's Lanyang Plain | Ching-Ping Liang, Fooyin University, Taiwan WE251 | A milestone on the way to a "whole" water Certified Reference Material: ERMCA100, PAHs in surface water | Marina Ricci, EC-JRC, Italy WE252 | Derivation of Environmental Quality Standards for highly sorptive organic substances according to the EU Technical Guidance: A case-study for Deltamethrin | Laurent Lagadic, Bayer AG, Crop Science Division, Germany WE253 | A framework to assess the suitability of water quality standard values derived in different global jurisdictions as alternative water quality benchmarks for Canada | Olivia Tran, wca consulting, UK

Clean circular economy: recycling while eliminating legacy toxics (P) | Niels Jonkers, Heather Leslie WE257 | How far does CENELEC EN 50625 contribute to a clean circular economy? The case of WEEE plastics recycling | Arthur Haarman, EMPA Technology & Society Lab, Switzerland WE258 | Challenges on the way to a nontoxic environment | Pim Wassenaar, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment RIVM, Netherlands

Do we have the right tools to identify emerging hazards and risks? (P) | Yuri Bruinen de Bruin, Georg Streck, Jos Bessems, Joost Bakker WE259 | Classification & Labeling of Human Health and Environmental Hazards for Chemicals: Keeping a Global Perspective | Giovanna Meregalli, Dow Agrosciences, USA

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

THURSDAY

Submit your abstract by 19 May! S L A 2 0 1 7 . S E TA C . O R G

7–10 September 2017 Santos, São Paulo, Brazil

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THURSDAY

Publish with SETAC Journals Volume 13

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Number 1

Issue 3 March 2017

Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management

Volume 36 | Issue 3 | March 2017 ISSN 0730-7268

Vol. 36

| January 2017 IS S N 1551-3777

Environmental

Toxicology and Chemistry

Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry

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SETAC S E TA C J O U R NEurope A L 27S .Annual O RMeeting G | brussels.setac.org th

Thursday 11 May Daily Schedule

Location

7:30 am–2:00 pm

Registration Open

Registration Area | Level -1

7:30 am–8:30 am

Poster Setup

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

8:00 am–11:00 am

SETAC Europe Job Event

Meeting Studio 204 | Level +2

8:30 am–10:15 am

Platform Session Morning Part 1

10:15 am–11:00 am

Coffee Break & Poster Viewing

11:00 am–12:45 pm

Platform Session Morning Part 2

12:45 pm–2:45 pm

Poster Viewing

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

12:45 pm–2:45 pm

Closing Reception with Belgian Beer and Fries

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

Exhibition Hall | Level -2

Satellite Meetings

Location

8:30 am–5:00 pm

UNEP ILCP

Meeting Studio 202 | Level +2

11:00 am–1:00 pm

Horizon Scanning Project Stakeholder Roundtable Discussion (invitation only)

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

2:00 pm–6:00 pm

Solutions PCC

Meeting Studio 206 | Level +2

2:00 pm–5:00 pm

LCIA Ecotoxicity TF

Meeting Studio 201 A/B | Level +2

2:00 pm–4:00 pm

LCIA WULCA TF

Meeting Studio 314&316 | Level +3

5:00 pm–8:00 pm

LCIA Stakeholder

Meeting Studio 314&316 | Level +3

SETAC Europe Job Event For the first time, we organise a Job Event, where students and companies can meet each other during a speed dating.

Thursday 11 May, 8:00 am–11:00 am | Meeting Studio 204 SOLD OUT

Closing Reception with Belgian Beer and Fries Instead of having the wrap up keynotes in one of the auditoria, we thought it might be nicer to say goodbye to all the people you have met during the week in a typical Belgian atmosphere. Belgian beers and fries will be served! During this farewell lunch, a few closing remarks and the Young Scientist Awards for the best poster and best platform presentation at the SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting, will be presented on a podium. Also, grasp the opportunity to visit the poster exhibition!

Thursday 11 May, 12:45 pm–2:45 pm | Exhibition Hall FREE facebook.com/setacworld #SETACBrussels | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Programme Highlights Special Session: Global Horizon Scanning Project - Open Session Thursday 11 May, 8:30 am - 10:15 am, The Arc | Level +3 Paul van den Brink Alterra and Wageningen University, Netherlands The SETAC Europe Horizon Scanning Workshop was held at the SETAC Europe Annual Meeting in Barcelona, May 2015. The project aimed to collect and prioritise the most important future research questions as recognised by environmental scientists in Europe working in government, academia and business. The results of this project contribute to the mission

of SETAC to achieve Environmental Quality Through Science®. The aim of this session is to present the results of this workshop and to look further into the main questions and research needs. It will be followed up by a stakeholder meeting for invitees only.

Programme 08:30 am

Introduction to the programme and questions on vulnerability, propagation of effects, multiple stressors and effect modelling | Paul van den Brink, Alterra and Wageningen University, Netherlands

09:00 am

Research needs for high-throughput assessment of individual contaminants and their mixtures, both historical and emerging, and sustainable molecular design and alternatives analysis of chemical products | Bryan Brooks, Baylor University, USA

09:20 am

Prioritisation and detection of existing and emerging environmental contaminants | Alistair Boxall, University of York, UK

09:40 am

Predicting stressor effects on ecosystems and their services in a changing world: implications for risk communication, risk management and restoration | Lorraine Maltby, The University of Sheffield, UK

10:00 am

Discussion on way forward

10:15 am

End

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

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Thursday 11 May 8:30 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1

8:35 am

8:55 am

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Cost effective and ecological relevant testing using invertebrate species: new insights for environmental… Introduction

465 | Nanomaterial toxicity through a high throughput screening approach on Mytilus edulis hemocytes | Andrew Barrick, Université Catholique de l´Ouest, France

466 | Assessing the relevance and reliability of invertebrate embryo larvae studies for risk assessment of pharmaceuticals | Rebecca Brown, wca consulting, UK

Fish model species in human and environmental toxicology (I) | Jessica Legradi, Riccardo Massei, Marek Pípal Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

470 | Alterations of the bile acid synthesis, hepatic detoxifying mechanisms and lipid metabolisms in European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) after in vivo exposure to a xenoestrogen mixture | Eider Bilbao, University of the Basque country (UPV/EHU), Spain

471 | Thyroid hormone disrupting effects in zebrafish exposed to compounds found in indoor environments | Jessica Legradi, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Measuring and Estimating Dose Metrics: Linking Exposures to Effects for improved Chemical Risk Assessment | Introduction

475 | Predicting chemical concentrations in the exposure medium: a validated model for plastic well plates | Julita Stadnicka-Michalak, EPFL - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland

476 | The influence of a surfactant's polar head group on its in vitro distribution and cytotoxic potency | Nynke Kramer, Utrecht University, Netherlands

Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations (III) | Silver Hall Level 0

Introduction

480 | Determination of Phthalate Esters and Personal Care Products in Fish Tissues with Ultraperformance Liquid Chromatography/tandem Mass Spectrometry | Chia-Yang Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan

481 | Determination of opioid analgesics and their metabolites in municipal wastewaters by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry | Ivona Krizman Matasić, Institute Rudjer Boskovic, Croatia

Copper Hall Level 0

Hazard and exposure assessment of chemical mixtures: steps towards increasing the realism of human… Introduction

485 | Transthyretin-binding activity of complex mixtures representing the composition of housedust contaminants in dust and serum | Timo Hamers, VU University Amsterdam, Institute for Environmental Studies (IVM), Netherlands

486 | Different responses of zebrafish and human-based estrogenicity bioassays to selected environmental contaminants and their mixtures | Helene Serra, INERIS, France

Human health: use of biomonitoring data as validation of high tier human exposure models | Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

490 | High-selenium lentils in the daily diet to counteract health effects of chronic high arsenic exposure in Bangladeshi people | Judit Smits, University of Calgary, Canada

491 | Assessing multimedia/multipathway exposures to inorganic arsenic at individual level using MERLIN-Expo | Johan Bierkens, VITO NV, Belgium

Microplastics, nanoplastics and co-contaminants: Fate, effects and risk assessment for biota, the environment… Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

495 | Mechanical fragmentation of ingested microplastics by Antarctic krill | Amanda Dawson, Griffith University, Australia

496 | Adverse effects of microplastics and oxidative stress-induced MAPK/Nrf2 pathway-mediated defense mechanisms in the marine copepod Paracyclopina nana | Hye-Min Kang, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea

Increasing the relevance of toxicity assessment in LCA: in the need for a cross fertilization between RA and LCA (I) | Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

500 | Un-characterized elementary flows: to which extent is the quantification of the toxicity impact categories in LCA complete? | Erwan Saouter, EU Commission JRC, Italy

501 | Getting the chemicals right: Gaps and opportunities in addressing inorganics in life cycle assessment | Nienke Müller, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Development and validation of standardised methods and their use in regulatory frameworks | Introduction

505 | Systematic reviews - the missing link between the advancements of science and confident evaluation of environmental effects of chemicals | Francois Busquet, CAAT Europe, Belgium

506 | Species Sensitivity Distributions with Censored Values | John Green, DuPont, USA

The Arc Level +3

Global Horizon Scanning Project - open session | Paul van den Brink

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8:30 am

9:00 am

510 | Introduction to the programme and questions on vulnerability, propagation of effects, multiple stressors and effect modelling | Paul van den Brink, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands

511 | Research needs for high-throughput assessment of individual contaminants and their mixtures, both historical and emerging, and sustainable molecular design and alternatives analysis of chemical products | Bryan Brooks, Baylor University, USA

Special Session

Thursday 11 May 9:15 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 1 9:35 am

9:55 am

467 | Assessing effects of the Bt toxin Cry1Ab on trichopterans with a food-spiking method | Antonia Pott, Bundesamt für Naturschutz (BfN), Germany

468 | Development of a testing method simulating running waters for chronic testing of invertebrate species | Maria Brueggemann, Fraunhofer IME, Germany

469 | Chronic exposure to fieldrelevant fungicide concentrations impairs reproduction in the amphipod leaf-shredder Hyalella azteca | Patrick Baudy, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

Fish model species in human and environmental toxicology (I) | Jessica Legradi, Riccardo Massei, Marek Pípal Hall 400 Level +4

472 | The annual killifish Nothobranchius furzeri as a new model in long-term ecotoxicological research | Charlotte Philippe, KULeuven, Belgium

473 | Development of a test method for transgenerational effects of genetically modified crops in food using the zebrafish model | Isabelle Gabriëls, University of Antwerp, Belgium

474 | Applying Zebrafish as an integrative model in effects-directed analysis (EDA) to identify key drivers in Danube River surface water | Ying Shao, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

COFFEE BREAK

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

…risk assessment (I) | Bruno Campos, Dick Roelofs, Susana Loureiro, Carlos Barata

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

| Todd Gouin, Steven Droge, Beate Escher, Philipp Mayer 477 | The chemical exposure toxicity space (CETS) model: expanding its application to non-fish organisms including Hyalella Azteca and Lumbriculus variegatus. | Alena Celsie, Queens University, Canada

478 | Advancing TKTD modelling of developmental toxicity: Quantifying glutathione dynamics in the organogenesis stage rat embryo | K Veltman, University of Michigan, USA

479 | Future water monitoring - steps towards a panel of effect based tools based on adverse outcome pathways | Rolf Altenburger, UFC Centre for Environmental Research, Germany

483 | Screening for pharmaceuticals in wastewater and receiving seawater in Nuuk, Greenland | Leendert Vergeynst, Aarhus University (AU), Arctic Research Centre, Denmark

484 | Poster spotlight: TH094, TH095, TH097, TH116

Silver Hall Level 0

482 | Tracing micropollutants in raw and drinking water in Sweden | Lutz Ahrens, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden

…and ecological risk assessments | Rolf Altenburger, Thomas Backhaus Copper Hall Level 0

487 | Toxic mixtures in time - the sequence makes the poison | Roman Ashauer, University of York, UK

488 | A non-toxic aquatic environment: a Paracelsian exploration of European aquatic mixture impacts | Leo Posthuma, RIVM, Netherlands

489 | Poster spotlight: TH128, TH129, TH130, TH132

493 | Internal dosimetry metrics for risk assessment of endocrine disruptors - the case of bisphenol A | Spyros Karakitsios, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

494 | Poster spotlight: : TH153, TH154, TH155, TH157

COFFEE BREAK

|Kristof Demeestere, Lynn Vanhaecke

| Katleen De Brouwere, Gudrun Koppen Hall 300 Level +3

492 | The DustEx model for calculating human exposure to semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) in dust: Evaluation and validation | Natalie Von Goetz, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

Gold Hall Level 0

497 | Rapid filtering and ingestion of microplastics by marine mussels under ecologically-relevant scenarios | Cátia Gonçalves, MARE - Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, Portugal

498 | Tissue alteration in blue mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) caused by the ingestion of polyethylene microplastic particles from toothpaste | Inger Lise Nerland, Norwegian Institute for Water Research NIVA, Norway

499 | Gene expression in liver of European sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax experimentally exposed to PVC microplastics | Cristina Panti, University of Siena, Italy

| Erwan Saouter, Joane Cettier, Peter Fantke, Quentin de Hults Hall 100 Level +1

502 | A trophic chain-based approach for ranking chemicals in LCA | Eleonora Crenna, European Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy

503 | Accounting for metal speciation in terrestrial ecotoxicity: a compromise between coherence across metals and validation data availability | Geneviève Plouffe, CIRAIG - Polytechnique Montreal, Canada

504 | Rooting LCA methods in experts' knowledge: Human cost of pesticides caused by agricultural practices | Silvia Di Cesare, Università degli Studi G. dAnnunzio, Italy

COFFEE BREAK

…and human health (II) | Matthew Cole, Ana I Catarino, Maria Cristina Fossi, Albert Koelmans

507 | Ecotoxicological assessment of corrosion protection products used on hydraulic steel structures | Etienne Vermeirssen, Oekotoxzentrum EawagEPFL, Switzerland

508 | Are current algae toxicity tests suitable for the evaluation of carbonbased nanomaterials? | Julia Farkas, SINTEF Materials and Chemistry, Norway

509 | Poster spotlight: TH232, TH233

COFFEE BREAK

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

| Adam Lillicrap, Sebastian Buchinger, Kirit Wadhia

The Arc Level +3

Global Horizon Scanning Project - open session | Paul van den Brink

9:20 am

9:40 am

10:00 am

512 | Prioritisation and detection of existing and emerging environmental contaminants | Alistair Boxall, University of York, UK

513 | Predicting stressor effects on ecosystems and their services in a changing world: implications for risk communication, risk management and restoration | Lorraine Maltby, The University of Sheffield, UK

514 | Discussion on way forward

Special Session

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Thursday 11 May 11:00 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2

11:05 am

11:25 am

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

Cost effective and ecological relevant testing using invertebrate species: new insights for… Introduction

515 | The effects of DEHP, a potential endocrine disruptor, on an insect, the Egyptian cotton leafworm | Amandine Aviles, University Pierre et Marie Curie, France

516 | Biochemical and transcriptional responses in the freshwater crayfish Procambarus clarkii exposed to pharmaceutical mixture. | Julian Blasco Moreno, CSIC Spanish National Research Council ICMAN, Spain

Fish model species in human and environmental toxicology (II) | Jessica Legradi, Riccardo Massei, Marek Pípal Hall 400 Level +4

Introduction

520 | Toxicity and neurotoxicity profiling of European sediments samples with Danio rerio embryos: A novel multi endpoints assay | Riccardo Massei, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ, Germany

521 | Zebrafish as a Sensitive Model for Assessment of Neurotoxic Effects of Nanoplastics | Qiqi Chen, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

Determining population relevance of ecotoxicological effects | James Wheeler, Lennart Weltje, David Dreier The Arc Level +3

Introduction

525 | The 'so what' question: when is an effect actually an effect? | Amy Brooks, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK

526 | Population-Relevant Endpoints in Ecotoxicological Hazard and Risk Assessment Endocrine-active Substances (EAS) | Laurent Lagadic, Bayer AG, Crop Science Division, Germany

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

Advances in Exposure Modelling: Bridging the gap between research and application| Introduction

530 | Modelling exposure to ionizing substances with spatial and temporal resolved models: A case study for multiple pharmaceuticals in the Baltic area | Claudia Lindim, Stockholm University, Sweden

531 | European environmental scenarios of chemical bioavailability in freshwater systems | Melissa Morselli, University of Insubria, Italy

Silver Hall Level 0

Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations (IV) | Introduction

535 | Characterization of surface- and wastewater samples using the planar Yeast Estrogen Screen (pYES) | Sebastian Buchinger, Federal Institute of Hydrology, Germany

536 | Breaking new ground in high-throughput analysis: MALDI-TOF MS for the quantification of explosives in contaminated soil | Sascha Kober, TUAS Wildau, Germany

Human health: risk assessment of chemicals and PM2.5 in the environment: approaches… Hall 300 Level +3

Introduction

540 | Exposure to heavy metals, contaminated soil, diet and children neurodevelopment | Denis Sarigiannis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

541 | Indoor Sources of and Human Exposure to Brominated Flame Retardants (BFRs) and Phthalate Esters (PAEs) | Joseph Okeme, University of Toronto, Canada

Improving the environmental assessment of complex composition substances and mixtures for… Copper Hall Level 0

Introduction

545 | An improved approach for the ecological risk assessment of UVCBs at Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) | Mark Bonnell, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada

546 | Risk assessment and management of UVCBs with the REACH Regulation | Paul Ryan, European Chemical Agency ECHA, Finland

Microplastics, nanoplastics and co-contaminants: Fate, effects and risk assessment for biota, the environment…

Gold Hall Level 0

Introduction

550 | Do microplastics contaminate the atmospheric environment? | Stephanie Wright, Kings College London, UK

551 | What happens to polyethylene in the ocean? | Therese Karlsson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden

Increasing the relevance of toxicity assessment in LCA: in the need for a cross fertilization between RA… Hall 100 Level +1

Introduction

555 | Harmonizing human exposure and toxicity characterization | Peter Fantke, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

556 | A method for application-specific human health risk estimation from chemical exposure in an LCA context | Tomas Rydberg, IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute, Sweden

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

Environmental risk assessment of biocides: regulatory requirements, challenges and consequences|

100

Introduction

560 | Introductory talk: Working groups involved in the environmental assessment of biocides and latest developments of guidance and guidancerelated documents | Heike Schimmelpfennig, European Chemicals Agency ECHA, Finland

561 | Comparative environmental risk assessment of biocides - a chance to get better products | Johannes Ranke, University of Bremen, Germany

Thursday 11 May 11:45 am

Morning Platform Presentations Part 2 12:05 pm

12:25 pm

517 | BDE-47 induces oxidative stress, activates MAPK signalling pathway, and elevates de novo lipogenesis in the copepod Paracyclopina nana | Min-Chul Lee, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea

518 | Mechanisms of action of compounds that enhance storage lipid accumulation in Daphnia magna. | Carlos Barata, CSIC, Spain

519 | D-counter: Automatic Organism Counting and Characterization in Ecotoxicology assays | Sizenando Abreu, University of Aveiro, Portugal

Hall 400 Level +4

Fish model species in human and environmental toxicology (II) | Jessica Legradi, Riccardo Massei, Marek Pípal 522 | Toxicity of bifenthrin during early zebrafish (Danio rerio) development | Daniel Frank, Technical University of Munich, Germany

523 | Bioaccumulation and biological effects of tritiated water using zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryo-larvae model | Caroline Arcanjo, IRSN/PRP-ENV/LECO, France

524 | Poster spotlight: TH035, TH036, TH051, TH053

LUNCH BREAK

Meeting Studio 311 & 312 Level +3

…environmental risk assessment (II) | Bruno Campos, Dick Roelofs, Susana Loureiro, Carlos Barata

The Arc Level +3

Determining population relevance of ecotoxicological effects | James Wheeler, Lennart Weltje, David Dreier 527 | Secondary Sex Characteristics How can changes be interpreted with respect to ED mediated adverse effects? | Juergen Arning, German Environment Agency, Germany

528 | Modelling breeding success in birds potentially exposed to treated seed | Alan Lawrence, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK

529 | Methods for quantitative weight of evidence assessment of higher tier studies on the toxicity and risks of neonicotinoid insecticides in honeybees | Keith Solomon, University of Guelph, Canada

533 | SimpleBox approach to exposure modeling of nanomaterials - the next step! | Joris Quik, RIVM, Netherlands

534 | Can release rates be estimated well enough to allow 'inverse posteriorization' of REACH substances? | Dik van de Meent, RIVM, Netherlands

538 | The Story of TCPP Indoors and Outdoors: Sources, Concentrations and Fate | Miriam Diamond, University of Toronto, Canada

539 | Emerging Atmospheric Contaminants in the Canadian Great Lakes Basin | Hayley Hung, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada

Silver Hall Level 0

| Kristof Demeestere, Lynn Vanhaecke 537 | Bioimaging of the Fungicide Fludioxonil in Formulation-Coated Wheat Seeds utilising ToF-SIMS | Valerio Converso, Imperial College London South Kensington Campus, UK

LUNCH BREAK

Meeting Studio 313 & 315 Level +3

| Todd Gouin, Antonio Di Guardo 532 | Evaluation of a global multiscale multimedia fate model framework applied to home and personal care products in Asia | Olivier Jolliet, University of Michigan, USA

Hall 300 Level +3

…and case studies | Katleen De Brouwere, Gudrun Koppen 542 | SAFR®: Applying a new hazard and exposure assessment approach for responsible fire safety solutions | Smadar Admon, IMI TAMI Institute for R&D Ltd, Israel

543 | Sex-specific Associations between Particulate Matter Exposure and Gene Expression in Independent Discovery and Validation Cohorts of Middle-aged Men and Women | Karen Vrijens, Universiteit Hasselt, Belgium

544 | Spatial variation of secondary inorganic PM2.5 exposure: from exposure magnitude to exposure distance | Katerina Stylianou, University of Michigan - School of Public Health, USA

547 | Report on the RIFM/ECETOC Workshop: Developing a strategy to improve the environmental risk assessment of difficult to test multicomponent substances | Joop de Knecht, RIVM, Netherlands

548 | Unknown or Variable Composition, Complex reaction products or Biological materials and still the same; is this possible? | Eleni Vaiopoulou, CONCAWE, Belgium

549 | Addressing combined toxicity in the environmental risk assessment of inorganic UVCBs | Koen Oorts, ARCHE, Belgium

Gold Hall Level 0

…and human health (III) | Matthew Cole, Ana I Catarino, Maria Cristina Fossi, Albert Koelmans 552 | Marine snows: a vector of transport of microplastic to the benthos and its biological implications. | Adam Porter, University of Exeter, UK

553 | Desorption of organic wastewater contaminants from microplastic particles in presence of natural dissolved substances | Sven Seidensticker, University of Tuebingen, Germany

LUNCH BREAK

Copper Hall Level 0

…Chemicals Management | Hugo Waeterschoot, Daniel Salvito, Robert Diderich, Romanas Cesnaitis

554 | Do microplastics really act as vectors of organic pollutants to marine zooplankton? Experiments with pyrene and nonylphenol spiked polyethylene using Paracentrotus lividus larvae. | Ricardo Beiras, Universidade de Vigo, Spain

557 | Learnings from LCA-based methods: should chemicals in food packaging be a priority focus to protect human health? | Alexi Ernstoff, Quantis, Switzerland

558 | Modeling indoor occupational air emissions of nanomaterials for lifecycle assessment | Guido Sonnemann, University of Bordeaux, France

559 | Towards a Life Cycle Based Chemical Alternative Assessment (LCAA) | Olivier Jolliet, University of Michigan, USA

563 | Studies to support the national environmental risk assessment on antifouling products for leisure boats | Michael Feibicke, Umweltbundesamt, Germany

564 | The use of biocides to disinfect the ballast water of ships: protection of the marine environment from invasive species | Anja Kehrer, Federal Environment Agency, Germany

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Level +3

| Anja Kehrer, Anja Coors 562 | Managing environmental risk assessment of antifouling products regulatory challenges | Birgitte Cordua, The Danish Environmental Protection Agency, Denmark

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LUNCH BREAK

Hall 100 Level +1

…and LCA (II) | Erwan Saouter, Joane Cettier, Peter Fantke, Quentin de Hults

Thursday 11 May Poster Sessions 07:30 am–08:30 am 10:15 am–11:00 am 12:45 pm–2:45 pm 2:45 pm–3:15 pm

Poster setup Poster viewing Poster viewing Poster take-down

Cost effective and ecological relevant testing using invertebrate species: new insights for environmental risk assessment (P) | Bruno Campos, Dick Roelofs, Susana Loureiro, Carlos Barata TH001 | Adverse effects of methylmercury (MeHg) on life parameters, antioxidative system, and MAPK signal pathways in the copepod Tigriopus japonicus | YoungHwan Lee, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea TH002 | Corbicula fluminea gene expression modulated by nCeO2 exposure and salinity | Vanessa Koehle-Divo, LIEC - Université de Lorraine - CNRS, France TH003 | Adverse effects of BDE-47 on life cycle parameters, antioxidant system, and activation of MAPK signaling pathway in the rotifer Brachionus koreanus | Jun Chul Park, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea TH004 | Developing biomarkers of monoamine and neural development in crustaceans. | Rachel Lock, University of Portsmouth, UK TH005 | Biomarkers of intersexuality and reproductive dysfunction in crustaceans | Alex Ford, University of Portsmouth, UK TH006 | Development of biomarker genes for endocrine disruption assessment in the non-model crustacean species Gammarus fossarum | Duarte Gouveia, Irstea Lyon, France TH007 | Coupled application of antioxidant defence response and embryo development in amphipod crustaceans in the assessment of sediment toxicity | Kari Lehtonen, Finnish Environment Institute, Finland TH008 | Developmental/reproductive effects and expression of ecdysone-related genes in Chironomus riparius after exposure to reclaimed water and its fortification with triclosan and carbamazepine. | Paloma Sanchez-Arguello, INIA - National Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain TH009 | The effects of copper and diuron on the activity of the sodium/potassium and calcium-ATPase during the embryo-larval development of the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas | Julien Rouxel, IFREMER, France TH010 | Suitabiltiy of Enchytraeids as Indicator Organisms for Nanoparticle Toxicity in Terrestrial and Aquatic Systems | Davorka Hackenberger, Josip Juraj Strossmayer University in Osijek Department of Biology, Croatia TH011 | Phenotypic defects in Gammarus fossarum exposed to fenoxycarb as embryo | Hélène Arambourou, Irstea Lyon, France TH012 | Acute toxicity assessment of sediment in an area under the influence of a chlorinated outfall with Parhyale hawaiensis | Arthur Rocha, University of Campinas, Brazil TH013 | Sediment-associated Cu influence T tubifex: Bioturbation & correlation among individual-level endpoints | Amalie Thit

102

Poster Presentations Jensen, Roskilde University, Denmark TH014 | A saponin method for controlling entrapment of water flea | Youn-Joo An, Konkuk University, South Korea TH015 | Investigation of the sensitivity towards a-cypermethrin is life-stage dependent in Tenebrio molitor | Nanna Pedersen, Copenhagen University, Denmark TH016 | Optimization of a flow-through system for Daphnia magna chronic toxicity testing following OECD Guideline 211 | Corinna Beyer, Innovative Environmental Services IES Ltd, Switzerland TH017 | Effects of aquatic contamination and food limitation on chironomid larval morphology | Bryant Gagliardi, The University of Melbourne , Australia TH018 | Cost effective approaches to assessing the impacts of radiation on aquatic invertebrates: fecundity and fluctuating asymmetry in Asellus aquaticus at Chernobyl | Neil Fuller, University of Portsmouth, UK TH019 | Behavioral and regeneration endpoints to evaluate impacts of PAHs on planarians | João Pestana, CESAM & University of Aveiro, Portugal TH020 | The survival and feeding rate of Daphnia for acute toxicity assessment of water environment | Yury Grigorev, Siberian Federal University, Russian Federation TH021 | Development of a freshwater molluscan embryo bioassay with Lymnaea stagnalis: a beneficial standalone assay, and complimentary appendment to an existing OECD Test Guideline. | Craig Stenton, Cefas, UK

Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry, Branch Pszczyna, Poland TH030 | The comparison of the sensitivity of the collembolan, Folsomia candida and the earthworm, Eisenia fetida to pesticides | Weronika Dec, Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry, Branch Pszczyna, Poland TH031 | Combining assessment of apical endpoints and gene expression on the freshwater snail Physa acuta after exposure to reclaimed water. | Paloma Sanchez-Arguello, INIA - National Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain TH032 | Development and test of a new micro-impedance sensor system for water quality monitoring | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany TH033 | Ecotoxicological assessment of phosphate recyclates from sewage sludges | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany

Fish model species in human and environmental toxicology (P) | Jessica Legradi, Riccardo Massei, Marek Pípal TH034 | Thyroid hormone disrupting effects in zebrafish exposed to compounds found in indoor environments | Jessica Legradi, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands TH035 | Developmental toxicity of cyanobacterial water bloom extracts | Marek Pípal, Masaryk University, Faculty of Science, RECETOX, Czech Republic TH036 | Carbon nanopowder acts as a Trojanhorse for benzo(a)pyrene in Danio rerio embryos | Andrea Binelli, University of Milan, Italy

TH022 | A comparative assessment of chronic toxicity between freshwater (Daphnia magna) and marine (Tisbe battaligai) test species | Michelle Fox, Scymaris Ltd, UK

TH037 | Effects of agro-pesticide cypermethrin on haematology of a freshwater catfish Mystus cavasius | Kizar Sumon, Bangladesh Agricultural University, Bangladesh

TH023 | Validation of a short-term, in vivo screening method for detecting chemicals with juvenile hormone activity using adult Daphnia magna(JHSST) | Norihisa Tatarazako, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan

TH038 | New endpoint of tail length in fathead minnow embryo-larval tests | Joanne Parrott, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada

TH024 | Toxicity of microbial insecticides towards the non-target species Chironomus riparius | João Pestana, CESAM & University of Aveiro, Portugal TH025 | Infuence of biochar particle sizes on biota responses | Marija Prodana, University of Aveiro & CESAM, Portugal TH026 | The enantioselective synergism of the fungicide imazalil with the pyrethroid α-cypermethrin towards Chironomus riparius | Janna Kuhlmann, Copenhagen University, Denmark TH027 | Comparative toxicity assessment of lead and mancozeb on two Daphnia species. | Giuliana Araujo, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal TH028 | Functional endpoints in ecotoxicology: a case study on the benthic community in freshwater indoor microcosms | Michael Faupel, Rifcon GmbH, Germany TH029 | The impact of pesticides on the quantitative composition of the cellular components (coelomocytes) of the hemolymph with coelomic fluid of earthworms (Eisenia fetida) | Weronika Dec,

TH039 | Interaction of rainbow trout CYP450 with pharmaceuticals present in aquatic environment | Viktoriia Burkina, University of South Bohemia in Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic TH040 | Ultra Sensitive Cyprinid Vitellogenin ELISA: A new tool allowing accurate determination of vitellogenin in male and juvenile fish | Reinhard Moeller, TECOmedical AG, Switzerland TH041 | The use of different histochemical staining as an enrichment of histopathological evaluation of the toxicity of chemicals in the fish - the impact on skin. | Tina Turek, Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry Branch Pszczyna, Poland TH042 | Assessment of chemical biotransformation using the fish in vitro metabolism assay: A fish species comparison. | Karla Johanning, KJ Scientific LLC, USA TH043 | Developing Screening Assays in Zebrafish | Francis Smet, Union Biometrica Inc., Belgium TH044 | Ecotoxicological assessment of novel potential formicide: in vitro cytotoxic effects in zebrafish (Danio rerio) hepatocytes | Marina Marques Bonomo, Federal University of Sao

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Thursday 11 May Carlos, Brazil TH045 | A Temporal High-Resolution Investigation of the Ah-Receptor Cascade during Early Development of Zebrafish (Danio rerio) after Chemical Exposure | Henriette Meyer-Alert, RWTH Aachen University, Germany TH046 | Ontogeny of steroid and thyroid hormone metabolism gene transcription during zebrafish embryo-larval development | Jelena Periz Stanacev, University of Antwerp, Belgium TH047 | Behavioral analysis and toxicoproteomics profiling of mianserin exposure of zebrafish | Kristien Van Camp, Systemic Physiological and Ecotoxicological Research (SPHERE), University of Antwerp, Belgium TH048 | Neurodevelopment related transcriptome alterations in zebrafish embryo after exposure to valproic acid | Sangwoo Lee, Seoul National University, South Korea

Poster Presentations TH060 | Continuous and intermittent exposure to the toxigenic cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa produces different negative effects on the survival and reproduction of Daphnia curvirostris | Felipe Fernando Martínez-Jerónimo, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas-I.P.N., Mexico TH061 | Effects of long term exposure to imidacloprid on Asellus aquaticus populations | Paul van den Brink, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Netherlands TH062 | Macromolecular, morphological and population effects in the cladoceran Simocephalus mixtus exposed to glyphosate (FAENA®) | Fernando Martinez-Jeronimo, Mexico Regional Chapter, Mexico TH063 | Determining the population relevance of radiation-induced reproductive effects in the marine amphipod, Echinogammarus marinus | Neil Fuller, University of Portsmouth, UK

TH049 | Analysis of the relationship between effects in the locomotor activity and morphological alterations induced by biocides in zebrafish embryos | Iñaki Iturria, BioBide, Spain

TH064 | Effects of an aquaculture pesticide (diflubenzuron) on non-target shrimp populations: from lab experiments to population-level endpoints | Jannicke Moe, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Norway

TH050 | Toxic effects of kaolin residues on embryos, juveniles and adults of zebrafish Danio rerio | Alma Sobrino-Figueroa, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa, Mexico

TH065 | Assessing the spatial distribution of the gastropod Olivella semistriata by using whole-sediment avoidance and recolonization assays | Julián Blasco, Institute of Marine Sciences of Andalusia (CSIC), Spain

TH051 | pH-Dependent Effects of β-Blockers in Zebrafish Embryos | Lisa Bittner, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany

TH066 | Direct Blue 15 dye affects differently organisms of different trophic levels. A comparative study with microalgae, cladocerans, and zebrafish embryos | Miriam Hernández, Instituto Politecnico Nacional, Mexico

TH052 | Effects of sublethal dietary exposure of Microcystis aeruginosa and the toxin microcystin-LR on target-gene expression profiles, histopathology and gut microbiota in adult zebrafish | Dalia Sabrei, Heriot-Watt University, UK TH053 | Mixture-specific gene expression in zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos exposed to perfluorooctane sulfonate, perfluorohexanoic acid and 3,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl. | Melanie Blanc, Orebro University, Sweden TH054 | Interference of hepatotoxicity with endocrine activity in fish | Lisa Baumann, University of Heidelberg, Germany TH055 | Coexposure effects of 17α-ethinylestradiol in the presence of microand nanoplastic on embryo development and larvae behavior of Danio rerio | Michael Gundlach, RWTH Aachen University, Germany TH056 | Effects of bisphenol SIP on HPG axis and reproduction in zebrafish (Danio rerio) | Jiyun Lee, Yongin University, South Korea TH057 | Response of zebrafish and Japanese medaka to imidacloprid: a comparative study | Caroline Vignet, Eawag, Switzerland

Determining population relevance of ecotoxicological effects (P) | James Wheeler, Lennart Weltje, David Dreier TH058 | Deriving ecologically relevant endpoints for wild mammal risk assessment | Amy Brooks, Cambridge Environmental Assessments, UK TH059 | Analysis of relation between bodyweight, survival and reproductive success in Common voles (Microtus arvalis) | Magnus Wang, WSC Scientific GmbH, Germany

Yunah Lee, Seoul National University, South Korea TH075 | Influence of climate change (CC) on the multimedia distribution of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and polychlorinated dibenzo dioxins/furans (PCDD/Fs) | Ayoung Kwon, Seoul National University, South Korea TH076 | Development of the IIAQ-CC model to assess the impacts of climate change on the indoor air quality | Lia Chang, Seoul National University, South Korea TH077 | A Double-Diffusion Model to Quantify the Adsorption Effects of Indoor Surfaces on the Exposure to Chemicals Encapsulated in Products | Lei Huang, University of Michigan, USA TH078 | Environmental exposure scenario for reagents used in-vitro diagnostics | Karina Urmann, Arcadis Schweiz LTD, Switzerland TH079 | Integrated external and internal exposure to chemicals: the INTEGRA computational platform | Spyros Karakitsios, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece TH080 | Regional scale modelling of PCBs from a highly contaminated site in Northern Italy | Elisa Terzaghi, University of Insubria (Como), Italy TH081 | Chemical Preservation of Semivolatile PAH Compounds at Ambient Temperature: A Sediment Sample Holding Time Study | Ray Arnold, Chevron Energy Technology Company, USA TH082 | Risk assessment performed by using multiple lines of evidence: a case study with soil gas and flux chamber measures | Ian Ross, ARCADIS, UK

TH067 | A review of the evidence for endocrine disrupting effects of current-use chemicals on wildlife populations | Lennart Weltje, BASF SE, Germany

TH083 | Fertilizers Environmental Exposure Tool: Advances in environmental exposure assessment of micronutrients in fertilizers | Sabine Navis, Arche consulting, Belgium

TH068 | Field based ECx - approach to NTA Risk assessment | Frank Bakker, EurofinsMitox, Netherlands

TH084 | Mathematical model for radionuclide transport affected by rate-limited sorption | Jui-Sheng Chen, National Central University, Taiwan

TH069 | Evaluating Ecological Recovery in Mechanistic Effect Models for Environmental Risk Assessment | Oliver Jakoby, Rifcon GmbH, Germany

TH085 | How Advances in Exposure Modelling can technically become included in Regulatory Context | Bernhard Jene, BASF SE, Germany

TH070 | A new screening approach for testing natural soil communities in the laboratory | Andreas Toschki, gaiac Research Institute for Ecosystem Analysis and Assessment, Germany

TH086 | Influence of uncertainty on decisionmaking for reduction of pharmaceuticals in rivers | V Gimeno Melia, Catalan Institute for Water Research (ICRA), Spain

TH071 | Age Sensitivity Distribution of the Springtail Folsomia candida: An Aquatic Test Approach | Afolarin Ogungbemi, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

TH087 | SETAC Exposure Modeling Interest Group | Todd Gouin, Unilever, UK

Advances in Exposure Modelling: Bridging the gap between research and application (P) | Todd Gouin, Antonio Di Guardo TH072 | Improving industrial on-site environmental exposure assessment by adapting SimpleTreat | Cyril Durou, CEHTRA SAS, France

IG

Measuring and Estimating Dose Metrics: Linking Exposures to Effects for improved Chemical Risk Assessment (P) | Todd Gouin, Steven Droge, Beate Escher, Philipp Mayer TH088 | Relating in vitro to in vivo: bioavailability an essential element | Todd Gouin, Unilever, UK

TH073 | Industrial SimpleTreat - an updated model for predicting the fate of chemicals which enter industrial wastewater systems; model validation and use in a regulatory context | Thomas Austin, SHELL, UK

TH089 | Using predicted and measured physicochemical properties for better planning and interpretation of toxicity tests | Luise Henneberger, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH - UFZ, Germany

TH074 | Implications of prediction of climate change impacts on the fate and transport of pollutants in multimedia environment. |

TH090 | Expanding the evaluation of the chemical activity hypothesis for toxicity

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Thursday 11 May

Poster Presentations

assessment | James Armitage, University of Toronto - Scarborough, Canada TH091 | Measuring aquatic mixture toxicity by the direct application of equilibrium passive samplers in passive dosing mode | Kilian Smith, RWTH Aachen University, Germany TH092 | Exposure and Risk Assessment for Agricultural Applicator to Insecticide Chlorantraniliprole during Rice Cultivation in Paddy Field using Whole Body Dosimetry | Jiho Lee, Seoul National University, South Korea TH093 | Various approaches for equilibrium passive sampling of POPs in lean and lipid rich fish tissue | Foppe Smedes, RECETOX, Czech Republic

Organic micropollutants in the environment: analytical challenges and engineering innovations (P2) | Kristof Demeestere, Lynn Vanhaecke TH094 | Identification of emerging contaminants from a waste water influenced River using high resolution accurate mass LC/ MS, chemometrics and statistical analysis | Tarun Anumol, Agilent Technologies Inc., USA TH095 | Micro-pollutants along the river Rhine investigated by high-resolution mass spectrometric approaches | Christian Zwiener, Environmental Analytical Chemistry, Center for Applied Geoscience, University of Tuebingen, Germany

TH105 | Novel method optimization for estrogenic activity assessment of steroid hormones in water using DGT and the ERECALUX bioassay | Wei Guo, Vrije universiteit Brussel, Belgium TH106 | Virtual Norwegian Environmental Specimen Bank | Eivind Farmen, Norwegian Environment Agency, Norway TH107 | Determination of illicit drugs in sewage treatment plants in Adana, Turkey | Serdar Kilercioglu, Cukurova University, Turkey TH108 | Studies on Some Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) at Nubarashen Landfill | Anahit Aleksandryan, Hazardous Substances & Waste Policy Division, Armenia TH109 | Occurrence and spatial distribution of six endocrine disrupting compounds in surface- and groundwaters of the Romagna area (North Italy) | Emanuela Pignotti, Alma Mater Studiorum - University of Bologna, Italy TH110 | Emerging contaminants in river water samples from Brazil | Eny Vieira, Sao Paulo University, Brazil

TH096 | Joint nordic screening of emergent pollutants - Efficient tool for developing monitoring and regulation | Eivind Farmen, Norwegian Environment Agency, Norway TH097 | Discovery of Novel Fluorinated and Chlorinated Contaminants in Wildlife by Non-Target HPLC-Orbitrap with In-Source Fragmentation Flagging | Yanna Liu, University of Alberta, Canada TH098 | Estimating Organophosphate Ester (OPE) Transport, Fate and Emissions in Toronto, Canada using the Multimedia Urban Model (MUM) | Joseph Okeme, University of Toronto, Canada TH099 | Ecotoxicological risk assessment of traffic-related non-exhaust emissions | Wiebke Kathmann, Federal Institute of Hydrology, Germany TH100 | Synthesis of reference substances and method development for the analysis of chlorinated and brominated methanesulfonic acids in environmental and drinking water samples | Daniel Zahn, Hochschule Fresenius, University of Applied Sciences, Germany TH101 | Accurate mass screening of pesticides residues in fresh water and sediments using LC-Hybrid LTQ/Orbitrap-MS | Triantafyllos Albanis, University of Ioannina, Greece TH102 | Investigation of psychiatric drugs and their metabolites in wastewaters and surface waters using liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution-orbitrap mass spectrometry | Triantafyllos Albanis, University of Ioannina, Greece TH103 | A comprehensive analytical method for determination of dechloranes and novel brominated flame retardants in biota and environmental matrices | Frank Neugebauer, Eurofins GfA Lab Service GmbH, Germany

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TH104 | Identification of emerging contaminants in the environment by LC/QTOF MS combined with commercial and opensource MS/MS libraries | Thierry Faye, Agilent Technologies, France

TH111 | Determination of human pharmaceuticals on Sucullu and Uluborlu dam lakes (Antalya basin, Turkey) | Fatma CEVIK, University of Cukurova, Turkey TH112 | Do pit waters from coal mines contribute to PCB contamination of surface waters? | Sabine Schaefer, Federal Institute of Hydrology, Germany

Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan TH122 | Development of an HPLC-MS/ MS Method to Measure Chlordecone's Metabolites in Livestock Liver | Agnès Fournier, Université de Lorraine UL, France TH123 | Development of cherry tomato analytical reference material for acetamiprid, carbendazim, diethofencarb, pyridaben, pyriproxyfen | Jong-Hwan Kim, Korea Institute of Korea KIT, South Korea TH124 | Development of cherry tomato analytical reference material for buprofezin, tebuconazole, tebufenozide, tetraconazole, pyraclostrobin | Jong-Hwan Kim, Korea Institute of Korea KIT, South Korea TH125 | Identification of fungicides and fungal toxin(Aflatoxin) in grain tea using LCHRMS | Kim Deokwon, Changwon National University, South Korea TH126 | Fiber optic color sensor for determination of chemical parameters in different water bodies | Boris Obrovski, Faculty of Technical Sciences, Serbia TH127 | A strategy to mitigate in a sustainable way ammonia losses by volatilization in the environment through coating urea in a spouted bed | Tamiris da Costa, University of Aveiro, Portugal

Hazard and exposure assessment of chemical mixtures: steps towards increasing the realism of human and ecological risk assessments (P) | Rolf Altenburger, Thomas Backhaus TH128 | Exploring the synergistic potential of azole fungicides in Gammarus pulex | Andrea Rösch, Eawag, Switzerland

TH113 | Occurrence of pharmaceuticals and personal care products in Konya closed basin lakes, Turkey | Evsen Guzel, University of Cukurova, Turkey

TH129 | Review of case studies on the human and environmental risk assessment of chemical mixtures | Aude Kienzler, European. Commission - Joint Research Centre, Italy

TH114 | How far have plasticizers and additives penetrated our aquatic environment? | Steve Huysman, Ghent University, Belgium

TH130 | Challenges and Chances in Regulatory Ecotoxicological Mixture Toxicity Assessment for Plant Protection Products | Judith Neuwöhner, Rifcon GmbH, Germany

TH115 | Measuring emerging organic micropollutants in the North Sea using high-resolution Orbitrap mass spectrometry: method validation and occurrence in harbour and open sea | Francis Vanryckeghem, Ghent University, Belgium

TH131 | Evaluation of hazard-relevant metal impurity profiles in chemicals derived from natural source materials | Ralf Arno Wess, Envigo CRS (Switzerland) Ltd., Switzerland

TH116 | Occurrence of oxygenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in mussels at the Belgian coast | Bavo De Witte, ILVO, Belgium

TH132 | Pesticides in paddy soil and rice from the Kingdom of Thailand: Fate and health risk assessment | Naranun Khammanee, Tongji University, China

TH117 | Organophosphate flame retardants in L'Albufera Natural Park (Valencia, Spain). | Maria Lorenzo, Universitat de Valencia, Spain

TH133 | Pesticides do rarely come alone, except in risk assessment - Typical treatment regimes | Bjorn Scholz-Starke, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

TH118 | Chlorinated benzenes in organs of fishes from Lake Dongting | Gaofeng Zhao, China IWHR, China

TH134 | Addressing chemical mixtures in fish consumption advisories | Nilima Gandhi, University of Toronto, Canada

TH119 | Polychlorinated naphthalenes (PCNs) in Great Lakes fish | Nilima Gandhi, University of Toronto, Canada

TH135 | Toxicity of Quaternary Ammonium Compounds (QACs) to aquatic non-target microorganisms: tests with single compounds and mixtures | Valeria Di Nica, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy

TH120 | Exposure Assessment of Residual Organochlorine Pesticides (OCPs) in Paddy and Upland Soils in Korea | ByungJun Park, National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, RDA, South Korea TH121 | Concentrations of neonicotinoid insecticides in honey, pollen, honey bees and honey products in Japan | Yutaka Kameda,

TH136 | Synergic effects of surfactants on the toxicity of carbamazepine and triclosan in aquatic vertebrates and invertebrates | Eulalia Beltrán, INIA - National Institute for Agricultural and Food Research and Technology, Spain

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Thursday 11 May

Poster Presentations

TH137 | Exploring community based environmental hazard assessments of mixtures based on mode-of-action based approaches | Miriam Leon Paumen, ExxonMobil Biomedical Sciences, Belgium

Human health: linking environmental exposure and human biomonitoring data for human health risk assessment of chemicals (P) | Katleen De Brouwere, Gudrun Koppen

Improving the environmental assessment of complex composition substances and mixtures for Chemicals Management (P) | Hugo Waeterschoot, Daniel Salvito, Robert Diderich, Romanas Cesnaitis

TH138 | Micropollutants in European Rivers: A Mode of Action Survey to Support the Development of Effect Based-Tools for Water Monitoring | Wibke Busch, Helmholtz centre for environmental research - UFZ, Germany

TH153 | Modelling Pb blood concentrations in pre-school children living in a residential setting using MERLIN-Expo | Johan Bierkens, VITO, Belgium

TH168 | Assessment of SID of inorganic UVCBs in recycling industry | Federica Iaccino, Arche consulting, Belgium

TH139 | Assessment of acute toxicity of industrial effluents using Daphnia magna | Jigar Rana, Jai Research Foundation, India TH140 | Toxicity of complex mixtures of emerging pollutants in groundwater systems | Rui Morgado, University of Aveiro, Portugal TH141 | Building spatial composite indicators to identify environmental health risk areas in Walloon region | Sarah Habran, ISSeP, Belgium TH142 | Adaptation of the WHO/IPCS framework on mixtures assessment to regulatory environmental risk assessment practices | Kunihiko Yamazaki, Ministry of the Environment, Japan TH143 | Human health Risk Characterisation of inorganic complex materials in the workplace | Frederik Verdonck, ARCHE, Belgium TH144 | A Case Study on Current Risk Characterization Methods for Occupational Exposure to Chemical Mixtures | Hyeri Jeong, KIST Europe, Germany TH145 | Pesticides do rarely come alone, except in risk assessment - Outline and first results of the project COMBITOX | Matthias Liess, UFZ Center for Environmental Research, Germany

TH154 | Linking biomonitoring data to human health risk assessment for lead exposureassociate anemia risk among factory workers | Yi-Jun Lin, National Taiwan University, Taiwan TH155 | Human exposure and risks of brominated flame retardants due to their elevated levels in dust and air in three types of indoor environment | Katarína Bányiová, Masaryk University, Czech Republic TH156 | Phthalates in floor dust and exposure of children based on urinary phthalates metabolites | Sunmi Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea TH157 | Endocrine disruptive potentials of indoor air and dust samples assessed with human cell models in vitro | Zuzana Novakova, Masaryk University, Czech Republic TH158 | Risk assessment on aggregate exposure to pesticide of agricultural operator | Hie Ling Wong, University of York, UK TH159 | Integrated exposure assessment to PAHs arising from the use of petroleum substances and comparison with biomonitoring data | Katleen De Brouwere, VITO NV, Belgium TH160 | Accumulative effects of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) environmental exposure on telomere length | Nan Lin, Peking University, China

TH146 | Eco-friendly Product Design Support Tool (Eco-PDS) for Screening Mixture Toxicity of Chemical Products | Jongwoon Kim, KIST Europe, Germany

TH161 | Biomonitoring of human exposure to benzene and toluene in oil extraction area of Muanda, Congo | Matteo Creta, KU Leuven, Belgium

TH147 | Risk assessment of florists’ exposure to insecticide residues during normal professional tasks | Khaoula Toumi, Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech/ULg, Belgium

TH162 | A probabilistic risk assessment for the impact of airborne paraquat-associated exposures on Parkinson's disease | YingFei Yang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan

TH148 | Human health risk assessment of POPs in agricultural soils from Turkey | Emine Can Güven, Akdeniz University, Turkey

TH163 | Development and evolution of pesticides risks indicators to human health in Belgium and Wallonia | Arnaud Giusti, ISSeP, Belgium

TH149 | Derivation of Novel Uncertainty Factors for Health Risk Assessment: Application to Cleaning Product Ingredients | Zhen Wang, Baylor University, USA TH150 | High Throughput Development of No Observable Adverse Effects Levels for Use in Screening Level Human Health Risk Assessment of Cleaning Product Ingredients | William Scott, Baylor University, USA TH151 | A critical overview of the mixture ecotoxicity data with pharmaceuticals and personal care products reported in the last 16 years | Aline Godoy, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil TH152 | First screening for (eco)toxicity testing of multi-component metal oxide nanomaterials | Maria Diez, Leitat Technological Center, Spain

TH171 | Practical Considerations for PBT Assessment of Complex Mixtures with Difficult Properties | Damien Carson, Blue Frog Scientifiic Limited, UK TH172 | Do natural plant extract substances, such as Essential oils, PBT candidates ? | Cyril Durou, CEHTRA SAS, France TH173 | Assessing the Bioconcentration Potential of Fragrance Ingredients in Fish via Dietary Exposure with Internal Chemical Benchmarking | Changer Chen, Stockholm University, Sweden TH174 | Determination of PNEC values for risk assessment of natural complex mixtures: options and limits | Cyril Durou, CEHTRA SAS, France TH175 | Evaluating uncertainties in the risk assessment framework for petroleum hydrocarbons | Aaron Redman, Exxon Mobil Biomedical Sciences, USA TH176 | Practical aspects in the aquatic toxicity testing of complex fragrance ingredients, synthetic or of natural origin (multi-constituents and UVCBs) | Sylvia Gimeno, Firmenich, Belgium TH177 | Test solution preparation for UVCB substances - a review of the water accommodated fraction methodology | James Dawick, Shell Health, UK

TH180 | Matrix effects, bioavailability/ bioaccessibility and the risk assessment of grease thickeners in situ in base oil | Rhiannon Smith, wca, UK TH181 | Physicochemical and biological characteristics of leachate from biochar produced from malt spent rootlets | Margarita Dormousoglou, University of Patras, Greece

TH165 | Assessing BPA intake from canned food consumption based on web survey | Szu-Chieh Chen, Chung Shan Medical University, Taiwan

Microplastics, nanoplastics and cocontaminants: Fate, effects and risk assessment for biota, the environment and human health (P) | Matthew Cole, Ana I Catarino, Maria Cristina Fossi, Albert Koelmans

TH166 | Toxicological properties of PM10: relationships with markers for wood burning and traffic and association with health biomarkers in an adolescent population of Flanders | Gudrun Koppen, VITO, Belgium

IG

TH170 | UVCB substances: Methodology for substance identification and application to fate and hazard assessment | Stela Kutsarova, University of Zlatarov, Bulgaria

TH179 | Understanding WAF results used for the assessment of aquatic toxicity (CRANCS project) | Pascal Bicherel, KREATiS, France

TH164 | Assessing the food safety risk in children exposed to organophosphate pesticides in Taiwan | Minpei Ling, Department of Food Science, National Taiwan Ocean University, Taiwan

TH167 | SETAC Human Health Interest Group Brian Mulhearn, Ensafe Inc., USA

TH169 | CRANCS2: promotion of a new methodology to deals with Natural Complex Substances type 2 | Paul Thomas, CEHTRA SAS, France

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TH182 | Microplastics' fate and potential effects in soil ecosystems: the need for future research | Anderson Abel de Souza Machado, Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, Germany TH183 | Mass load of microplastics through freshwater in South Korea: sewage treatment

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Thursday 11 May plant (STPs) and Running water | Seung-Kyu Kim, Incheon National University, South Korea TH184 | Sludge as an origin of microplastic in agricultural farmlands | Nikki Alst, Aalborg University, Denmark TH185 | Microplastics in terrestrial ecosystems: the impact of nylon microplastics in soil on earthworm reproduction | Elma Lahive, Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (NERC), UK TH186 | Microplastics in a UK canal system: Abundance, characterisation and impact on freshwater microbial communities | Rebecca Adams, The University of Birmingham, UK TH187 | Nanoplastics affect the toxicity of copper to the freshwater microalga Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata | Arianna Bellingeri, University of Siena, Italy TH188 | Polyethylene microbeads evidently affect the Lemna minor root growth and root cell viability | Gabriela Kalcikova, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia TH189 | Fate and effects of microplastics in a freshwater mesocosm study | Christian Scherer, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany TH190 | Freshwater microplastics and competitive co-occurring pollutants | Katie Reilly, The University of Birmingham, UK TH191 | Combined toxicity of microplastics and nickel on Daphnia magna | Dokyung Kim, Konkuk University, South Korea TH192 | Single and combined effects of microplastics and chemical pollutants on freshwater biota | Sven Seidensticker, University of Tuebingen, Germany TH193 | Tissue transfer potential of Microplastics in Daphnia magna | Christoph Schuer, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany TH194 | Size matter? Physical effect of large microplastic particles (Polystyrene) on Daphnia magna | Rana Aljaibachi, University of Reading, UK TH195 | Microplastic: threat for freshwater Amphipods? | Almut Gerhardt, LimCo International GmbH, Germany TH196 | Release of microparticles from artificial turf into storm water and the biological effects of these particles in two biological systems: gut function of rainbow trout and LC50 toxicity in D. magna | Bethanie Carney Almroth, Goteborg University, Sweden TH197 | Effects of polystyrene microplastics in brown trout (Salmo trutta f. fario) and the giant ramshorn snail (Marisa cornuarietis) | Hannah Schmieg, Tübingen University, Germany TH198 | Microplastic ingestion by brown trout living in a river polluted by industrial plastic production | Bethanie Carney Almroth, Goteborg University, Sweden TH199 | Effects of ingested microplastics with sorbed triclosan on fish gut health and assessment of triclosan bioavailability | Ana I Catarino, Heriot-Watt University, UK TH200 | Interactions between microplastics and biota in the marine environment | Matthew Cole, University of Exeter, UK

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Poster Presentations TH201 | Ecological investigations of microplastics and microparticles in environmental matrices - the role of particle properties | Kristin Connors, Procter & Gamble, USA TH202 | Uptake and effects of microplastic particles in selected marine microalgae | Iurgi Salaberria, NTNU University, Norway TH203 | Chronic ingestion of environmentally relevant doses of microbeads has no significant effect on growth to intertidal amphipod Echinogammarus marinus | Sarah Bruck, University of Portsmouth, UK TH204 | Uptake and effects of microplastic particles in the marine copepod Calanus finmarchicus | Iurgi Salaberria, NTNU University, Norway TH205 | Do recycled rubber tires pose a risk for the marine environment? A chemical, physical and effects assessment | Andy Booth, SINTEF Ocean, Norway TH206 | Do microplastic fibers exert a greater toxicity than microbeads? | Daniella Hodgson, University of Exeter, UK TH207 | Accumulation and biomarker responses of mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis to polystyrene microplastics and adsorbed organic and metallic contaminants | Amaia Orbea, University of the Basque Country, Spain TH208 | Uptake and toxicity of polystyrene nanoplastics compared to microplastics, alone and with adsorbed benzo(a) pyrene, in hemocytes of mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis | Amaia Orbea, University of the Basque country UPVEHU, Spain TH209 | Development of a dynamic uptake model for virgin and contaminated microplastics in the Mediterranean mussel (Mytilus galloprovincialis) | Camilla Catarci Carteny, University of Antwerp, Belgium TH210 | Occurrence, amount and characterization of microplastics in the gastrointestinal tract of wild stocks of the common sole Solea solea in the Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean) | Alessio Gomiero, International Research Institute of Stavanger, Norway TH211 | Histological evidences for mechanical and physical damages induced by microplastics in the intestine of European sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax (Linnaeus, 1758) | Maria Cristina Fossi, University of Siena, Italy TH212 | Impact of plastic debris on whale sharks (Rhincodon typus) from the Gulf of California (Mexico): ecotoxicological investigation using skin biopsies | Maria Cristina Fossi, University of Siena, Italy TH213 | Styrene oligomers (SOs) in polystyrene based consumer products: Tracing major contributor to environmental SOs | Seung-Kyu Kim, Incheon National University, South Korea TH214 | Quantitative analysis of phthalate esters in plastic marine debris and fresh plastics using HPLC-TOF/MS | Lian Hong, Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology, South Korea TH215 | Weathering of plastic materials and identification of their leachates | Berit Gewert, Stockholm University, Sweden TH216 | Investigation of the effect of plastic additives on the plastic-water partition

coefficient of selected persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in batch tests | Michael Gottschling, TU Darmstadt, Germany TH217 | DDTs and PCBs in plastic pellets from São Paulo coast, Brazil | Vaítsa Haratsaris, University of São Paulo USP, Brazil TH218 | Ageing of polystyrene microplastics - particle characterization and interaction with organic compounds | Thorsten Hüffer, University of Vienna, Austria TH219 | Direct and potential transference of organic pollutants from littoral plastics to seawater | Victor M. León, Instituto Español de Oceanografia, Spain TH220 | Effect of the presence of biofilms on sorption/desorption of cadmium to microplastics in the aqueous phase | Ana I Catarino, Heriot-Watt University, UK TH221 | Identification and quantification of micro-plastics in marine samples from 5 µm to 5 mm by FTIR and Raman microspectroscopy | Dieter Fischer, LeibnizInstitut f. Polymerforschung Dresden, Germany TH222 | Freshwater sediment microplastic from an urban river in the west of Scotland | Reina Blair, University of Glasgow, UK TH223 | Comparative study of occurrence and spatial distribution of microplastics in surface sediments from The Persian Gulf | Abolfazl Naji, University of Hormozgan, Islamic Republic of Iran TH224 | Explaining the behaviour and removal efficiency of micro- and nanoplastic by different drinking water technologies | Svenja Mintenig, Utrecht University, Netherlands TH225 | Microplastics and heavy metal contamination in sea salts: a threat to food safety? | Bavo De Witte, ILVO, Belgium TH226 | Are microplastic particles entering the human food chain via fish meal animal feed products? | Christina Thiele, University of Southampton, UK

Increasing the relevance of toxicity assessment in LCA: in the need for a cross fertilization between RA and LCA (P) | Erwan Saouter, Joane Cettier, Peter Fantke, Quentin de Hults TH227 | Environmental Safety Check (ESC) demonstrates freshwater aquatic safety of cleaning products by means of 'projected' environmental safety ratios | John Pickup, John Pickup Associates, UK TH228 | Freshwater ecotoxicity as an environmental impact category in LCA Findings of a cross-functional taskforce | Nikolaj Otte, Henkel AG & Co. KGaA, Germany TH229 | A framework for contaminants in environmental assessment of organic waste recycling in agriculture | Angel Avadí, CIRAD, France TH230 | Assessment of toxicological thresholds based on legal limits from REACH regulation | Carlos Ferreira, LAETA-ADAI, Portugal TH231 | Modelling species sensitivity distribution parameters for data-poor chemicals using a QSAR-type modelling approach | Renske Hoondert, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Thursday 11 May Development and validation of standardised methods and their use in regulatory frameworks (P) | Adam Lillicrap, Sebastian Buchinger, Kirit Wadhia TH232 | Ecotoxicological testing of waste materials: State of the art and future developments | Jörg Römbke, ECT Oekotoxikologie GmbH, Germany TH233 | ISO/CD 19040-2 Water quality Determination of the estrogenic potential of water and waste water - Part 2: Yeast estrogen screen (Arxula adeninivorans) | Karina Hettwer, QuoData GmbH, Germany TH234 | Novel bioassays using Chlorella and Daphnia for rapid detection of water toxicity | Yury Grigorev, Siberian Federal University, Russian Federation TH235 | A novel, efficient, and ecologically relevant bioassay method using multiple aquatic fungal species for fungicide ecological effect assessment | Takashi Nagai, Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, NARO, Japan TH236 | Transformation of organic chemicals in environmental fate metabolism studies: A comparison between aquatic sediment (OECD 308) and surface water test systems (OECD 309) | Stefan Höger, Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd, Switzerland

Poster Presentations TH237 | Comparison of Statistical Approaches for Quantal Data from Ecotoxicity Studies | John Green, DuPont, USA TH238 | Comparison of Statistical Approaches for Count Data from Ecotoxicity Studies | John Green, DuPont, USA TH239 | Selecting non-toxic concentrations in bioassays | Julita Stadnicka-Michalak, EPFL - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland TH240 | Luminescent bacteria testing in natural samples - inter laboratory comparison test | Päivi Meriläinen, National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland TH241 | Influence of the peat particle size on the toxicity of boric acid to the reproduction of Folsomia candida in laboratory test with OECD artificial soil | Phuong Nguyen, Eurofins Agroscience Services Ecotox GmbH, Germany TH242 | Hazardous waste classification - tests methods for inorganic substances | Ola Wik, Swedish Geotechnical Institute , Sweden TH243 | Improvement of the ISO 10634 guidance document for the preparation and treatment of poorly water-soluble organic compounds for the evaluation of their biodegradability in aqueous media | Cyril Sweetlove, L´Oréal SA, France

Environmental risk assessment of biocides: regulatory requirements, challenges and consequences (P) | Anja Kehrer, Anja Coors TH244 | A proposal for a risk envelope approach to assesses product families and Union authorisation under the Biocidal Product Regulation | Simon Gutierrez, ECHAEuropean Chemicals Agency, Finland TH245 | Optimizing environmental risk assessment in a large biocidal product consortium | Frederik Verdonck, ARCHE, Belgium TH246 | Challenges of application of environmental risk assessment methodology to PHMB | Cyril Durou, CEHTRA SAS, France TH247 | Challenges and solutions for the environmental exposure assessment of PT18 biocides. | Leen Jansen, ARCHE, Belgium TH248 | Comparison between US and EU active substance registration for environmental safety - Pyrethroids as a case study | Samantha Walker, S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc., UK

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Come to the SETAC Square and enjoy a range of activities:

Reddit Ask Me Anything

SETAC Europe Committees

Be part of our Reddit Ask Me Anything platform and answer questions to anyone in the world curious about our science on

Come and see our poster gallery to learn more about SETAC Europe Committees and how to get involved.

Monday, 8 May from 2:00 pm–6:00 pm

Book Launch

Certification of Environmental Risk Assessors

SETAC is pleased to announce the release of Mitigating the Risks of Plant Products in the Environment: MAgPIE. Please join us at the SETAC Square on Wednesday, 10 May 4:00 pm–4:30 pm to celebrate this achievement with the authors and editors.

Photo Booth Take a picture with your friends thanks to our photo booth. A fun, free take-away gift to bring with you back home!

#

Find out more about the Certification of Environmental Risk Assessors (CRA) programme! Get more information about the programme, requirements, enrolment or find a mentor. Monday - Thursday during the Coffee Breaks (10:15 am–11:00 am & 4:00 pm–4:30 pm).

?

Questions to SETAC Address any questions you may have about SETAC and put it in our SETAC Questions Box.

#WhySETAC Tell us #WhySETAC matters to you! We are interested in hearing your thoughts about how we can achieve Environmental Quality Through Science® and #WhySETAC is the place to do it! Share your thoughts as part of a short video interview. Contact [email protected] or visit the SETAC Square to get an appointment. You can also use #WhySETAC and send your posts on our social media pages! twitter.com/SETAC_World

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

facebook.com/setacworld

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EXHIBITORS

SETAC Square

EXHIBITORS

Exhibitors Booth Exhibitor

Booth Exhibitor

45+47 Agilent Technologies

2

ibacon

43

AquaBioTech Group

1

Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd

36

Arcadis

4

IPO BRANCH PSZCZYNA

15

ARCHE Consulting

42

JRF Global

49

Biobide

56

Kode

46

BioChem agrar GmbH

8

Loligo Systems

24

Blue Frog Scientific

31

MicroBioTests / EBPI

11

Cambridge Environmental Assessments

30

new_diagnostics GmbH

51

Cefas

33

Noack Laboratorien GmbH

17+19

CEHTRA / KREATiS

54

PFA-Brussels SPRL

27

CEM Analytical Services Limited

35

Ramboll Environ

34

Charles River

55

RIFCON

32

Chemex Environmental

3

Scymaris Ltd

41

Chemical Risk Manager

13

SGS

26

Diagenode SA

14

Smithers Viscient

5+7

EAG Laboratories

18

Symbiotic Research

23

ECT

10+12

SynTech Research

21

EPP Ltd

16

TECOmedical

40

Euro Chlor (Cefic)

28

Thermo Fisher Scientific

48

EUROFINS

25

Toxi-Coop

39

European Chemical Industry Council - LRI

37

ToxRat Solutions

53

European Chemicals Agency

52

UL Environment

38

European Crop Protection Association

9

UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle Initiative

6

EXPONENT

50

VIEWPOINT

29

Fera Science Ltd

20

Waters

44

Frontiers

22

wca

SETAC Europe Partners and Affiliates SETAC Global Partners and Affiliates SETAC Europe Award Sponsors

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SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Exhibition Hall Stairs to Registration Area

Internet Corner

SETAC SQUARE LIFT

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48

50

52

54 56

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13 14

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15 16

25 26

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Poster Corner 20-25

POSTER AREA Poster Corner 14-19

brussels.setac.org | SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting

Poster Corner 8-13

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FEED ADDITIVES TRIALS AQUATIC ECOTOXICOLOGY AQUACULTURE TECHNOLOGIES FISH HEALTH & DIAGNOSTICS VACCINE DEVELOPMENT & TESTING Find us at STAND 43

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Discover your Source of Chlorine Science at: www.eurochlor.org www.chlorinethings.eu @EuroChlor

Visit Euro Chlor at booth 40 The Long-range Research Initiative (LRI) programme is a major voluntary initiative of the European chemical industry to support the long-term sustainability of its sector and our European society. Since the onset of the programme, LRI has funded more than 170 projects in three research areas; intelligent testing, complex environments and acceptance of new technologies. By fostering innovative research, LRI advances approaches for the scientific assessment of the safety of chemicals and improves our understanding of the potential health and environmental risks. Discover our funding opportunities by scanning the Mini Guide to Cefic-LRI funding QR code below.

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2018: REACH registration deadline Act now for safe and competitive chemicals! => echa.europa.eu/reach-2018 ECHA - working for the safe use of chemicals •  annual evaluation report => echa.europa.eu/evaluation •  regulatory science strategy => echa.europa.eu/about us

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International Limited

122

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30 years’ experience in chemical risk assessment and specialist research  GLP compliant

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Delivering for the Future - Visit the Fera stand to find out more about: Europe’s most advanced E-Flows Edge-Of-Field Waterbody Safety Assessment Facility A state-of-the-art system designed to provide plant protection companies with a testbed of streams, ditches or ponds that represent edge-of-field surface waterbodies. Enabling environmental testing of new plant-protection products to meet the most stringent regulatory standards, helping to introduce a wider range of more effective products to market more quickly to help farmers tackle threats to their crops.  Flow-through systems for controlled exposure scenarios  Capacity for multiple studies,reducing waiting times

 Mesocosm studies with the highest reliability rating  High diversity to exceed Minimal Detectable Difference criteria

Fera Science Ltd | National Agri-Food Innovation Campus | Sand Hutton, York, YO41 1LZ, UK Tel: +44 (0)300 100 0324 Email: [email protected] www.fera.co.uk/chemicals-environment

VISIT US Open access

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Our CRO Services: Terrestrial Ecotoxicology - Laboratory Pollinator Tests - Semi-field Tunnel and Field Bee Studies - Non-target Arthropod Tests - Soil Organism Tests - Non-target Plant Tests

Analytical Chemistry

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- Method Development, Validation and Dose Verification - Metabolite Identification - Residue Analysis - 5 batch Analysis

- Standard Testing: Fish, Daphnia, Algae and Lemna - Bacterial Toxicity Test - Biodegradation Tests - Higher Tier Testing - Endocrine Disruptor Studies

- Transformation in Soil - Soil Adsorption/Desorption - Transformation in Aquatic Systems - Aerobic Mineralisation in Surface Water - Photolysis in Water and Soil - Hydrolysis and Processing Hydrolysis

Innovative Environmental Services (IES) Ltd [email protected] | www.ies-ltd.ch

124

Metabolism - Plant Metabolism - Metabolism in Rotational Crops - In Vitro Comparative Metabolism - In Vitro Skin Penetration - Bioaccumulation in Fish

70

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CONTRACT RESEARCH in compliance with Good Laboratory Practice principles

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125

Kode Chemoinformatics provides services and products for industries (chemical and pharmaceutical) and research (institutions, universities, regulatory authorities). We have expertise on all chemoinformatics topics regarding chemical data management and analysis, using chemometric tools and machine learning techniques (in particular, QSAR/QSPR modelling for drug design and ecotoxicological screening). Check some of our software: DRAGON 7.0 – one of the world-wide most used application for the calculation of molecular descriptors. VEGA – free open source platform with QSAR models for several eco-toxicological endpoints.

Visit our website for more details:

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126

Detect the Nearly Undetectable

bioanalytical solutions for food the environment & medical applications

[Standardized test kits to detect endocrine active substances across various matrices.]

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Visit us at booth 30 127

PFA-Brussels sprl, located in central Brussels (nr. Merode metro), provides high quality scientific, technical and policy support for the chemicals industry, related manufacturing industries, regulatory authorities and government organisations. We have specific expertise on: •

REACH Registration - all technical aspects of dossiers Evaluation – testing strategy, exposure control Authorisation – applications, analysis of alternatives, SEA



Biocides Product authorisation



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Contact us at [email protected] or [+32] 02 741 2444 or see our website for full details: www.pfa-brussels.eu.

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A contract research laboratory focused on excellence in scientific services Aquatic Ecotoxicology – freshwater and marine Biodegradation and Environmental Fate Analytical Chemistry Product Chemistry Booth 3, SETAC Europe 2017 Scymaris Ltd, Brixham Laboratory, Freshwater Quarry, Brixham, Devon TQ5 8BA U.K. Tel: +44 (0)1803 659170 www.scymaris.com 129

REGISTRATION OF AGROCHEMICALS: INTEGRATED SOLUTIONS FROM ONE HAND CONSULTANCY & STRATEGY PLANNING • Regulatory Affairs • Ecotoxicology • Population Modelling • Environmental Fate • Consumer Safety • Toxicology • Efficacy • PhysChem • Analytical Methods • Data Gap Analysis • Dossier Preparation (a.s., dRR, BAD, MRL, JMPR) • Information Brokerage • Consultation with European and non-European Authorities

CRO – Higher Tier GLP Field Studies • Wild Birds & Mammals • Pollinators • Reptiles & Amphibians • Arthropods • Soil Organisms • Full Fauna • Soil Dissipation • Drift Studies • All Types of Tailor-made Studies

Meet us at Exhibition SETAC 2 0 1 7 Stand No. 55 Smithers SETAC Ad 2017 210x148mm_vAW.pdf

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We are a One-Stop Shop CRO for your Metabolism, E-Fate, Residue and Product Chemistry research needs. Symbiotic Research conducts in-life 14C fish metabolism, bioaccumulation and fish feeding studies on-site. We are partnered with several inlife 14C licensed facilities throughout North America to conduct plant and animal metabolism studies. Symbiotic Research is a fully compliant GLP facility, inspected by the US-EPA, USDA and NJDEP/NRC. Our laboratory holds a permit to receive soil regulated by 7 CFR 330 from foreign and domestic sources. Visit Symbiotic Research at SETAC Europe in Booth #18 Symbiotic Research, along with our partner SynTech Research, offers a full suite of services designed to assist in regulatory submission. We are prepared to help you fill your REACH data gaps to meet the upcoming 2018 deadline. Please feel free to contact us to set up a meeting or stop by our booth to discuss your REACH data gaps or any of our other services. www.SymbioticResearch.com Telephone: (973) 426-9900 Email: [email protected]

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Expert services – quality results Worldwide services to agricultural R&D Getting crop protection and crop production products to market requires specialist expertise. The SynTech Research range of agrochemical and seeds research, development and registration services will help you get your products positioned and registered fast. With a presence in 32 countries, SynTech Research is a global leader in contract research for crop protection and production.

www.syntechresearch.com 131

TECO® Vitellogenin System in Fish The TECO Vitellogenin System includes a set of different Vitellogenin ELISAs offering unique features: • • • • •

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The result? Thinking forward and staying ahead of the game not only helps labs protect the investments they make today, but also helps those same labs protect tomorrow’s environment. That’s a future filled with promise all around, we’re sure you’ll agree.

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Don’t miss our vendor seminar on Wednesday, May 10 | 12:45 – 14:15: “New strategies for streamlining environmental contaminant analysis”

Meet us on booth

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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.

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Zebrafish have been gaining in popularity in the behavioural neurosciences. Now, they are making their entry in ecotoxicology research, and have proven particularly effective to study PCB effects. Zebralab will be your tool of choice.

By using bio-sensors together with our solutions, you will strengthen your capabilities to understand environmental concerns.

Larval Zebrafish

Recently, Fisheries and Oceans Canada2 conducted a study to investigate environmentally relevant concentrations of PCB126 on larval development.

Tadpoles

In 2010, a study of Toxicity, uptake kinetics and behavior assessment in zebrafish embryos following exposure to perfluorooctanesulphonicacid (PFOS) by Oregon State University with Wenzhou Medical College3.

Tadpoles are a useful tool in environmental studies. Recently a study published in Ecotoxicology (Lui et al., 2011)1 shows the toxicity of the rice field herbicide Butachlor on frog tadpoles. ZebraBox 96 larvae analysed at once

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Independent research and consultancy on chemical risk assessment and regulatory compliance 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.

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 22.

+44 (0) 1367 246026 [email protected] wca-consulting.com WCA Advert_01.02.17.indd 1

01/02/2017 19:52

S E TA C E U R O P E 2 8 th A n n u a l M e e t i n g 13–17 May 2018 I Rome, Italy Reserve your booth now! Contact [email protected] 135

Author Index A

Audy, Ondřej. TH155 Aars, Jon. 111, 30 Abati, Adebisi. TU153 Abbaci, Khédidja. TH011 Abbar, Sonia. WE013 Abdollahi, Atousa. MO116 Abe, Ryoko. TH023 Abel, Sebastian. MO180 Åberg, Annika. WE127 Abessa, Denis. TH027 Abiodun-Solanke, Ayojesutomi. TU038 Abrahamsson, Peter. MO163 Abreu, Sizenando. 519 Achten, Wouter. MO223, WE205 Acosta, Jose. 447, MO068, TU243 Adam, Catherine. TU059, TU136 Adam, Daniel. TH236 Adam, Iris. 334 Adam, Véronique. 19 Adam-Guillermin, Christelle. 3, 523 Adams, Rebecca. TH186 Adamsky, Frank. MOPC12 Adelman, David. 385 Ademollo, Nicoletta. MO142, TU146, TU160, TU163 Adeyinka, Gbadebo. WE085 Adler, Nicole. TU177 Admon, Smadar. 542 Adolfsson-Erici, Margaretha. TH173 Adolphe, Luc. 142 Adriaens, Els. TU011 Adrian, Philippe. TH246 Agatz, Annika. 225 Agbaogun, Babatunde. MO118 Agerstrand, Marlene. TU256, WE187, WE228 Agez, Maxime. 89 Agüera, Ana. 346 Aguilar, Lissette. 2 Aguirre-Martinez, Gabriela. TU111 Aharchaou, Imad. 296 Ahel, Marijan. 481 Ahmad, Yousuf. 478 Ahn, Kyonghyun. TU122 Ahrens, Lutz. 28, 482, MO046, MO163, MOPC10 Ahvo, Aino. TH007, WE148, WE149, WE153, WE162 Ait-Aissa, Selim. 400, 486 Akcha, Farida. 185, 396, MO005, TH009 Akdogan, Kubra. 23, MO092, MO093 Akhtar, Evana. 490 Akkanen, Jarkko. MO180 Akre, Robyn. 393, WE122 Al Bitar, Lina. WE037 Al Sid Cheikh, Maya. WEPC05 Alani, Rose. TU153 Alasuvanto, Toni. 285 Albanis, Triantafyllos. MO261, TH101, TH102, WE009 Albentosa, Marina. TH209 Albergaria, Tomás. MO176 Albin, M. MO259 Alcaide, Vicente. MO247 Alday, Aintzane. TH049, TU058 Aldershof, Saskia. TU124

136

Aldrich, Annette. WE117 Aleksandryan, Anahit. TH108 Alépée, Nathalie. TU011 Alexandre, Stéphanie. TH244 Alexandrou, Nick. 539 Alfonso, Sébastien. 377 Alghadi, Hend. TU085 Ali, Md. TH037 Aliani, Stefano. WE142 Alix, Anne. 45, MO250, TU206 Aljaibachi, Rana. TH194 Allacker, Karen. 139, 140 Allan, Ian. 144 Allan, Matt. TU197 Alleman, Laurent. TU002 Allen, Kramer. 269 Allen, Marie. MO252 Allinson, Mayumi. 378 Almaas, Kjersti. 131 Almeida, David. MOPC08 Almeida, Salomé. MO021 Almeida, Sérgio. TU125 Almunia, Christine. 366, TH006, WE006 Almvik, Marit. MO113 Alonso, Covadonga. 11 Alonzo, Frederic. 3 Alqahtani, Faisal. TU081 Alscher, Annika. 191, TU200 Alscher, Bonny. TU096, TU126 Alsolmy, Soha. TU274 Alst, Nikki. 398, TH184 Altenburger, Rolf. 315, 479, 486, TH138, TU103 Altendorfer, Katrin. TH071 Altin, Dag. 109, TH202, TH204, WE134, WE153, WE162 Altmann, Dominik. TUPC25 Altmann, Korinna. 341 Alvarenga, Paula. 242 Alvarez, Lara. WE147, WE255 Alvarez, Tania. WE047 Alvarez-Muñoz, Diana. 146, MO042, TU145 Alvarez-Rogel, Jose. 56, MO069, TU161, WE181 Alves, Artur. MO014 Alves, Daniela. 242 Alves, Lisandra. WE149 Alzualde, Ainhoa. TH049, TU058 Amann, Nicole. 556 AMARA, Anis. WE243 AMARIEI, GEORGIANA. MO055, TU102 Amat, Juan. MO035 Aminot, Yann. 18, MO261 Amlund, Heidi. 69 Amor, Ben. 453 Amores Barrero, Maria José. MO229 Amouroux, David. TU250 Amouroux, Isabelle. WE243 Amyot, Marc. TU250 An, Youn-Joo. 444, MO015, TH014, TH191, TU090, TU122, WE018, WE021, WE125, WE126 Ancel, Ariane. 448 Ancona, Valeria. 232 Andaloro, Franco. TH211 Anders, Nico. TU053 Andersen, Henrik. MO161 Andersen, Magnus. 111, 30 Andersen, Sjur. 285 Anderson, Richard. 24

André Mayer, Anne-Sylvie. MO073 Andres, Sandrine. WE243 Anelli, Simone. 233, TU158 Anest, Hugo. 245 Angeletti, Bernard. 224 Angelier, Frédéric. 110 Angeon, Valérie. TU134 Angiulli, Francesca. TH227 Ankley, Gerald. 154, TU004, TU054, WE004 Annevelink, Mark. WE161 Antczak, Philipp. 417 Antczak, Phillip. TU010 Antonopoulou, Maria. TH181 Antony, ANJU. WE044 Antunes, Margarida. TH199, TH220 Anumol, Tarun. MO166, MOPC09, TH094 Aparicio, Juan. TU252 Apell, Jennifer. 2 Apitz, Sabine. 300, 313, TU276 Appenzeller, Brice. MO004 Appoloni, Carlos. MO136 Aquilino, Monica. TH031 Arambourou, Hélène. TH011 Araujo, Cristiano. TH065, TU043, TU066 Araujo, Giuliana. TH027 Araujo, Mario. WE042 Arcanjo, Caroline. 523 Archimede, Harry. TU134 Ardente, Fulvio. 407 Arena, Maria. 338, 412, MO248, WE112, WE115 Arendarczyk, Anna. TH030 Arhonditsis, George. TH134, TU246 Arijs, Katrien. TH168 Arini, Adeline. 60 Ariza, Beatriz. TU066 Armant, Olivier. 3, 523 Armengaud, Jean. 366, TH006, WE006 Armini, Alessandro. TH036 Armiraglio, Stefano. 233, TU158 Armitage, James. TH090, TU230 Armstrong, Dana. WE093 Arning, Juergen. 527 Arnold, Kathryn. 323, MO036, MO247, WE038 Arnold, Ray. TH081 Arnot, Jon. 269, 477, TH090, TU156, TU230, TUPC24 Arp, Hans. TU239 Arrhenius, Asa. 35 Arrivabene, Hiulana. TU182 Arroja, Luís. TU209, TU218, WE208 Arroyo, Beatriz. MO034 Arroyo Rojas Dasilva, Yadira. MOPC20 Artois, Tom. TU003, TU017 Arts, Gertie. 164, 250, TU087, TU093, TU095 Arukwe, Augustine. MO172 Asanova, Anastasiya. MO129 Asbach, Christof. 345 Ascagni, Miriam. TH036 Ashar, Shloka. 246, MO226, TU268 Ashauer, Roman. 14, 225, 487, WE047, WE060, WE070 Ashford, Jenna. MO256 Ashford, Paul. 556 Askem, Clare. 219, TU052

Asker, Noomi. TU060 Asplund, Lillemor. WE077 Assad, M. 230, TU249 Asselin, Anne. 245 Asselman, Jana. 3, 418 Astrup, Thomas. 462 Athanassiadis, Ioannis. WE077 Atiénzar, Irene. MO039, TH136 Atoloye, Idowu. TU228 Aubee, Catherine. MO016 Audenaert, Wim. 428 Audoorn, Lieve. WEPC17 Auerswald, Karl. 284 Auffan, Mélanie. 224, TH002 Augspurger, Thomas. WE245 Augustin, Jürgen. TU222 Augustine, Starrlight. WE168 Aumonier, Simon. 350, WE219 Aury, Jean-Marc. WE015 Austin, Thomas. TH073 Austnes, Kari. 423 Auteri, Domenica. 338, 412, MO248 Avadí, Angel. TH229 Avdalovic, Jelena. TU168, WE164 Aviles, Amandine. 515 Avisar, Dror. WE140 Awuah, Fred Kobby. 392 Aydin, Ali. MO092, MO093 Aygun, Ahmet. MO093 Ayu Purnomo, Chanistya. TH061 Azad, Atabak. 145 Azam, Didier. WE015 Azevedo, Ligia B. MO257 Azevedo-Pereira, Henrique. 242 Azimonti, Giovanna. 45 Aznar-Alemany, Òscar. MO261

B Baas, J. 441 Babin, Mar. TU117 Babut, Marc. MO171, TU149 Baccaro, Marta. 81 BACH, Cristina. MO168 Bachmann, Jean. 138, TU177 Bachtin, Julia. TH112 Backhaus, Thomas. 238, 239, 35 Backmann, Jan. TH078 Badetti, Elena. MO140 Bado-Nilles, Anne. 173 Badun, Gennadii. TU026 Baek, Sujin. TH092 Baensch-Baltruschat, Beate. 395 Baert, Jan. MO024 Baeyens, Willy. 543 Baggerman, Geert. 186, 365, TH047 Baggs, David. MO226 Bagnis, Simone. 32 Bagnuolo, Giuseppe. WE142 Bahn, Olivier. 454 Bailey, Gwendolyn. WE220 Baini, Matteo. TH212, WE142 Bajagain, Rishikesh. WE104 Bajić, Jovan. TH126 Baken, Kirsten. WE161 Baken, Stijn. MO077, TUPC09 Bakker, Frank. TH068, TU124, WE111 Bakker, Joost. 362 Bakker, Martine. 492 Baldan, Damiano. WE171

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Balistrieri, Laurie. 422 Ballabio, Davide. 326 Ballini, Matilde. WE142 Bandoro, Chris. 218 Bandow, Nicole. 177 Banegas, Andinarel. 21 Bang, Hyunwoo. TU089 Bannick, Claus-Gerhard. 341 Banning, Helena. 74 Banta, Gary. TH013 Bányiová, Katarína. TH155, TH157 Baptista, Filipa. 519 Baptista, Ivana. TU069, WE024, WE025 Bär, Susanne. TH133, TH145 Barata, Carlos. 318, 369, 518, MO006, MO021, WE030 Barausse, Alberto. WE171 Barbe, Valérie. WE015 Barberio, Grazia. WE186, WE196 Barbosa Xavier, Maria Flavia. TU069 Barcelo, Damia. 127, 179, 18, 289, 343, MO164, MO243, MO261, MOPC08, TH109, TU084, TU145 Barceló, Damià. MO027, MO042, MO145 Barciela, Rosa. MO260 Baré, Birgit. TU072 Bare, Jane. TU217 Baricci, Andrea. MO221 Barmaz, Stefania. 412 Barmentlo, Henrik. 229, 56, WE165 Barnes, Ben. 548 Barnhoorn, Irene. MO185 Barone, Ida. 222 Barone, Lidia. MO254 Baroudi, Moumen. TU135 Barra, Ricardo. 21 Barra Caracciolo, Anna. 232, MO142, TU146, TU160, TU163 Barrick, Andrew. 465, TU078 Barriuso, Enrique. MO121 Barron, Leon. WE011, WE057 Barron, Mace. 268, TU020 Barrows, Abby. 303 Barry, Michael. 172 Barth, Andreas. TH215 Barthel, Anne-Kathrin. 341 Barthel, Yves. MO157, TH243 Bartolome, Nora. 176 Bartolozzi, Irene. WEPC08 Bartram, Abigail. WE147, WE255 Bas, Dorian. 404 Basei, Gianpietro. 347, WE197, WE198 Basseres, Anne. 433, WE160 Basta, Nicholas. 24 Bastiansen, Finn. TH069 Bastos, Ana Catarina. TH025, WE107 Basu, Nil. 60, TU259 Batinić, Branislav. TH126 Batista, Daniela. 58 Baudrot, Virgile. 63 Baudy, Patrick. 469, TU147 Bauer, Angela. 132 Bauer, Coretta. TU240 Bauer, Franklin. 329, TU012, TU034 Bauerfeind, Eduard. 385 Bauerlein, Patrick. TH224 Baumann, Jonas. TH034, WEPC24 Baumann, Lisa. TH054 Baumer, Andreas. MO188 Baun, Anders. MO125, WE187,

WEPC03 Baustert, Paul. MO220 Baveco, Hans. 255, 257, 436, 437, 438, TU193 Bayer, Bastian. TU126, TU127 Baynes, Alice. 136 Bean, Tim. TU010 Beasley, Amy. 268, 269, TU020, WE055 Beaudette, Lee. 391 Beaudoin, Robert. TUPC12 Beaudouin, Rémy. MO171 Beaumelle, Lea. MO096 Beauvais-Flueck, Rébecca. 316, TU275 Bechmann, Renee. TH064 Becker, Benjamin. TH112 Becker, Jeremias. 107, WE066 Becker, Roland. 341, TU206 Beckers, Liza-Marie. MO205 Bednarska, Agnieszka. TU114 Beekman-Lukassen, Wendy. TH187 Beeltje, Henry. 387 Beemster, Gerrit. 317 Beentjes, Tessa. MO234 Beer, Claudia. 391 Beggel, Sebastian. 284 Begliomini, Felipe Nincao. TU125 Begnaud, Frederic. TU001, TU005 Bégout, Marie-Laure. 377 Behra, Renata. 319, 35, WE143 Behrens, Paul. 342 Beimfohr, Claudia. MO156 Beimowski, Fabian. 114 Beiras, Ricardo. 216, 554 Beitel, Shawn. TU023 Belanger, Scott. 213, 268, TH201, TU020, TUPC25, WE055 Belboom, Sandra. MO238, WE202, WE221 Belgers, Dick. TU193, WE063 Beliën, Jeroen. WE205 Belkhiria, Sami. TU233 Bell, Anna. 535 Bell, S. MO259 Bellamoli, Francesco. WE032 Bellavita, Mara. TH082 Bellido, Rafael. MO229 Bellingeri, Arianna. TH187 Bellio, Caterina. TU226 Beloin-Saint-Pierre, Didier. 454 Belpaire, Claude. WE141 Belschner, Hanna. 136 Beltrán, Eulalia. MO039, MO210, TH008, TH136 Bemowsky, Steve. MO061 Benavides, Katherine. TH065 Bendall, Julie. 337 Bending, Gary. 129, MO153 Bendz, David. TH242 Benedetti, Lorenzo. 208 Benetto, Enrico. MO220, TU215 Bengtson Nash, Susan. 495, MO028 Benini, Lorenzo. 196, MO225, TU264 Benítez-López, Ana. 67 Benstead, Rachel. 225, TUPC22 Benz, Katharina. TH130 Benzing, Saskia. MO040 Bereswill, Renja. TU207, TUPC07 Berezina, Nadezhda. TH007 Berg, Michael. MO123 Berg, Sanne. 438 Bergami, Elisa. 161, TH187

Berger, Markus. TU220 Berger, Urs. TU239, TU240 Berggren Kleja, Dan. WE127 Bergman, Ake. 373 Berkner, Silvia. 64, TU176 Berndtsson, Ronny. MOPC10 Bernhard, Mary Jo. TU154 Berny, Philippe. 9, MO037 Berset, Jean-Daniel. TH104 Bert, V. 230 Berthaud, Fabienne. TU001, TU005 Bertram, Michael. 378 Bertrand, Carole. TH002, TU040 Bervoets, Lieven. MO017, MO169, TH209, WE141 Besada, Victoria. MO101 Besley, Aiken. 342 Besseau, Laurence. 377 Besseling, Ellen. WE138 Bessems, Jos. 363 Bester, Kai. TH026, WE094 Betancourt Quiroga, Carolina. MO227 Betoulle, Stéphane. 173 Betz, Alexander. WE003 Betz, Sarah. TU042 Beutels, Filip. WE193 Beuthe, Birgitta. MO176 Beyer, Corinna. TH016 Beylot, Antoine. WEPC11 Bezuidenhout, Carlos. TU142 Bezuidenhout, Jaco. MO128 Bhavsar, Satyendra. TH119, TH134, TU246, WE235 Bicherel, Pascal. 329, TH169, TH179, TU012, TU034 Biegel-Engler, Annegret. TU241 Bielska, Lucie. TU137, TU138, TU159 Biemmi, Simone. TH082 Bier, Raven. MO152 Bierkens, Johan. 491, TH153, TH159 Bilbao, Eider. 470 Billoir, Elise. 256 Binelli, Andrea. TH036 Bini, Luca. TH036 Birch, Heidi. 130, MO161, MO162 Birgersson, Lina. WE023 Birgul, Askin. MO092, MO093 Birkholdt, Franziska. TH241 Birkved, Franziska. MO213 Birkved, Morten. 40 Birungi, Grace. MO182 Bischof, Ina. TU154 Bishop, Christine. 61 Bittermann, Kai. MO188 Bittner, Lisa. TH051 Bittner, Michal. TH157 Bjerregaard, Poul. 215, 297, TU248 Björklöf, Katarina. TH240 Björklund, Anna. TU223 Björnsson, Lovisa. TU225 Bjørgan, Marie. TH083 Bjørgesæter, Anders. WE146 Bjørn, Anders. 196, 308, 309 Bjørn, Tor Harry. MO030 Blackford, Jeremy. TH200 Blackwell, Brett. TU004, TU054, WE004 Blahova, Lucie. TU086 Blair, Reina. TH222 Blais, Jules. WE152 Blake, Sylvia. TU235 Blanc, Isabelle. 39

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Blanc, Mélanie. 377 Blanc, Melanie. TH053, TU006 Blanc, Philippe. 39 Blanchet, Pierre. WE213 Blanckenhagen, Felix von. MO245, TH130 Blanckenhorn, Wolf. TU177 Blancquaert, Piet. TH247 Blankinship, Amy. 526 Blasco, Julián. TH065 Blasco, Julian. TU043, TU066 Blasco Moreno, Julian. 516, TU111 Blass, Vered. MO240 Blauw, A. K1 Blazquez, Mercedes. 498 Blévin, Pierre. 110 Blok, Kornelis. 306 Bluhm, Kerstin. TU053, TU063 Bluhm, Wally. TU192 Blust, Ronny. 154, 186, 187, 217, 317, 365, 473, 55, MO017, MO031, MO031, TH047, TH209, TU004, TU037, TU054, TU187, WE012, WE141, WE237 Bock, Michael. WE159 Bock, Ronald. 87, MO177 Bodar, Charles. 424 Bodart, Jean-François. TU048 Boehm, Leonard. TU152 Boënne, Wesley. 123 Boerwinkel, Marie-Claire. MO254, TH061, WE063 Boesten, Jos. 119, 120, 436, TU193 Bofill-Mas, Sílvia. MO218 Böhle, Gisela. WE050 Böhme, Alexander. TU007, TU009, TU032 Böhmer, Jörn. MO105 Bohmer, Nils. WE199 Boije af Gennäs , Urban. 361 Boisclair, Daniel. 195 Boiteux, Virginie. 86, MO168 Boivin, Arnaud. 76, MO121 Boix, Estefania. 548 Boldrin, Alessio. 462 Bolekhan, Anastasiia. 168, 78 Bollmann, Ulla. WE094 Boltes, Karina. MO055, TU102 Bon, Robin. MO045 Bondar, Nadiia. TU148 Bonetto, Alessandro. MO140 Bonhomme, Marion. 142 Böni, Heinz. WE257 Bonisoli Alquati, Andrea. 304 Bonnard, Marc. 278, TU051 Bonnell, Mark. 269, 290, 336, 545, TU149, TU151 Bonneton, François. TH006 Bonnineau, Chloe. 272, TUPC13 Bonningue, Philippe. WE211 Boobis, Alan. 149 Booth, Andy. 281, 34, 508, TH202, TH204, TH205, WE134 Bopp, Stephanie. TH129 Bordalo, Maria. MO021, TH024 Borga, Katrine. MO029, MO030, TU149, WEPC15 Borge, Asbjørn. 22 Borggaard, Ole. 298 Boriani, Elena. 405 Borin, Sara. 233, TU158 Börjesson, Pål. TU225 Bornehag, Carl-Gustaf. WEPC22 Borowska, Ewa. MO052, TU143 Borsato, Aurélio. TU228 Borschneck, Daniel. 224

137

Bosch, Lluis. TH086 Bosch-Orea, Cristina. 127, MO243 Boschen, Clint. 12 Boschung, Alain. MO156 Bosker, Thijs. 342 Boskovic, Nikola. WE091 Bosma, Roel. 43 Bossaer, Mattias. TH225 Bossus, Maryline. 376 Botha, Tarryn. MO128, WE031 Boti, Vasiliki. MO261, TH101, TH102, WE009 Botta, Fabrizio. 425 Botteon, Elena. MO261 Boucher, Justin. 455 Bouchet, Sylvain. TU250 Boulay, Anne-Marie. 196, 308, TU217 Boullemant, Amiel. 445, 448, WE180 Boulogne, Isabelle. 515 Bourgault, Guillaume. 36 Bourgeon, Sophie. 111, 30, MO030 BOURRELLY, Stephane. 143 Boutrup, Susanne. TH096 Boutry, Delphine. MO126 Bouwmeester, Hans. 348 Boxall, Alistair. 125, 238, 239, 512, WE201 Boyacıoğlu, Meltem. TUPC15 Boyd, Patrick. 391, WE119 Boyle, David. MOPC22 Boyles, Matthew. 160 Bozzolan, Françoise. 515 Braaten, Hans Fredrik Veiteberg. MO029 Brack, Julia. 115, MO070 Brack, Werner. 400, 401, 402, 403, 474, 520, MO205, WE027, WE172, WE173 Bracquene, Ellen. WE222 Bradley, Michael. MOPC03 Bradshaw, Clare. 144, 275, TU039 Braga, Anna. TU050 Bragin, Gail. TU027 Brakstad, Odd. 131 Bramaz, Nadine. 475 Brancart, Francis. TH163 Brande-Lavridsen, Nanna. TU104 Brander, Susanne. 522 Brandsma, Sicco. 460 Brandstätter-Scherr, Kerstin. MO109 Brandt, Kristian. MOPC18 Brandt, Ute. MO201 Brant, Jan. 303, TU253 Brasseur, Anne. TU073 Braster, Martin. MO155 Brauco, Kalina. TU069 Brault, Emily. TU155 Braun, Ulrike. 341 Braunbeck, Thomas. 213, TH054, TUPC25 Braungardt, Charlotte. MO076 Brede, Dag. TU120 Bredenhand, Emile. WE106 Breitholtz, Magnus. WE077 Breivik, Knut. 288 Brendonck, Luc. 472 Brennholt, Nicole. 395 Breulet, Hervé. WE191 Breunig, Hanna. WE218 Breuninger, Esther. 395 Brice, Ken. 539 Briels, Nathalie. MO172 Brienza, Monica. 426

138

Brighty, Geoff. WE254 Brill, Jessica. 268, TU020, WE055 Bringer, Arno. 377 Brinkmann, Markus. WE027 Brion, Francois. 486 Brion, Natacha. MO049 Brix, Kevin. 118 Brochot, Céline. 491, TH153 Brock, Andreas Libonati. WE089 Brock, Theo C.M.. 436, MO179, MO254, MOPC05 Brockmann, Christiane. MO057 Brockmann, Doris. MO157 Brockmeier, Erica. 417 Brodhag, Christian. TU269 Brodie, Renae. TU061 Brodin, Tomas. 321 Broeders, Eddie. MO231 Broer, Wijnand. MO222 Brönner, Ute. WE146 Brooks, Amy. 525, MO252, TH058 Brooks, Bryan. 511, TH042, TH149, TH150 Brooks, Steven. 498 Brosse, N. 230 Brouwer, Ans. MO248 Brown, Andrew Ross. 384 Brown, Colin. MO036, TH158 Brown, David. 160 Brown, Lee. MO050 Brown, Murray. MO020, TU055 Brown, Philip. MO052, TU143 Brown, Rebecca. 466, MO209 Brown, Richard. 360 Brown, Trevor. TH090, TU156 Brox, Stephan. MO262 Bruce, Peter. WE147 Bruck, Sarah. TH203 Brude, Odd. WE146 Brueckner, Jasmin. 138 Brueggemann, Maria. 468, TU018 Bruehl, Carsten. 190, TH071, TH241, TU207, TUPC07 Bruinen de Bruin, Yuri. 362, 363 Bruins, Randall. 312 Brun, Melanie. 359 Brun, Nadja. 283 Bruneau, Mélanie. 465, TU078 Brunel, Brigitte. 234 Brunelli, Andrea. MO140 Bruns, Eric. 167, 168, MOPC01, MOPC02 Bryant, Benjamin. TU212 Brzozowska-Wojoczek, Katarzyna. TH041 Bu, Yuanqing. TU123 Bub, Sascha. WE067, WE170 Bucheli, Thomas. 176, MOPC15 Buchholz, Hans. TH073 Buchinger, Sebastian. 535, TH099 Buchtova, Marcela. TU086 Buck, Robert. MO173, MO174, MO175 Budzinski, Hélène. TU273 Buij, Ralph. MO248 Buijse, Laura. MO254, WE063 Bulatovic, Sandra. WE163, WE164 Bulle, Cecile. 195, 308, 309, 503 Bundschuh, Mirco. 226, 227, 228, 42, 467, 469, 82, TU147 Bundschuh, Rebecca. 228, 467 Bundy, Jacob. 537 Bunyatyan, Yurik. TH108 Buratovic, Sonja. 368 Burden, Natalie. TUPC22 Burdick, Jeff. 26

Burdon, Francis. WE177 Burgeot, Thierry. 359 Burkard, Michael. MO028 Burket, Sarah. TH042 Burkhard, Benjamin. WE054 Burkhard, Lawrence. TU149 Burkhardt, Michael. 507, TUPC17 Burkhardt, Ulrich. 420, WE052, WE053 Burkina, Viktoriia. TH039 Burt, Adam. WE114 Burton, G Allen. MO080 Bury, Nicolas. MO189, TUPC24, WE011, WE057 Busch, Wibke. 315, 479, 486, MO205, TH138 Busquet, Francois. 505 Bustamante, Paco. 110, 113 Bustnes, Jan Ove. MO030 Butler, Emma. 14, 417, 419, WE002, WE070 Butler, Josh. 213, TU027 Butler Ellis, Clare. 121 Buttol, Patrizia. WE196 Bylemans, Dany. 123

C Cabal, Helena. 450 Cabellos, J. TH152 Caccamo, Letteria. TH211 Caccia, Arianna. TH080 Cachot, Jérôme. 443, TH057, TU006 Cadore, Solange. MO078 Cafarella, Mark. MOPC03 Cagnon, Christine. WE144 Cajaraville, Miren. TH207, TH208 Çakal Arslan, Özlem. TUPC15 Calado, Ricardo. TU064 Caldés, Natàlia. WE215, WE216, WE217, WEPC10 Calewaert, J.B. K1 Caley, Jane. 285 Callaghan, Amanda. TH194 Callaghan, Paul. 6 Callol, Carles. TU021 Calvet, Marta. MO229 Camacho, Carolina. MO042 Camarero, Pablo. MO034 Camilleri, Virginie. 523 Camoin, Luc. 367 Campagnolo, Luisa. 128, MO139 Campanale, Claudia. 232, WE142 Campbell, Anna. 170 Campiche, Sophie. WE120 Campillo, Juan. MO101 Campion, Jean-Florent. WE211 Campo, Julian. TH117 Campo-Moreno, Pablo. 73 Campos, Bruno. 318, 518, WE016 Campos, Diana. TH024, TU173 Campos-Mañas, Marina Celia. 346 Camus, Lionel. WE145 Can Güven, Emine. TH148 Cañavate Sastre, María Dolores. TU161 Candolfi, Marco. TH034, WEPC24 Canfield, Tim. 312 Canisius, Marie-France. WE234 Canivet, Ludivine. TU002 Cantos, Manuel. 231, TU131 Capdevielle, Marie. 458 Capela, N. WE124 Capela, Sonia. WE124 Cappellen, Olivier. TH163

Cappello, Tiziana. TH057 Cappuyns, Valerie. WE207, WE212 Capri, Ettore. 289 Carapeto-García, Ricardo. TU174 Carbonaro, Richard. TUPC11 Carbonell, Gregoria. MO039, TH136 Carboni, Andrea. MO058 Cardoni, Martina. 232, MO142, TU146, TU160, TU163 Cardoso, Caroline. WE010 Cardwell, Allison. MO077 Carere, Mario. WE254 Carlon, Claudio. 336 Carlsson, Christel. TH242 Carlsson, Pernilla. TH093 Carmean, Christopher. WEPC25 Carmo, Talita. MO136 Carmo Silva, Jaqueline. TU189 Carnall, Jacqui. 237, TU178 Carney Almroth, Bethanie. TH196, TH198 Carpinteiro, Inmaculada. MO043 Carr, Gregory. WE055 Carrara, Maria. MO211 Carravieri, Alice. 113 Carrillo, Manuel. MO038 Carro, Tiffany. 337 Carroll, Anthony. MO010 Carroll, Hyrum. WE055 Carson, Damien. TH171, TH176 Cartmell, Elise. 73 Casado-Martinez, M. Carmen. MOPC06 Casal, Paulo. TU067 Casalegno, Andrea. MO221 Casas, Gemma. MOPC08 Cascao, Irma. MO038 Casella, Patrizia. WE186 Cassar, Eva. MO007 Cassee, Flemming Ralph. WE198 Cassio, Fernanda. 58 Castaño, Andrea. 11 Castella, Emmanuel. 71, MO079 Castellani, Valentina. 500 Castro, Italo. TU050, TU125 Castro, Mafalda. WE077 Catae, Aline. TU203 Catalan, Caroline. 245, TU265 Catarci Carteny, Camilla. TH209 Catarino, Ana I. TH199, TH220 Cato, Eric. 28 Caudrelier, Dimitri. WE211 Cavalie, Isabelle. 523 Cavallin, Jenna. TU004, TU054, WE004 Cavicchioli Azevedo, Vinicius. MO136 Cayer, Alain. MO073 Cedeño-Macías, Luis Alberto. TH065 Cedergreen, Nina. 185, MO213, MOPC14, MOPC17, TH026, TH128 Cela, Rafael. 427, MO043 Celis, José. 21 Celma de Oliveira Lima, Emília. TU105 Celsie, Alena. 477, MO116, TH090 Cenijn, Peter. 471, 485 Cerrillo, Cristina. 281 Cerro-Gálvez, Elena. TU067 Cervera, Laura. TU066 César, Emilie. TH141 Cesnaites, Romanas. 265 Cesnaitis, Romanas. 546, 547 Cevik, Fatma. TH111

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Chaâbene, Zayneb. 166, TU092 Chadha, Marcus. MO163 Chadili, Edith. 173 Chae, Yooeun. 444, MO015, TH191, TU122 Chagnon, Pierre. MO143 Chalon, Carole. WE239 Chalot, Michel. 230, TU249 Chambers, Janice. 526 Chang, Daniel. 268, TU020 Chang, Elisabeth. MO189 Chang, Lia. TH074, TH076 Chapelle, Coline. 443 Chaplin-Kramer, Rebecca. TU212 Chaplow, Jacky. MO033, TU247 Chapman, Jennifer. 238, 239 Chapple, Andrew. WE170 Charles, Sandrine. WE058, WE059 Chastel, Olivier. 110 Chateauvert, Julie. 235 Chatel, Amelie. 396, TU078 Chatel, Amelie. 465 Chatterjee, Nivedita. 416, MO003, MO008, MO009, TU019, TU079, WE007, WE043 Chaumot, Arnaud. 355, 366, MO007, TH006, TH011, WE006, WE241 Chavez Bravo, Edith. WE101 Chelinho, Sonia. 242 Chen, Changer. TH173 Chen, Chia-Yang. 480 Chen, Jui-Sheng. TH084, WE250 Chen, Qiqi. 521, TH055 Chen, Szu-Chieh. TH165 Chen, Wei-Yu. MO081, MO184 Chen, Xiaobo. 406 Chenèble, Jean-Charles. MO157, TH243 Cheng, Yan. 339, TU123 Cheng, Yi-Hsien. TH162 Chénier, Marc. 25 Cheplick, Mark. 122 Cherel, Yves. 113 Chevre, Nathalie. WE120 Cheyne, Shawna. MO067 Cheyns, Karlien. MO095, TU245 Chiang, Gustavo. 21 Chiellini, Federica. 124 Chien, Ling-Chu. MO071 Chierichetti, Melisa A. WE081 Chiffoleau, Jean-Francois. 359 Chion, Béatrice. TH244 Chiron, Serge. 426 Chivers, Douglas. 320 Cho, Kijong. MO159, WE074 Cho, You Na. WE131 Choi, Geun-Hyoung. TH120 Choi, Inhee. 416 Choi, Jinhee. 281, 416, MO003, MO008, MO009, TU019, TU079, WE007, WE043, WE155 Choi, Kyungho. TH156, TU170, WEPC21 Choi, Soyeon. WE195 Choi, SuHyun. MO008, WE007 Choi, Sung-Gil. TH123, TH124 Chon, Tae-Soo. WE043 Chou, Wei-Chun. TH162 Chouvelon, Fannie. 443 Chowdhury, Jasim. MO087, TUPC09 Christensen, Anne Munch. 562 Christensen, Guttorm. 288, MO029, TU106 Christensen, Jan. WE097

Christiansen, Karen. 298 Christien, Gaëtan. 155 Christl, Heino. 165 Chropeňová, Mária. TH155 Chun, Hang-Suk. TH048 Chys, Michael. 428 Ciadamidaro, L. 230 Ciarlo, Michael. TH149, TH150 Ciesielski, Tomasz. 112, MO172, WE153, WE162 Ciffroy, Philippe. 491, TH153 Cinjee, Andre. 387 Ciroth, Andreas. 38, 451 Ciulli, Stefano. 128, MO139 Claassens, Sarina. 394 Claessens, Michiel. 336 Clarens, Frederic. MO218 Clark, James. TH200 Clark, Kathryn. WE247 Classen, Christian. 191, MO245, TU202 Classen, Silke. WE053, WE061, WE062, WE072 Claudino dos Santos, Alexandro. TU189 Claus, Evelyn. TH112 Claus-Krupp, Andrea. MO105 Clauson-Kaas, Frederik. MOPC14, MOPC18 Clavreul, Julie. 308, TU212 Clérandeau, Christelle. 443, TH057 CLEYET-MAREL, Jean Claude. 234 Clook, Mark. TUPC22 Coërs, Pierre. 556 Coetzee, Ilse. MO128 Coeurdassier, Michael. 63 Cofalla, Catrina. 356, WE027 Coggon, David. TH226 Cogne, Yannick. 366 Colbourne, John. 419, WE002 Cole, Matthew. TH200, TH206 Colin, Adelie. 86 Coll Mora, Claudia. MO152 Collegari, Stella. MO099 Colles, Ann. TH166 Collins, Janet. MOPC03 Collison, Elizabeth. MO241 Colombo, Emanuela. MO221 Coman Schmid, Diana. 319 Comas, Joaquim. TH086 Comber, Mike. MO161 Comber, Sean. 32, 72, MO053, MO075, MO076, TU236 Conesa Alcaraz, Héctor Miguel. MO069, TU161, WE181 Congiu, Eleanora. TH035 Connon, Richard. 522 Connors, Kristin. TH201 Consoli, Pierpaolo. TH211 Consonni, Viviana. 326, 328 Constantine, Lisa. 526, 65, TU025 Constantino, Carlos. 73, MO075, MO208, WE256 Contreras-Garces, Andrea. MO252 Converso, Valerio. 537 Cooper, Christopher. TH228, TUPC08, TUPC09 Cooreman, Kris. 147 Coors, Anja. 330, 561, MO191 Coquillé, Nathalie. TU273 Corcoll, Natàlia. 35 Cord, Isadora. TU069 Cordery, Katherine. 217, 55 Cordua, Birgitte. 562 Cormier, Bettie. TU006 Cornelis, Christa. 491, TH153

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Cornelis, Geert. 20 Cornement, Magdaléna. TU196, TU199 Cornet, Valérie. 272, 273 Cornier, Thierry. 62 Corominas, Lluis. TH086 Corona, Blanca. 452 Corsi, Ilaria. 161, TH187 Cortés Ruíz, Gema. TU174 Cortina, Tom. MOPC12 Cortvrindt, Rita. WE232 Cosio, Claudia. 316, TU275 Costa, João. MO014 Costa, Maria. 497 Costa, Maria-Vila. MO145 Costa, Pedro. 497 Costa, Sara. MO013, MO014 Costa, Tulio. TU070 Costas, Noemi. 184 Coughlin, Conor. 300 Couldwell, Genevieve. TU061 Coulson, Michael. TU206 Coulson, Mike. 192, 337 Courteille, Marine. 271 Courtney, Ronan. 449 Cousin, Xavier. 377 Cousins, Ian. 255, 530, MOPC13 Cousins, Mark. 243 Coustillas, Jori. MO222 Coutellec, Marie-Agnes. WE015 Covaci, Adrian. 154 Craft, John. 378 Craft, John. WE148 Craig, Carol-Ann. TU182 Craig, Peter. 338, WE112 Cravo-Laureau, Cristiana. WE144 Crawford, Sarah. TU257, WE027 Cremona, Paolo. TU226 Crenna, Eleonora. 502, TU221, TU264 Cresswell, Tom. 6 Creta, Matteo. TH161 Creusot, Nicolas. 400 Crévecoeur, Sophie. TH163 Crews, Sonny. WE219 Crocker, Joe. 528 Cronin, Mark. 212 Crookes, Michael. TU022 Croot, Peter. TU183 Cross, Richard. 83 Crossman, Alden. 391 Crosta, Chiara. 294 Croteau, Marie. 70, TU116 Crump, Doug. TU259 Cui, Rongxue. TH014, TU122, WE021, WE125 Cunha, Sara. 146 Cupr, Pavel. TH155, TH157 Ćurčić, Marijana. TU255 Cuvelier, Christine. TH163 Cuypers, Bart. 317 Czarnecka, Malgorzata. TUPC03

D D'Silva, Lawrence. TU257 da Costa, Tamiris. TH127, WE208 da Rosa, Gabriela. TH127 da Silva, Clóvis Lucio. WE102 Da Silva, Corinne. WE015 da Silva, Israel. TH068 da Silva, Victor Hugo. WE010 Dabrin, Aymeric. TUPC13 Dachs, Jordi. TU067, TU068 Dackermann, Vera. 82

Daehmlow, Daniel. MO105 Daehne, Dagmar. 563 Daffe, Cerise. 445 Daglioglu, Nebile. TH107 DAGLIOGLU, Nebile. TH111, TH113 Dagnino, Sonia. MO166 Dailianis, Stefanos. TH181, TU062 Daily, Gretchen. TU212 Daldorph, Peter. WE256 Dalhoff, Kristoffer. TH026 Dallet, Mélissa. WE243 Dam, Maria. TH096 Dambietz, Sebastian. TU118 Damgaard, Anders. 462 Damiani, Mattia. 194 Damien, Roussel. WE036, WE174 Damm, Moritz. TH189 Damonte, Gianluca. 161 Dancet, Geert. K2 Danger, Jean -Michel. TU051 Daniel, Otto. TH011, WE117 Daniele, Gaëlle. MO171 Daniels, Benjamin. TH133, TH145 Danielsson, Sara. TU149 Dann, Janek. 403 Date, Rahul. TU031 DAUCHY, Xavier. 86, MO168 Dauriat, Arnaud. 557 Davenport, Russell. MO147 David, Jean-Philippe. MO002, MO007 Davidson, Keith. MO260 Davidson, Todd. TU025 Davies, Iain. TUPC14 Davies, Joanna. TU095 Davis, John. TU154 Davison, Angus. WE015 Dawick, James. TH177 Dawson, Amanda. 495 Dawson, Kenneth. TU072 De Alencastro, Luiz Felippe. 443 de Baat, Milo. 404, WE175, WE176 De Boeck, Gudrun. 472, MO031 De Boer, Elmer. 306 de Boer, Jacob. 460 De Boever, Patrick. 543 De Boevre, Marthe. 473, TU037 De Brouwere, Katleen. TH159 De Bruecker, Philippe. WE205 De Caevel, Bernard. 248 de Cirugeda Helle, Olivier. MO250 De Coen, Wim. 265 De Coninck, Dieter. 418 De Deugd, Florian. WE175 De Faveri, Lia. MO045 De Gelder, Leen. WE194 De Guise, Sylvain. 218 de Hults, Quentin. 556 De Jaeger, Simon. WE205 De Jong, Frank. 338 de Jong, Irene. MO222 de Jong, Margje. 60 De Jong, Sanne. 424 de Jourdan, Benjamin. 430 De Klein, Jeroen. 208 de Klein, Jeroen. MO193 de Knecht, Joop. 547 De Kok, Theo. 543 De la Campa, Regina. 541 De la Rúa, Cristina. 450, WE215, WE217, WEPC10 De Laender, Frederik. 257, 531, MO024, TH137 De Leersnyder, Ilse. WE194 de Lima, Elizabete. TU167, WE102

139

De Loose, Marc. 473, TU037 De Marchi, Lucia. 124 De Meester, Luc. 57 De Meester, Steven. 407 de Oliveira, Adria. TH012 De Paiva Seroa Da Motta, Raquel. MO231 De Raedt, Jonathan. MO024 De Rijcke, Maarten. 51, 52 De Rosa, Michele. 92 de Rysky, Erica. 499, WE142 De Saeger, Sarah. 473, TU037 de Saxcé, Marie. 92 De Schamphelaere, Karel. 187, 240, 272, 3, 418, 51, MO023, MO025, TU185, WE069, WE073, WE248, WEPC16 De Schamphelaere, Kristine. WE237 de Souza Machado, Anderson Abel. MO084, TH182 De Troch, Marleen. MO025, WEPC16 De Troyer, Frank. 140 de Vaufleury, Annette. 370, WE182 De Vicente Álvarez-Manzaneda, Inmaculada. MO125 de Voogt, Pim. 66, MO058, MO155, MO158, WE161, WE176 de Vries, Mattie. 404 De Wilde, Tineke. TH245 De Wispelaere, Patrick. 134 De Witte, Bavo. TH116, TH225 De Zwart, Dick. 204, 268, 488, TU020, WE177, WEPC18 Deacon, Samantha. WE147, WE255 Dean, Robin. TU197 Debat, Vincent. TH011 Debecker, Sara. 54 Debier, Cathy. 271, 272 Debonneville, Christian. TU001 Dec, Weronika. TH029, TH030 Dechet, Friedrich. 10 Decio, Pamela. TU203, TUPC05 Defo, Celestin. MO088 Degrez, Marc. 93, MO223, WE205 Dehelean, Bogdan. TH068 Dehelean, Stefan. WE111 Dekker, Stefan. TH224 Del Giacco, Luca. TH036 del Río, Carmen. TU117 Del Rio Cubilledo, Cristina. TH052 Delahaut, Vyshal. MO031 Delannoy, Matthieu. TU134, TU135 Delbeke, Katrien. MO077 Deleebeeck, Nele. TU190 DeLeo, Paul. 207, TH149, TH150 Delgado, Maria Jose. MO069 Delhem, Rik. TH068, WE111 Della Pietra, Leondina. TH083 Della Torre, Camilla. TH036 Dell'Ambrogio, Gilda. WE120 Dell’Osbel, Naira. WE203 Delmaar, Christiaan. 492 Delorme, Nicolas. TH011 Delpit, Nicolas. TH176, TUPC18 Delpivo, Camilla. 281, MO130 Delvau, Nicolas. TU157 Delvaux, Alain. MO114 Demaegdt, Heidi. MO095 Demeestere, Kristof. 134, 388, 428, 483, TH114, TH115, TH116, WE248 Demeneix, Barbara. 155, WEPC20, WEPC22 Demmig, Sandra. 10

140

Demmons, Ellie. TU061 den Haan, Klaas. 31, 548, TH175, TU236 Den Hond, Elly. 543 Denayer, Franck. TU002 Deneer, John. 178, MO248 Denslow, Nancy. 457 Deokwon, Kim. MO026, TH125 Depledge, Michael. K1, MO259 Depuydt, Stephen. TU055 Derecka, Kamila. TUPC05 Derkx, Ria. MO248 Derocher, Andrew. TH097 Deruytter, David. 240 Descamps, Sébastien. 113 Deschênes, Louise. 503 Deschutter, Yana. MO025, WEPC16 Desforges, Jean-Pierre. 218 Desmet, Nele. 123 Deutschmann, Björn. 474 Devic, Gordana. WE163 Deville, Sarah. TU072 Deviller, Geneviève. MO143, MO150, TU013 Devin, Simon. MO073, MO094, TH002, TU040 Devriese, Lisa. TH225 Dewaele, Joost. TH227 Dewald, Carla. TU042 Dewulf, Jo. 407 Dewulf, Wim. WE220, WE222 DeZwart, Dick. 534 Dhoop, Barbara. TH247 Di Baccio, Daniela. TU163 Di Carlo, Elisa. 449 Di Cesare, Silvia. 504 Di Guardo, Andrea. MO110, MO111 Di Guardo, Antonio. 233, 257, 531, TH080, TU158, WE108 Di Ianni, Emilio. MO213 Di Lenola, Martina. 232, TU160, TU163 Di Maria, Andrea. 409 Di Napoli-Davis, Gina. TH095 Di Nica, Valeria. TH135, WE032 DI PAOLO, CAROLINA. 402 Di Toro, Dominic. WE151 Diamond, Jerome. 12 Diamond, Miriam. 538, 541, TH098, WE099 Dias, Ana. TU209, TU218, WE208 Dias, Marcelo José. WE010 Diaz de Rada, Jara. TU041 Diaz Navarrete, Cecilia Andrea. WE050 Diaz-Cruz, Silvia. 179 Diciotti, Stefano. 128, MO139 Dickhut, Rebecca. TU155 Dieterich, Andreas. TU042 Dietschweiler, Conrad. 507 Dietz, Rune. 218, TU248 Dietz, Sandra. MOPC24 Díez, Berta. TU102 Diez, Maria. TH152 Díez-Galerón, Patricia. MO101 Diksaityte, Austra. TU188 Dimitrov, Sabcho. 327, TH170 Dimmen, Malene. TH106 Dinelli, Enrico. MOPC08, TH109 Dinh, Khuong. MO019 Dinh, Khuong Van. 171, 54, WE112 Diniz, Lia Gracy. TH110 Dinter, Axel. TU195, TU206 Diogène, Jorge. 146 Dioh Lobe, Pascaline Diale. MO059 Djogo, Maja. MO056

Docekal, Bohumil. TU086 Dodd, Matt. MO067 Dodos, Andreas. TH180 Doelsch, Emmanuel. TH229 Doering, Jonathon. 156, WE008 Dohmen, Peter. 7, MO257 Dollacker, Annik. 253 Dollinger, Margit. TU087, TU088 Dom, Nathalie. TH168 Domegan, C. K1 Domingos, Rute. 20 Domínguez, Victor. TU244 Dominic, Anto Raja. MO104, MO105 Domoradzki, Jeanne. TU154 Donald, Kirsty. MO063 Dondi, Nicole. WE210 Dong, Yan. 405 Dormousoglou, Margarita. TH181 Dorn, Philip. 213 Dorne, Jean lou. 189, 99 dos Santos, Amanda. TH012 Dosis, Ioannis. WE251 Dotro, Gabriela. 73 Doucet, Annick. TU013 Doucette, William. TU013 Douglas, Grant. 448 Douglas, Gregory. TH081 Douziech, Mélanie. 67 Downes, Ruth. 556 Dranguet, Perrine. 316, TU250, TU275 Dreier, David. 457 Drewes, Jorg. 27 Dreyer, A. TH103 Drobne, Damjana. WE037 Droge, Steven. 476 , TU139, TU151, WE087 Drosopoulou, Elena. TU075 Drost, Wiebke. TU232 Drouillard, Ken. TH119, TH134 Druart, Coline. 370 Dryfhout-Clark, Helena. 539 Drzewiecka, Agnieszka. TH029, TH041 Du, Miaomiao. TU053 Du Pasquier, David. WEPC20 Dubois, Cecile. 367 Dubot, Pierre. TU002 Dubourg, Paul. TU106 Duca, Radu - Corneliu. MO004, TH161 Duchemin, Matthieu. WE162 Ducrot, Virginie. 205, WE059, WE168 Duering, Rolf-Alexander. TU152, TU176, TU177 Duffner, Andreas. TU118 Duflot, Aurelie. 278, TU051 Duflou, Joost. WE222 Duggento, Andrea. 128, MO139 Duinker, Arne. 145, 22, 69 Duke, Clifford. 312 Dumkova, Jana. TU086 Dunnett, Fraser. TH199 Dunon, Vincent. WE224 Dupont, Anne. TU024, TU028 Dupont, David. WE225 Dupraz, Valentin. 185, TU273 Duquesne, Sabine. TU093, WE066 Duran, Robert. WE144 Durand, A. TU249 Dürkop, Kristina. 137 Durou, Cyril. TH072, TH172, TH174, TH246 Duvignacq, Marion. 324

Dworczyk, Claudia. WE054 Dyer, Scott. 207, TH201, TUPC14

E Eadsforth, Charles. TU236, WE158 Ebeling, Markus. MO263, TH059 Echevarria, Guillaume. MO094 Echeveste, Pedro. TU183, TU189 Eckenstein, Helene. TU024, TU028 Edahiro, Akari. MO235 Edwards, Deborah. 300 Eeckhout, Mia. 473, TU037 Eens, Marcel. MO169 Efthimiou, Ioanna. TU075 Egea-Serrano, Andrés. 8 Egeler, Philipp. TU232 Egerer, Sina. WE124 Ehmke, Alexander. TU192 Eichhorn, Klaus-Jochen. TH221 Eidens, Corvin. TH233, WE240 Eilebrecht, Elke. TU018, WE050 Eisenreich, Karen. 547 Eisenreich, Steven. MO049 Eisfeldt, Franziska. 451 Eisner, Bryanna. TU023, WE008 Ekblad, Alf. WE116 Eklo, Ole Martin. MO113 Elger, Arnaud. TU097 Eliat, Maxime. TUPC21 Eljarrat, Ethel. 289, MO261 Elleuch, Amine. 166, TU092 Elliot, Michael. TU182 Elliott, John. 61 Ellis, Hugh. 110 Ellis, Rob. 170 Elphinstone-Davis, Jessica. TH021 Elshout, Pieter. TU211 Elskens, Marc. MO049, TH105 Elston, Charlotte. 192 Elvig-Jørgensen, Signe. MO213 Emberger, Matthew. MO144 Embry, Michelle. 213, 268, 269, 547, TU020, TU149, TU154, TU230, TUPC24, WE055 Emke, Erik. WE161 Endo, Satoshi. 386 Enell, Anja. WE127 Engelke, Maria. 17, MO138 Englert, Alexander. TUPC17 Englert, Dominic. 226, 42 Engwall, Magnus. WE127 Enrici, Marie-Hélène. MO150, TU233 Eo, Soeun. WE132 Eon, Mélissa. TU273 Erazo, Santiago. TU066 Erden, Michael. TU118 Eric, Maire. WE036 Ericher, Fabienne. 237, TU178 Eriksson, Per. 368 Ernst, Gregor. 337 Ernstoff, Alexi. 557 Erraud, Alexandre. 278, TU051 Ertunc, Tanya. WE100 Erzgraeber, Beate. 75 Escher, Beate. 331, 400, 401, 487, MO188, TH051, TH089, WE086 Esimbekova, Elena. WE001 Esmaili, Zinat. TH223 Esnouf, Antoine. 37 Espejo, Winfred. 21 Espí, Jose Jorge. MO218 Espinat, Laurent. MO171 Esposito, Giovanni. TU132 Esposito, Valentina. TH211

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Esteves, Ana. MO014 Etxebarria, Nestor. 470, TU041, WE162 Eulaers, Igor. 218 Eury, Nicola. WE255 Evans, Peter. 131 Evenset, Anita. 288, MO029 Everaert, Gert. MO025, WEPC15, WEPC16 Exeler, Nina. 191 Eyckmans, Johan. 409, WE205

F F. Astudillo, Miguel. 453 Faber, Ann-Helene. WE161 Faber, Daniel. MOPC01, MOPC02 Faber, Jack. 311 Fabi, Gianna. TH210 Falahudin, Dede. 442 Falciani, Francesco. 417 Falkenhain, Anna-Maria. MO191 Fantin, Valentina. WE186 Fantke, Peter. 298, 501, 555, 557, 559, MO237 Faraca, Giorgia. 462 Faragò, Maria. MO225 Faraji, Farid. TH068, WE111 Farkas, Julia. 281, 34, 508, TH205 Farley, Kevin. TUPC11 Farmen, Eivind. TH096, TH106 Faron, Justyna. TH029 Farr, Brianna. 213, 268, TU020 Farre, Marinella. 18, 343, MO164, MO243, MOPC08, TU084 Farré, Marinella. TH109 Farré-Urgell, Marinella. 127 Farukh, M. TH037 Fassbender, Christopher. TUPC25 Fatema, Mst Kaniz. 43 Faupel, Michael. TH028, TH130 Faure, Florian. 443 Faust, Michael. 239 Fay, Kellie. TU154 Faye, Thierry. TH104 Faz, Angel. 447, MO068, MO083, TU243 Fazeni, Karin. WEPC09 Fazio, Simone. MO236 Fearn, Sarah. 537 Feckler, Alexander. 227, 228 Fedyunin, Vladimir. TU184 Feibicke, Michael. 563, TU096 Feidt, Cyril. TH122, TU134, TU135, TU136 Feifarek, David. WE004 Félix, Carina. MO014 Fellenberg, Greta. 553 Felsmann, Daniela. WE124 Feng, Zhong-Ping. WE015 Fenner, Kathrin. MO148 Ferain, Aline. 272, 273 Fernandes, João. MO136, TH044 Fernandes, Marisa. MO136, MO137, TH044, TU182 Fernandes, Teresa. 160, 281, MO018, TU081, TU082, TUPC16 Fernández, Amanda. MO210 Fernández, Carlos. MO039, MO210, TH008, TH136 Fernández, Diego. 227 Fernandez, Marc. 545, 547 Fernández, Maria Dolores. TU117 Fernández Ondoño, Emilia. MO072 Fernandez-Cruz, Maria Luisa.

TU076 Fernandez-de-Simon, Javier. 63 Fernández-López, Carmen. MO041 Fernandez-Piñas, Francisca. 346, TU107 Fernandez-Pinos, Maria-Carmen. TU068 Ferra Vega, Carmen. TH210 Ferrara, Allyse. TH042 Ferrari, Anna Maria. WE210 Ferrari, Benoît J.D.. MOPC06, WE120 Ferrari, Federico. MO261 Ferrario, Claudia. WE040 Ferreira, Carlos. TH230 Ferreira, Violeta. WE190 Ferrer, Darci. 207 Ferret, Celine. 425 Festy, Frederic. 550 Fetter, Eva. 527, TU018 Fettweis, Andreas. MO023 Fick, Jerker. 321 Fidalgo, Maria. TU085 Fiebig, Silke. MO151, TU176 Fierens, Tine. 491, TH153 Figat, Ramona. MO044 Figueira, Etelvina. 124 Figueiredo, Joana. TU108, TU109, TU110 Fileman, Elaine. TH200 Filho, Osmar Klauberg. WE115 Fillmann, Gilberto. TU050 Filser, Juliane. 17, 221, MO059, MO138 Finessi, Emanuela. WE173 Fini, Jean-Baptiste. WEPC20, WEPC22 Finizio, Antonio. MO110, MO111, TU180, WE040 Finnegan, Meaghean. WE167 Fischer, Dieter. TH221 Fischer, Fabian. TH089 Fischer, Klaus. MO118 Fischer, Marten. WE137 Fischer, Stellan. MO046 Fischer, Stephan. TU150 Fisk, Peter. 548, TU022 Fitzpatrick, Anne. 300 Fitzsimmons, Patrick. 158 Fitzsimons, Mark. 32, MO053 Fivet, Adeline. TU059 Fjeld-Nygaard, Cecilie. WE146 Fki, Lotfi. 166 Flameling, Tony. 208 Fleming, Lora. K1, 47, 49, MO259, MO260, TU262 Flemming, Anthony. 537 Floate, Kevin. TU177 Floeter, Carolin. TU030, WE041 Florian, Mermillod-Blondin. WE036 Floriani, Magali. 523 Fochtman, Przemyslaw. TU011 Focks, Andreas. 255, 257, 436, 437, 438, TH061, TH137, TU193, WE063, WE064 Fogg, Lindsay. MO115 Foit, Kaarina. 13 Fontenot, Quenton. TH042 Ford, Alex. 276, 322, 376, TH004, TH005, TH018, TH063, TH203, WE034 Forget-Leray, Joelle. 278, TU051 Förlin, Lars. TU060 Fornaroli, Riccardo. 422 Forsberg, Norman. WE082

Fort, Jérôme. 113 Fortibuoni, Tomaso. TH210 Fossi, Maria Cristina. 499, TH211, TH212, WE142 Fossøy, Frode. 112 Foster, Karen. TU230 Fouche, Tanya. 394 Foulon, J. TU249 Fournier, Agnès. TH122, TU134, TU135, TU136 Fourquet, Patrick. WE005 Fowler, Jodi. TU085 Fox, Michelle. TH022 Francis, Tariq. 235 Franco, Antonio. 14, 438, 532, 67 Frank, Daniel. 522 Frank, Stefanie. WE110 Franke, Lea. 190, 191, TU198, TU201 Franke, Vera. 482 Frankenbach, Silja. MO124, WE190 Franqui, Lidiane. MO137 Fransman, Wouter. WE197, WE198 Fransson, Malin. WE127 Frantzen, Marianne. TU106 Frantzen, Sylvia. 145, 22 Fraser, Bruce. 541 Fraser, Chris. 391 Frauke, Stock. 527 Frédéric, Hervant. WE036, WE174 Freiburghaus, Aline. 316, TU275 Freire, Fausto. TH230 Freitas, Rosa. 124, TU108 Frelon, Sandrine. 367, WE005 French-McCay, Deborah. WE159 Frerot, Helene. 1 Frey, Marco. WEPC08 Fricke, Julian. 191, TU198, TU201 Friedler, Eran. MO228 Fries, Elke. 115, MO070 Frisch, Katharina. 227 Frische, Tobias. TH133, TH145, WE066 Fritsch, Clémentine. 62 Frohme, Marcus. 536 Frömel, Tobias. 292, TH100 Frommberger, Malte. 191 Frommlet, Jörg. WE190 Frost, Kirstin. TH233, WE240 Früh, Elisabeth. MOPC24 Fry, Jonna. 350 Fu, Qiuguo. TU150 Fuchs, Marlene. TH241 Fuchte, Hanna. WE083 Fuerle, Constanze. 563 Fulgoni III, Victor. TU227 Fuller, Neil. 276, TH018, TH063 Furmanski, Nicola. TH227 Furness, Robert. MO030 Fürste, Anette. TU121 Furxhi, Irini. WE185 Fusco, Laura. TU077

G Gabarron, Maria. 447, MO068, TU243 Gabbert, Silke. 294 Gabbert, Silke Gerda Margaret. TU229 Gabbia, Daniela. MO211 Gabriel, Aikaterini. 372 Gabriel, Antonieta. MO013 Gabriëls, Isabelle. 371, 473, TH046, TU037 Gabrielsen, Geir. 110, MO030

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Gabrielsen, Geir Wing. MO029 Gabsi, Faten. 382 Gagliardi, Bryant. TH017 Gagnaire, Beatrice. 523 Gago Ferrero, Pablo. MO046 Gahou, Josiane. TUPC13 Gai, Francesco. 499, TH211 Gainer, Amy. 393, WE122 Gala, William. TH081 Galas, Simon. 367, WE005 Galatola, Michele. K3 Galay-Burgos, Malyka. TH073 Galhano, Victor. MO132, WE242 Gallagher, Anthony. 72 Gallagher, Sean. 458 Gallet, Julie. TH135 Galli, Matteo. WE142 Gallo, Rosita. TU132 Galloway, Tamara. 159, 169, 440, 552, 83, TH185, TH200, TH206 Galloy, Anne. MO114, WE234 Galvão, Tiago. MO136 Gamarra, Ana Rosa. WE217 Gamblin, Clare. 41 Gan, Jay. WE080 Ganal, Caroline. 356 Gandhi, Nilima. TH119, TH134, TU246, WE235 Gandy, Catherine. 446 Gannon, Shawn. MO173, MO174 Gao, Chuan. MO023 Gao, Yue. TH105 Gao, Zhenglei. TU205, TUPC06, WE170 García, Inés. MO101, TH219 Garcia, Jade. TU265 Garcia, Jose Luis. 231 García, Patricia. 11 Garcia, Pilar. MO210, TH136 García Alonso, J. MO063 García Calderón, Jose. TH050 García Carmona, Minerva. MO072 Garcia Gonzalez, Maria Nelly. TU225 Garcia-Gomez, Concepcion. TU117 Garcia-Heras, Marie-Sophie. MO034 García-Sosa, Alfonso. 325 Garcia-Suarez, Tirma. 408 GARCIA-VELASCO, NEREA. 299, TU080, TU252 Garcon, Guillaume. TU002 Gardiner, William. WE160 Gardner, Mike. MO208 Garí, Mercè. 374 Gari, Merce. WEPC23 Garman, Emily. 241, TUPC12 Garmo, Oyvind. 295 Garner, Kendra. 558 Garrain, Daniel. WE215, WE216, WEPC10 Garric, Jeanne. MO171 Garside, R. K1 Garthwaite, Dave. TH158 Gartiser, Stefan. 177, MO146 Garza, M. K1 Gascon, M. MO259 Gasser, Michael. 463 Gates, Jennifer. MOPC03 Gathmann, Achim. MO249 Gauchotte-Lindsay, Caroline. TH222 Gaus, Caroline. 332, WE086 Gaze, William. 182, TU144 Gedik, Kadir. TH148 Geerts, Lieve. WE193

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Geffard, Alain. 278, TU051 Geffard, Olivier. 278, 355, 366, TH006, WE006, WE241 Geist, Juergen. 284, 522 Genovese, Lucrezia. 499, TH211 George, Sunny. WE044 Georgiadis, Stylianos. 405 Georgiou, Christos. TU062 Gerald, Thouand. MO157, TH243 Gérard, Guy. MO114 Gerbinet, Saïcha. MO238 Gerecke, Andreas. 492 Gergs, Andre. 260, WE061, WE062, WE072, WE167, WE168 Gergs, Rene. TU096, TU126, TU127 Gerhardt, Almut. MO217, TH032, TH033, TH195, WE044, WE045, WE048 Gerloff-Elias, Antje. TU238 Germer, Sabine. 527 Getliff, Jonathan. 431 Geueke, Birgit. 461 Gewert, Berit. TH215 Gewurtz, Sarah. TH119, TH134 Gfeller, Hans. 210 Ghekiere, An. TH245 Ghilardi, Anna. TH036 Ghosh, Manosij. MO004 Ghosh, Prasenjit. TU169 Giamberini, Laure. MO073, MO094, TH002, TU040 Giang, Pham. TH039 Gibon, Thomas. MO220 Giddings, Jeffrey. MOPC03 Gierbuszewska, Aneta. TH030 Giese, Evelyn. 115, MO070 Giesy, John. 156, WE008 Gil-Uriarte, Endika. TU041, WE153, WE162 Gilbert, Laurent. WE211 Gildemeister, Daniela. 138, 239, 64, MO201 Gilliam, Lucy. 303 Gillissen, Frits. TH187 Gimbert, Frédéric. 370, MO096 Giménez Papiol, Gemma. MO244 Gimeno, Sylvia. MO144, TH176, TU001, TU005 Gimeno Melia, V. TH086 Ginebreda, Antoni. MO027, MO145 Girard, Robin. 39 Giraudoux, Patrick. 63 Girones, Rosina. MO218 Gismondi, Eric. TU059 Gissi, Andrea. 285 Giubilato, Elisa. MO140, TU226 Giulivo, Monica. 289 Giusti, Arnaud. MO114, TH163 Gladbach, David. TU192, TUPC04 Glaholt, Stephen. 4 Glauner, Thomas. TH104 Gleiser, Carolin. MO040 Glimstedt, Linda. 28, 482 Glöckner, Martin. 556 Glossioti, Maria. MO246 Gobas, Frank. 158, 286 Godderis, Lode. MO004 Godeaux, Denis. TH163 Godinho, Lia. MO261 Godoy, Aline. TH151 Goedkoop, Mark. MO222 Goedkoop, Willem. 228 Goerlitz, Gerhard. 168, 78, WE067 Gogos, Alexander. MO123 Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana. TU168

142

Gokce Daglioglu, Nebile. TH113 Goksøyr, Anders. 111, 30 Golla, Burkhard. MO104, MO105 Golokhvast, Kirill. WE185 Golovko, Oksana. MO021 Golz, Anna-Lea. 275, TU039 Gomes, Helena. WE179 Gomes, Rachel. 340 Gomez, Sonia. 86 Gomez Garrido, Melisa. MO083 Gomez Lopez, Maria. 447 Gomez-Ruiz, Beatriz. 86 Gomiero, Alessio. TH210, WE139 Gonçalves, Cátia. 497 Gonçalves, Fernando. MO012 Gonçalves, Gil. MO060 Goncalves, Sandra. MO060, WE238 Gondran, Natacha. TU269 Gonsior, Guido. TH034, TU045, TU271, TU272 Gony, Sylviane. TH246 Gonzáles, Alberto. MO020 González, Ana Belén. WE020 Gonzalez, Cécile. TU172 González, Demetrio. TU117 González, Emilia. TH219 Gonzalez, Laura Emilia. 216 Gonzalez, Mariana. TU160 Gonzalez, Veronica. MO130 Gonzalez, Yolanda. WEPC23 Gonzalez - Andres, Veronica. MO130, TH152 González Fuentes, Miguel Ángel. WE101 González-acuña, Daniel. 21 González-Alcaraz, M. Nazaret. 56, MO069, TU161, WE181 Gonzalez-Doncel, Miguel. MO039, TH136 González-Gálvez, David. 281 González-Trujillo, Lezli. TH060 Görlich, Armin. TU194, TUPC01, TUPC02 Gorokhova, Elena. TU263, WE077 Goronovski, Andrei. TU223 Gosens, Ilse. WE198 Gottardi, Michele. TH128 Gottesbueren, Bernhard. 293 Gotti, Alberto. 274, 301, 493, 540, TH079 Gottschling, Michael. TH216 Gouin, Todd. 199, 68, TH087, TH088, TU139, WE087 Gournis, Dimitrios. TU075 Goussen, Benoit. 14, WE070 Goutas, Andreas. TU075 Gouveia, Duarte. 366, TH006, WE006 Govarts, Eva. TH166 Grabic, Roman. 400 Graef, Daniel. 44 Graham, David. 180 Graham, Scarlett. 435, WE071 Gramatica, Paola. TU156 Grant, Helen. TU247 Grant, Sharon. 332, WE086 Grassi, Giacomo. 161, TH187 Grathwohl, Peter. 553 Gravato, Carlos. TH019, TH024 Grechi, Laura. WE171 Gredelj, Andrea. WE171 Green, Andy. MO035 Green, Derek. TU257, WEPC15 Green, John. 506, MOPC03, TH237, TH238

Green Etxabe, Amaia. 376, TH005 Greggs, Bill. TH150 Gregoir, Arnout. 472 Gregory-Eaves, Irene. 195 Grellier, J. MO259 Grenni, Paola. 232, MO142, TU146, TU160, TU163 Griffith, Daniel. TU066 Grigorev, Yury. MO074, MO129, TH020, TH234 Grimalt, Joan. 374, WEPC23 Grimm, Christian. WE045 Grison, C. 230 Grisoni, Francesca. 328 Grivogiannis-forsberg, AnnaMaria. 20 Groenenberg, Bert-Jan. 296 Groezinger, Franziska. 7 Groffen, Thimo. MO169 Groh, Ksenia. 461 Gröller, György . WE206 Groothuis, Floris. 476 Groslambert, Sylvie. MO238, WE214 Gross, Elisabeth. 250, MO073, MO094 Grova, Nathalie. MO004 Grove, Andre. TH068, WE111 Grujic Letic, Nevena. WE091 Grund, Stefanie. TH130 Gschwend, Phil. 2 Gualdi, S . MO259 Guberman, Sarah. 2 Gubin, Iurii. TU148 Guckland, Anja. MO263 Gudkov, Dmitri. TH018 Guenthardt, Barbara. MOPC15 Güereca, Leonor Patricia. MO227 Guérold, François. MO073, MO094 Guerrisi, Maria. 128, MO139 Guest, Robert. TU011 Guiney, Patrick. 213 Guler, Yasmin. TH005 Gülsever, Gizem. TUPC15 Guluzada, Leyla. MOPC24 Gundlach, Michael. 521, TH055 Gunnarsson, Lina. 135, 181, 65, MO187 Guo, Wei. TH105 Guseynov, Oleg. TU026 Gutiérrez, Sandra. TU117 Gutierrez, Simon. 336, 560, TH244 Gutierrez Alonso, Simon. 265 Gutierrez Villagomez, Juan Manuel. WE152 Gutsch, Marissa. MO065 Gutsell, Steve. 212, 417, 419 Guymer, Ian. 77 Guyonnet, Dominique. WEPC11 Guzel, Evsen. TH107, TH111, TH113 Gwak, Young-ji. MO008 Gweon, Hyun Soon. WE130

H Haarman, Arthur. 352, 463, WE257 Haas, Adrian. 90, MO219 Haase, Henning. 420 Haase, Nora. MO262 Habekost, Maike. MOPC03 Habener, Leesa. MO010 Habran, Sarah. TH141 Hackenberger, Branimir. 104, TH010 Hackenberger, Davorka. 104, TH010

Hackett, Michael. MO252 Haderlein, Stefan. MOPC24 Hadioui, Madji. MO054 Haener, Andreas. TH078 Hafner, Christoph. TH034, WEPC24 Haftka, Joris. 66 Hagemann, Ulrike. TU222 Hägerbäumer, Arne. MO178 Haglund, Peter. MO089 Hahn, Stefan. TU229 Hahne, Joerg. TH059 Hald, Tine. 405 Halder, Marlies. TU020, TU154 Hale, Beverley. 243, 392 Hale, Sarah. TU239 Hall, Kathleen. MO098 Hall, Kristen. TU088 Hall, Tilghman. 167 Halland, Gunhild. TH204 Hallin, Sara. WE127 Hamberger, Anja. 192, WE123 Hamburger, Oliver. TH032 Hamel, Perrine. TU212 Hamer, Mick J.. 10, TH137 Hamers, Timo. 471, 485 Hamilton, Frederic. 448 Hammel, Klaus. 75, 78, MOPC01, MOPC02 Hammer, Jort. 66 Hammers-Wirtz, Monika. TH070, TU121, WE053, WE061, WE062, WE072 Hammershøj, Rikke. 130, MO162 Hammett, Kirsten. TU033 Hampel, Miriam. 516 Han, Gi Myung. TH214, WE131 Han, Jeonghoon. WE156 Han, Taejun. TU055, TU098, WE195 Hand, Laurence. 129, MO153 Handakas, Evangelos. 274, 372, 493, 540, TH079 Handley, John. TUPC22 Handy, Richard. MOPC22 Hanewald, Nicole. TU192, TUPC04 Hanke, Wojciech. 372 Hanley, Valerie. 24 Hanotel, Julie. TU048 Hansen, Bjørn Henrik. 109, TH202, TH204, WE154 Hansen, Hans. MOPC17 Hansen, Hans Christian. MOPC14, MOPC18 Hansen, Steffen. 34, WE198 Hansen, Søren. MOPC14 Hanssen, Sveinn Are. MO030 Hantson, Philippe. TU157 Hany, Cindy. TU049 Haratsaris, Vaítsa. TH217 Hardenstine, Jeff. TH081 Hardy, Ingrid. WE234 Hargreaves, Andrew. 73 Harloff, Annika. TH100 Harmsen, Joop. 178 Harner, Tom. MO116 Haro Castuera, Amparo. TU174 Harrad, Stuart. TH226 Harris, Craig. 478 Harris, Meagan. 435 , WE071 Harris, Shelley. 538, 541 Harrison, David. 300 Hartman, Rebecca. WE093 Hartmann, Nanna. WE187, WEPC03 Hartmann, Sarah. 356, MO131,

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MO133 Hartnell, David. TU010 Hartung, Thomas. 505 Hartzell, Sharon. 175 Harvey, Danielle. 522 Harwood, Colin. 180 Hashmi, Muhammad. 401 Hassellov, Martin. 551 Hassellöv, Martin. TH198 Hassink, Jan. 293 Hatti-Kaul, Rajni. TU225 Hatzky, Stefanie. 395 Hauck, Torsten. MO122 Hauschild, Michael. 116, 298, 307, 405, TU266 Hausen, Jonas. WE053 Hauser, Jacob. MO045 Havens, Patrick. MO255 Hawker, Darryl. 332, WE086 Hayward Walker, Ann. WE159 He, Shan. 419, WE002 He, Wenkui. MO107 Heard, Matthew. 189 Hecht-Rost, Sabine. 191, TU200 Hecker, Markus. 156, TU023, TU063, TU259, WE008 Hedde, Mickaël. MO096 Hedgpeth, Bryan. TU027 Hedlund, Britta. TH096 Heger, Sebastian. TU053 Heijungs, Reinout. TU214, TU219 Hein, Arne. 138, MO201 Heine, Simon. 167, 168, 439, 78 Heise, Susanne. 114, 302 Heitmans, Wijnand. TH068 Helias, Arnaud. 37 Hellack, Bryan. TU112 Hellstrom, Gustav. 321 Hellweg, Stefanie. WEPC12, WEPC13 Helm, Paul. 538, TH098, WE084 Helmus, Rick. MO041, MO058, MO155 Hemart, Matthieu. WE191 Henderson, Andrew. TU217 Hendriks, Jan. 59, WE161 Henneberger, Luise. TH089 Hennecke, Dieter. 132, 178, TU176 Hennies, Mark. TH040 Hennige, Sebastian. MO018, TUPC16 Henry, Kevin. MOPC03, WE231 Henry, Theodore. TH052, TH199, TH220, TU104 Hentges, Steve. WE247 Hepsø, Marion. WE134 Herbert, John. 417 Herborn, Katherine. WE038 Herbst, Uta. TU234 Hercht, Hendrik. 389 Herlin, Nathalie. MO126 Hermens, Joop. 66, TU139, WE087, TH088 Hernandez, Edgar. WEPC07 Hernández, Miriam. TH066 Hernández Rojas, Lourdes Andrea. WE101 Hernández Zepeda, J Santos. WE101 Herno, Valerie. MOPC01, MOPC02, WE252 Heron, James. MO067 Herrchen, Monika. 345, TU176 Herrera, Israel. WE215, WE217, WEPC10 Herrero, Oscar. TH008

Herrmann, Anne. MO186, TU016 Herzke, Dorte. 110, MO172 Herzog, Ingo. TH241 Heseding, Jens. TU030 Hesketh, Helen. 189 Hettwer, Karina. TH233, WE240 Heuck, Christian. TU118 Heutink, Roel. 441 Hevrøy, Tanya. 275 Heye, Katharina. MO194 Hickey, Gordon. TU259 Hickmann, Silke. 239 Hidding, Bjoern. 411, TU233 Hietaketo, Sanni. MO180 Higgins, Christopher. MOPC11 Hilaire, Bruno. MO224 Hilber, Isabel. 176 Hilbers, Jelle. 59 Hill, Jason. 544 Hillwalker, Wendy. TH248 Hilscherova, Klara. 400, TH035, TH157, TU086, WE017 Hindle, Ralph. MOPC09 Hird, Cameron. 169, 170, MO022, TH206 Hirmann, Doris. 267 Hirose, Akihiko. MO197, TUPC23 Hischier, Roland. 352 Hjermann, Dag. TH064, WEPC15 Hodges, Geoffrey. 212, 417, 419, WE002, WE087 Hodges, Juliet. 532 Hodgson, Daniella. TH206 Hodson, Mark. WE047 Hoeger, Birgit. TU025 Hoet, Peter. TU072 Höfer, Hubert. WE052 Hofer, Tim. 285 Hoffmann, Ary. TH017 Hoffmann, Sebastian. 505 Hofman, Jakub. MO109, TU137, TU138 Hofmann, Thilo. MO112, TH218, TU166, WEPC04 Hogendoorn, Elbert. 362 Höger, Stefan. 193, TH016, TH236, TU024, TU028, TU196, TU199 Hogstrand, Christer. 99, MO189, TUPC24 Hoke, Robert. TH228 Holbech, Henrik. 215, TH054 Holgado, Olaia. TU058 Hollander, Anne. TU211 Hollender, Juliane. 35, MOPC15, TH128, TU150, WE177 Hollert, Henner. 157, 330, 356, 402, 474, 520, 521, 536, TH045, TH055, TU014, TU023, TU053, WE027, WE150, WE162 Holm, Peter. 298 Holmes, Christopher. 122, 207, MO051, TUPC14 Holmström, Hans. 28 Holten, Roger. MO113 Holterman, Henk Jan. 119, 121, MO120 Holth, Tor Fredrik. 277 Hommen, Udo. WE075 Hönemann, Linda. TU093 Hong, Jongki. 416 Hong, Lian. TH214 Hong, Sang Hee. TH214, WE131, WE132 Hong, Su-Myeong. TH123, TH124 Honnen, Wolfgang. TH195 Hoogeweg, Gerco. 122 Hoondert, Renske. 59, TH231

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Hoppe, Martin. 17 Hoppe, Sabina. 295 Horemans, Nele. 188, 244 Horion, Sibylle. TU059 Horn, Harald. MO052, TU143 Horneman, Allan. 26 Hortiguela, Maria. MO060 Horton, Alice. 189, 441 Hoshikawa, Ritsuko. WEPC25 Höss, Sebastian. MO178, TU159 Hostens, Kris. TH225 Hostettler, Lu. 210 Houtz, Erika. 26 Howells, Aron. MO256 Howley, Peter. 238 Hristozov, Danail. 160, 347, WE197, WE198 Hseu, Zeng-Yei. MO071 Hsi, Hsing-Cheng. MO071 Hsieh, Nan-Hung. TH154 Hsu, Tzu-Shiow. MO071 Hu, Ching-Yao. MO071 Hu, Jing. TU154 Huang, Lei. 559, TH077 Huang, Qingguo. MO170 Huaux, François. TU071 Hubaud, Jean-Claude. TUPC16 Hubbard, Sue. TH143 Hübner, Uwe. 27 Hudson, Malcolm. TH226 Huelser, Tim. TU112 Hüffer, Thorsten. TH218, TU166, WEPC04 Hug, Christine. 403 Hug, Stephan. MO123 Hug Peter, Dorothea. 71, MO079 Huggett, Duane. WE231 Hughes, Christopher. TH177 Hughes, Greg. MO115 Hughes, Gregory. MO252, TU175, TU178 Hughes, Sarah. 213 Huguenot, David. TU132 Huhn, Carolin. MOPC24, TH192 Huijbregts, Mark A.J.. 116, 305, 59, 67, TU211 Huijsmans, Jan. 119 Huith, Philipp. TU042 Humel, Stefan. TU130 Hund-Rinke, Kerstin. 178, 345, 468, TU119, WE188, WE189 Hung, Hayley. 539 Hung, Wan-Hua. 480 Hungerbühler, Konrad. 291, 455, 492, MOPC13, MOPC15 Hunka, Agnieszka. TU258 Hunt, Kathy. MOPC09 Hunting, Ellard. 220, 229, 424, WE165 Huntsman-Mapila, Philippa. TUPC12 Huppertz, Tom. 248 Hursthouse, Andrew. 114 Hurtado-Gallego, Jara. TU107 Husson, Steven. 186, 217, 317, 365, TH047 Huston, Wilhelmina. 495 Hutchinson, Kathryn. 65, MO187, TU025 Hutchinson, Tom. TUPC22 Huygens, Inge. MO251 Huysegoms, Lies. WE212 Huysman, Sofie. 407 Huysman, Steve. 388, 96, TH114, TH115 Hvezdova, Martina. MO109, TU137

Hwang, Wonjae. TU089 Hwang, Yu. MOPC23 Hyder, Kieran. TU253 Hylland, Ketil. 277 Hyun, Seunghun. TU089 Hyunsaing, Mun. MO026

I Iaccino, Federica. 549, TH168 Ibouraadaten, Saloua. TU071 Ibrahim, Lara. TH069 Ievsieieva, Larysa. TU148 Ifemeje, Mary-Jane. WE184 Iguchi, Taisen. TH023 Ilic, Mila. TU168, WE163, WE164 Im, Jeong. 281 Inthavong, Chanthadary. TH122 Ioannidou, Chrysa. TU075 Ioppolo, Francesco. TH082 Ippolito, Alessio. 422, MO246 Ireland, Alex. TU015 Irigoyen, Xabier. TU068 Irijalba, Itziar. TH049, TU058 Irizar, Amaia. 299 Irmer, Andreas. WE100 Isacco, Luca. MO119 Isemer-Kellner, Rena. TU088 Itsubo, Norihiro. MO232, MO235 Iturria, Iñaki. TH049, TU058 Iturrioz, Xabier. WE153 Ivetic, Tamara. MO056 Iwuoha, Emmanuel. MO062, MO097 Izagirre, Urtzi. 470, TU041, WE153, WE162

J Jackson, Craig. 4 Jackson, Daniel. WE015 Jackson, Don. WE235 Jacob, Stefanie. TU044 Jacobi, Sylvia. TU233 Jacot, Alain. WE035 Jager, Tjalling. 381, WE060, WE066, WE154 Jagla, Magdalena. 290 Jähne, Martin. TH233, WE240 Jahnke, Annika. 333 Jahren, Susie. TH205 Jaimes, Maria. TH171 Jakoby, Oliver. TH069 Jakubowicz, Ignacy. 551 Jambeck, Jenna. 303 Jamilloux, Véronique. WE015 Janer, G. TH152 Jang, Mi. TH214, WE131 Jans, Daniela. TU088 Jänsch, Stephan. 115, 420, MO070, WE052 Jansen, Leen. TH247 Jansen, Mieke. 57 Janssen, Colin. 187, 418, 51, 52, MO024, MO025, WE069, WE248 Janssen, Martien. WE258 Janssens, Lizanne. 105, MO019 Janthur, Ina. TU096, TU126 Jantunen, Liisa. 538, 539, 541, TH098, WE099 Januskaitiene, Irena. TU188 Janz, David. TU063 Jaramillo, Rusbel. TU066 Jarosova, Barbora. WE017 Jarvis, Adam. 446 Järvistö, Johanna. TH240

143

Jaspers, Veerle. MO172, WE056 Jaumot, Joaquim. MO006 Jaumot, Joaquin. 369 Jefferson, Bruce. 77 Jegede, Kayode. 243 Jekel, Martin. 341 Jeker, Lukas. 190 Jellinek, Johanna. TUPC20 Jeltsch, Florian. 439 Jemec, Anita. TH188, WE037, WEPC01 Jene, Bernhard. 293, TH085, TU233 Jenkins, William. 41 Jennen, Danyel. 543 Jenner, Karen. 210, 547, TU233 Jensen, Antony. TH226 Jensen, John. TU177 Jensen, Karl. 69 Jensen, Kathleen. WE004 Jensen, Keld. 281, WE198 Jenssen, Bjorn Munro. 111, 112, 30, MO172, WE162 Jenssen, Martin. 421 Jentzsch, Paul. TU066 Jeon, DaRae. TH092 Jeon, Junho. MO026, MO047 Jeong, Chang Bum. 496 Jeong, Hee-Jin. MO167 Jeong, Hyeri. TH144, TH146, WE029 Jeong, Jae-Seong. TU019, TU079 Jeong, Seung-Woo. TU122, WE104 Jeong, Tae-yong. TU186 Jeong, Yoonah. TH091, TU140 Jeong, Yunsun. TH156 Jérôme, Adrien. WE036 Jesus, Fatima. 519 Jevtic, Dragan. 336 Jewell, Kevin. 27 Ji, Kyunghee. TH056 Jiang, Jing. 521 Jiang, Jinlin. 339 Jiang, Xiaogang. MOPC17 Jiang, Zhilan. 353 Jimenez, Begona. TH212 Jimenez, Cristina. TU077 Jimenez, María. MO210 Jiménez-Cárceles, Francisco José. WE181 Joaquim-Justo, Celia. TU059 Joassard, Lucette. 377 Jobling, Susan. 136, MO214 Johann, Sarah. 356, WE150, WE162 Johanning, Karla. TH042, TU154 Johansson, Erik. 491, TH153 Johns, Tim. TUPC08 Johnson, Matthew. 340 Johnson, Michael. 234 Johnson, Steven. MO045 Johnston, Helinor. TU081 Johnstone, Christopher. 378 Jollie, Lucas. MO179, MOPC05 Jolliet, Olivier. 478, 532, 544, 555, 557, 559, TH077, TU227 Joly, Laure. TH147 Jonas, Beth. TUPC14 Jonathan, Ifemeje. WE184 Jones, Alan. MOPC03, WE105 Jones, Christopher. WE127 Jones, Delwyn. 246, MO226, TU268 Jones, Glyn. 238 Jones, Huw. TU133 Jong, Mui Choo. 180 Jonkers, Niels. MO234

144

Jonkers, Tim. MO212 Jonsson, Bo. WEPC22 Jonsson, Henrik. WE146 Jordan, Alex. 84 Jordão, Rita. 518 Joris, Ingeborg. 123 Journel, Romain. 213 Joy, Linta. WE044 Joyce, Fiona. MO253 Joyce, Peter. TU223 Jubany, Irene. MO218 Jubeaux, Guillaume. 355, WE241 Juberg, Daland. WE259 Julshamn, Kåre. 22 Jung, Min Woo. TH092 Junghans, Marion. WE177 Junho, Jeon. TH125 Junker, Thomas. TU176 Junttila, Juho. TU106 Juraske, Ronnie. MO122 Jurjanz, Stefan. TU134 Jørgensen, Kirsten. 356, WE148, WE149, WE153, WE162

K Kabler, Aaron. MOPC03 Kabouw, Patrick. 337 Kaegi, Ralf. MO123, TUPC17, WEPC05 Kaeppler, Andrea. TH221 Kaerrman, Anna. 303 Kah, Melanie. MO112, TU166 Kahl, Michael. WE004 Kahn, Iiris. 325 Kaišarević, Sonja. WE172, WE173 Kalbar, Pradip. 40 Kalbitz, Karsten. MO058 Kalcikova, Gabriela. TH188 Kalman, Judit. TU076 Kamari, Abderrahmane. 396 Kameda, Yutaka. TH121, WE095, WE098, WE244, WE249 Kammann, Ulrike. WE041 Kanda, Rakesh. MO214 Kandarova, Helena. TU011 Kandie, Faith. 134 Kandris, Ioannis. MO246 Kang, Habyeong. TH156, TU170 Kang, Hye-Min. 496 Kang, Hyun-Joong. 331 Kanyile, Sthandiwe. TU083 Kapanen, Anu. 336 Kaplan, Aviv. WE140 Kapo, Katherine. MO051 Kapustka, Lawrence. 312 Karaaslan, Muhammet. TUPC15 Karafilidis, Christos. 556 Karakitsios, Spyros. 274, 372, 493, 540, TH079, WE185 Karam, Marie-Joe. 1 Karamertzanis, Panagiotis. 285, 336, 546 Karaoglan, Bilgin. TU232 Karapanagioti, Hrissi. TH181 Karatas, Okan. MO093 Karlsson, Therese. 551, TH198 Karthikeyan, KG. TU091 Kase, Robert. MOPC06 Kashiwada, Shosaku. MO135 Kasiotis, Konstantinos. MO246 Kaßner, Franziska. 527 Kästner, Matthias. 334, TU132, WE089 Kataoka, Chisato. MO135 Kathmann, Wiebke. TH099

Kato, Yumie. MO135 Katsiadaki, Ioanna. 155, 98, TU010 Katsumiti, Alberto. TH208 Kaufmann, Kristina. 402 Kawaguchi, So. 495 Kay, Paul. MO050 Keck, Matthias. MO186, TU016 Kefford, Ben. 227 Kehrer, Anja. 564 Keiter, Steffen. TH045, TH053, TU006 Keith, Nathan. 4 Keizer, Jan. TH025 Keller, Arturo. 558 Kelley, Barbara. TU027 Kellner, Martin. WE046 Kelly, Frank. 550 Kennedy, Linda. TH094 Kenngott, Kilian. 228, TH071 Kerkhof, Annemarie. 306 Kern, Matthew. MOPC03 Kestemont, Patrick. 273 Ketelslegers, Hans. TH159 Khachatryan, Artak. TH108 Khairy, Mohammed. TU155 Khammanee, Naranun. TH132 Khan, Nadeem. TH139, TU021 Khanam, Mst Ruhina Margia. TU065 Khodaparast, Zahra. 80 Kibria, Golam. WE026 Kidd, Karen. TU149 Kienzler, Aude. 268, TH129, TU020 Kierkegaard, Amelie. 333 Kilercioglu, Serdar. TH107 Kilgallon, John. 532 Kille, Peter. MO001, TH005, WE130 Kim, Bokyung. TH056 Kim, Chanhee. WE043 Kim, Da-Hye. MO167 Kim, Dokyung. 444, TH191, TU090, TU122, WE018, WE125 Kim, Eun-Young. TU019 Kim, Eunhye. TH092 Kim, Heeseok. TH075 Kim, Hunbeen. TU079 Kim, Jang. TU055 Kim, Jeong-Han. TH092 Kim, Jong-Hwan. TH123, TH124 Kim, Jongwoon. TH144, TH146, WE029 Kim, Juhee. TU089 Kim, Ki eun. MO127 Kim, Kitae. TH156 Kim, Kyungmin. TU089 Kim, Mi Rae. TU098 Kim, Mina. 416 Kim, Sang Don. TU186, WE014 Kim, Seohyun. TH092 Kim, Seung-Kyu. TH183, TH213 Kim, Shin Woong. 444, TU122 Kim, Suhkmann. 416, TU079 Kim, Sujin. TU170 Kim, Sungkyoon. WEPC21 Kim, Sunmi. TH156, WEPC21 Kim, Woo-Keun. TH048 Kim, Woojung. TU186, WE014 Kim, Yongeun. MO159, WE074 Kim, Youn-jung. WE195 Kim, Youngho. 416, MO009, WE155 Kimmel, Stefan. 191, 193, TU196, TU199, TUPC04 King, Catherine. 495 King, Henry. 308, 408, TH228 King, Rob. 495

Kinniburgh, David. MO032 Kirby, Mark. TU235, TU253 Kirkley, Andrew. WEPC25 Kirschner, Stefanie. TH241 Kitae, Kim. MO047 Kiwoon, Choi. MO047 Kjeilen-Eilertsen, Grethe. WE146 Kjos, Marianne. 34 Kladnik, Aleš. TH188 Klaminder, Jonatan. 321 Klaschka, Ursula. TU171, TUPC19 Klawonn, Thorsten. MO064 Klein, Michael. 338, TU229, WE112 Klein, Olaf. 191, 192, TU198, TU201, WE110, WE123 Kleinjans, Jos. 543 Kleiven, Merethe. TU120 Kling, Annette. TU191, TU192 Klix, Volker. TH176 Kloas, Werner. 526, TH182, TH192 Klöckner, Philipp. 482, WE135 Kloeckner, Philipp. 344 Klopp, Christophe. WE015 Kloslova, Zuzana. 285 Klüver, Nils. MO188, TH051 Knaebe, Silvio. 191, 44, TU191, TU198, TU201, WE110, WE123 Knapen, Dries. 154, 217, 371, 473, MO190, TH046, TU004, TU029, TU037, TU054 Knapik, Marta. TH030 Knautz, Timm. WE061 Knepper, Thomas. 292, TH100 Knezevic, Varja. WE172 Knight, Derek. 410 Knillmann, Saskia. 13, TH133, TH145 Knudsmark Sjøholm, Karina. WE097 Ko, Jung Ah. MOPC23 Kober, Sascha. 536 Koch, Holger. 492 Koch, Josef. WE069 Koch, Wolfgang. 138, MO201 Kochleus, Christian. 395 Köck-Schulmeyer, Marianne. MO261 Koehle-Divo, Vanessa. TH002 Koelmans, Albert. 442, TH187, TH224, WE138 Koelsch, Daniela. 556 Koene, Joris. WE015 Koenig, Wolfram. 74 Koeser, Jan. 17, 221, 282, MO061, MO138 Kögel, Tanja. 145, 22 Köhler, Heinz. MOPC24, TH197, TU042 Kohler, Manfred. WE050 Kohler, Shanelle. 322, 376, WE034 Köhler, Stephan. 482 Kohls, Claudia. TU127 Kohlschmid, Eva. TU087 Kohoutek, Jiří. TH155, WE017 Koivisto, Joonas. WE198 Köke, Niklas. 292 Kolar, Boris. TU180 Kolb, Ruth. 12 Kole, Maxime. TU128 Kolic, Terry. TH119 Kolind, Rasmus. TU248 Komdeur, Jan. 60 Kong, Deyuan. TH081 König, Fabian. 341 Konradi, Sabine. MO199, TU176 Konschak, Marco. 228, 469, TU147

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Konstantinou, Ioannis. TH181 Kontoulis, Dionysios. WE225 Kooi, Merel. WE138 Kools, Stefan. TU179 Koopmans, Kim. 123 Koppen, Gudrun. TH159, TH166 Kortenkamp, Andreas. 485 Korzeniowski, Stephen. MO177, MOPC12 Kos, Monika. WE037 Koschorreck, Jan. 395, TU149, WE050, TH103 Kosma, Christina. TH102 Kostanjevecki, Petra. 481 Kosubova, Petra. MO109 Kosugi, Yuki. MO195 Kothawahla, Dolly. 482 Kotschik, Pia. WE124 Kotterman, Michiel. 146 Kouloumpis, Antonios. TU075 Kounina, Anna. 557 Kouts, Tarmo. 356, WE162 Koutsaftis, Apostolos. 337 Koutsoumpeli, Eleni. MO045 Kowal, Virginia. TU212 Kowalczyk, Agnieszka. TH227, WE246 Kozyatnyk, Ivan. MO089 Kraak, Michiel. 404, MO179, MOPC05, WE175, WE176 Kragten, Steven. WE035 Krailler, Jesse. WE055 Krais, Stefanie. TH197 Kramer, Kees. 534 Kramer, Nynke. 476, TH088 Krämer, Wolfgang. MO248 Kramer-Schadt, Stephanie. WE066 Kratasyuk, Valentina. WE001 Krauss, Martin. 400, 401, 402, 403, 42, 520, MO205, TH138, WE173 Kretschmann, Andreas. TH026 Kreutzer, Anne. 356 Krichbaum, Kevin. TU207, TUPC07 Kringstad, Alfhild. MO261 Krinulović, Katarina. TU255 Kristiansson, Erik. 135 Krivoshiev, Boris. 317 Krizman Matasić, Ivona. 481 Kroeze, Carolien. WE138 Krogseth, Ingjerd. 288 Krohn, Regina. 490 Kropf, Christian. TH042, TU005 Krueger, Hank. 458, TU033 Krueger, Henry. MOPC03, MOPC04 Krug, Harald. WE199 Kruszewski, Francis. 266 Kubitza, Johanna. TU095 Kubowicz, Stephan. TH205 Kudryasheva, Nadezhda. TU026 Kuhl, Katrin. 167, TU095 Kuhlbusch, Thomas. 345 Kuhlmann, Janna. TH026 Kühne, Ralph. 211, 530, TH138, TU239 Kühnel, Dana. 345, TU103, WE188, WE189, WE199, WEPC01 Kuhnert, Klaus-Dieter. MO131 Kula, Christine. MO249 Kulak, Michal. 408, TU212 Kulec-Płoszczyca, Elżbieta. TUPC03 Kulka, Ryan. 541 Kullik, Sigrun. 235 Kumar, Anu. 526 Kümmerer, Klaus. TUPC19

Kummrow, Fábio. TH151 Kundi, Lone. TU044 Kungskulniti, Nipapun. TH132 Kunze, Jan. MO131 Kurimoto, Masayuki. MO197, TUPC23 Kurt Karakus, Perihan. 23, MO092, MO093, TH148 Kurtz, Markus Peter. TH071 Kurtz, Sandra. TH071 Kurtzweil, Mitchell. MO160 Kussatz, Carola. 282, WE188 Küster, Eberhard. 137, MO262 Kutsarova, Stela. 403, 530, TH170 Kuzmic, Mira. 367 KUZMIC, Mira. WE005 Kvas, Stephanie. 391 Kwak, Jin Il. TH014, TU090, TU122, WE018, WE021, WE125, WE126 Kwon, Ayoung. TH075 Kwon, Jung-Hwan. 331, MO009 Kydralieva, Kamila. TU184 Kyriakopoulou, Katerina. MO246 Kyunghyun, Kim. MO026 K'oreje, Kenneth. 134

L La Porta, Caterina. TH036 Labadie, Karine. WE015 Labarrere, Carla. TU257 Labille, Jerome. TUPC16 Labrenz, Matthias. TH221 Lacasse, Katia. TH143 Lacirignola, Martino. 39 Ladermann, Kim. TH045, WE061, WE062 Ladouce, Romain. 367, WE005 Laender, Frederik. 438 Laenge, Reinhard. MO186, TU016 Lafay, Florent. MO171 Laffite, Amandine. TU141 Laforsch, Christian. TH221 Lagadic, Laurent. 526, TH137, WE079, WE252 Lagarde, Fabienne. 396 Lagesson, Annelie. 321 Lahive, Elma. 189, 441, TH185 Lahr, Joost. 178, MO248, TU177 Lai Shuen Lyn, Adelene. MO148 Laitinen, Jaana. 560, TH244 Lajoie, Kévin. TH057 Lam, Wan Yee. MO231 Lambert, Scott. TH189 Lambin, Xavier. 63 Lammel, Tobias. TU074, TUPC20 Lammertsma, Dennis. MO248 Lamon, Lara. TH129 Lampi, Mark. TU027, TU236 Lamy, Isabelle. MO096 Lanctot, Chantal. 6 Lander, Deborah. MO174 Landi, Claudia. TH036 Landis, Wayne. 435, WE071 Lane, Julie. 323, WE038 Lane, Oksana. 303 Lane, Taylor. TU063 Langenheder, Silke. MO152 Langenhoff, Alette. MO158 Langeveld, Jeroen. 208 Langlois, Valerie. WE152 Lantto, Tiina. 285 Lapczynski, Aurelia. TU172 Lapenna, Silvia. 285 Laporte, Fréderic. MO002 Lara, Pablo. TU111

Larondelle, Yvan. 271, 272 Larrey-Lassalle, Pyrene. TU213 Larsen, Morten. 483, TH096 Larsson, Josefine. WE046 Larsson, Maria. WE127 Lartigue-Peyrou, Françoise. 354 Laskowski, Ryszard. 338, WE112 Lassalle, Gilles. WE015 Lategan, Kim. TU085 Lathuilliere, Michael. TU217 Latino, Diogo. MO148 Latrille, Eric. 37 Laucht, Silke. WE035, WE178 Laue, Heike. 210, TU154 Laukens, Kris. 317 Laurence, Volatier. WE036 Laurent, Alexis. 236, MO225, TU267 Laurin, Lise. MO237 Lautz, Leonie. 67 Lauwers, Elsa. 188 Lavalle, Christine. TH038 Lavandier, Catherine. TU215 Lavigne, Carolien. WE205 LAVISSE, Victor. MO224 Lavranou, Alexia. TH181 Lawlor, Alan. TU247 Lawrence, Alan. 525, 528, MO252, MO253, MO256 Le Faucheur, Séverine. 316, 445, TU250, TU275 Le Mevel, Sébastien. WEPC20, WEPC22 Le Page, Gareth. 181 Leach, Lloyd. TU085 Lead, Jamie. 16 Leahy, Paul. WE236 Leão, Susana. MO239 Leat, Eliza. MO030 Lebed, Pablo. TU120 Lebedova, Jana. TU086 Lebepe, Jeffrey. 358 Lebreton, Morgane. MO005 Lechon, Yolanda. 450, WE215, WE217, WEPC10 Leclerc, Alexandra. 236 Leclerc, Maxime. TU250 Lecomte, Catherine. 367 Lecomte-Pradines, Catherine. WE005 Lecube, Xabier. WE162 Lee, Danny. 286 Lee, Dong soo. MO127, TH075 Lee, Dong Soo. TH074, TH076 Lee, Hee-Jee. TH183 Lee, Hojun. TU098 Lee, Hyonho. WE043, WE155 Lee, Iwa. 368 Lee, Jacquetta. 406 Lee, Jae-Seong. 496, 517, TH001, TH003, WE156 Lee, Jiho. TH092 Lee, jiyun. TH056 Lee, Jong-hwa. TH092 Lee, Jongmyoung. WE132 Lee, JongSu. WE132 Lee, Jung Hak. TH092 Lee, Jungeun. TU170 Lee, Michael. TU025 Lee, Min-Chul. 517 Lee, Sangwoo. TH048 Lee, si-won. WE007 Lee, So-Young. 331 Lee, Sojin. WE104 Lee, YoungHwan. TH001 Lee, Yun-sik. MO159, WE074

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Lee, Yunah. TH074, TH075, TH076 Lee, Yung-Shan. 286 Leemans, Michelle. WEPC22 Lees, Katherine. MO053 Lefebvre, Wouter. 543 Leganes, Francisco. 346, TU107 Lege, Sascha. MO040, TH104 Legler, Juliette. 471 Legradi, Jessica. 460, 471 Leguay, Didier. 377 Lehmann, Gunnar. TU053 Lehmler, Hans-Joachim. TH097 Lehrenbaum, Warren. MO177 Lehtonen, Kari. TH007, WE148, WE149, WE153, WE162 Leifer, Marc. 542 Lein, Pamela. 522 Lekamge, Sam. WE192 Lemaire, Benjamin. 271, 272, 273 Lemière, Sébastien. TU048 Lemieux, Heather. 391, WE119 Lemkine, Gregory. 155, WEPC20 Lencioni, Valeria. WE032 Lennon, Rosie. MO036 Lenton, Timothy. TH200 León, Victor M.. MO101, TH219 León Castellanos, Verónica. TU077 Leon Paumen, Miriam. 269, 336, 431, 547, TH137, TH175, TU233, TU236 Leonard, Angelique. MO238, WE202, WE214, WE221 Leonard, Anne. 48 Leonard, Marc. 152, 213 Leonards, Pim. 368, MO206, MO212 Leone, Marianna. MO142 Leong, Meng-Lan. MO184 Leopold, Annegaaike. WE233 Lepot, Benedicte. 425 Leppanen, Matti. 295 Leppänen, Matti. MO180, TH240 Lepper, Peter. 285 Lepretre, Alain. TU048 Lerche, Christiano. TH040 Leroy, Delphine. WE234, WE239 Lescuyer, Arlette. TU048 Leslie, Heather. 460 Lesnikova, Elena. MO138 Letcher, Robert. 218 Letinski, Daniel. TU027 Letón, Pedro. MO055 Letsinger, Sarah. MO050 Leubner, Nadine. WE045 Leusch, Frederic. MO010 Levard, Clément. 224 Levasseur, Annie. 454 Levêque, Benjamin. 245 Leverett, Dean. 466, MO209, TUPC10, WE253 Levesque, Christine. 25 Levin, Milton. 218 Levine, Steven. 456, WE109, WE229, WE230 Lewis, Ceri. 169, 170, 552, MO022, TH200, TH206 Lexén, Jenny. 556 Leynen, Nathalie. TU017 Lharidon, Jacques. MO157, TH228, TH243, TU224, WE211 Li, Dingsheng. 558 Li, Jianhong. TU047 Li, Li. 85 Li, Xueshu. TH097 Li, Yi-Ying. TH165 Li, Zhe. MO152, WE092

145

Li, Zhiwen. TH160 Liang, Ching-Ping. TH084, WE250 Liang, Man-wai. 125 Liang, Xia. TU047 Liao, Chung-Min. MO081, TH154, TH162 Liao, Wenjie. 197, 353 Liber, Karsten. TU063 Libert, Pierre-Nicolas. WE234 Libre, Jean-Marie. WE146 Licht, Oliver. TU018 Liddle, Corin. 440 Liebmann, Bettina. WE133 Liess, Hans-Dieter. 13 Liess, Matthias. 107, 13, TH133, TH145, WE066 Lievens, Elsy. TH163 Lièvre, Clémence. TU078 Liistro, Giuseppe. TU157 Lille-Langøy, Roger. 111, 30 Lillicrap, Adam. 269, 95, MO149, TU035 Lim, Sungjin. TH120 Lima, Claudia. WE121 Limmer, Matt. 270 Lin, Jianming. MO144 Lin, Nan. TH160 Lin, Yi-Jun. TH154 Lindeque, Penelope. TH200 Linderholm, Linda. TH096 Lindh, Christian. WEPC22 Lindim, Claudia. 255, 530 Lindorfer, Johannes. WEPC09 Lindqvist, Dan Nybro. MO242 Ling, Minpei. TH164 Lintott, Lucinda. MO260 Lipkova, Adriana. 560, TH244 Lippmann, Nils. WE062 Lison, Dominique. TU071 Litman, Eric. TH081 Little, Joanne. WE253 liu, cuicui. TH132 Liu, Fan. MO196 Liu, Jianguo. 85 liu, wei. MO126 Liu, Yanna. TH097 Llorca, Marta. 343, MO164, MOPC08 Lo, Justin. 286 Lo Guidice, Jean-Marc. TU002 Lo Nostro, Fabiana. WE081 Lock, Rachel. TH004 Lockyer, Anne. 136 Loeillet, Denis. 504 Loersch, Katharina. TU126, TU127 Löfstrand, Karin. TH173 Lofthus, Synnøve. 131 Lofts, Stephen. 244 Loh Lindholm, Carina. 556 Lohmann, N. TH103 Lohmann, Rainer. 29, 385, TU155, WE084 Loibner, Andreas. TU130 Loiseau, Eleonore. 141, 194, MO239, TU213 loizeau, Véronique. 377 Lombardi, Ana Teresa. TU189 Lombardo, Anna. 211 Lončarić, Željka. 104, TH010 Long, Aurora. TH042 Long, Sara. TH017 Loonen, Maarten. 60 Loots, Jeroen. MO222 Lopes, Alexandra. TUPC16 Lopes, Isabel. 379, 8, MO011, MO013, MO014, MO124, MO132,

146

MO134, TH024, WE238, WE242 Lopes, Myriam. TU209 López, Isabel. 108 López Antia, Ana. MO169 Lopez-Ferber, Miguel. TU213 Lorber, Sophie. TU097 Lorenz, Carla. MOPC24 Lorenz, Stefan. MO104 Lorenzo, Maria. TH117 Lorenzo-Toja, Yago. MO229 Loubet, Philippe. WE223 Louch, Rebecca. MO133 Louis-Rose, Sébastien. TH243 Loureiro, Susana. 223, 432, 79, 80, MO060, MO124, MO132, MO134, TH025, TH027, TH140, TU108, TU109, TU110, TU115, WE107, WE190, WE238, WE242 Loutseti, Stefania. 337, TU099 Love, Oliver. 113 Lövgren, Lars. MO089 Low, Tanja. MO063 Lowrie, Chris. MO154 Lu, Pei-Hsuan. TH165 Lüderwald, Simon. 226, 82 Ludwigs, Jan-Dieter. 7, MO245, TH069, WE178 Lueckmann, Johannes. 191, TH130, TU200, TU202 Luh, Dih-Ling. TH165 Luijkx, Gerard. TH227 Luit, Richard. WE258 Lukas, Marcus. 282 Lumaret, Jean-Pierre. TU177 Lundin, Daniel. TU068 Lundström Belleza, Elin. 556 Lunn, Nick. TH097 Luo, Qi. MO170 Luo, Yun-Ru. TH165 Lutterbeck, Carlos. TU162, TU165, WE203, WE204 Lutz, Thomas. MO102, WE065 Lützhøft, Hans-Christian Holten. WE187 Luus-Powell, Wilmien. 358 Luz, Vitor. MO038 Lyakurwa, Dionis. TH202 Lyautey, Emilie. TUPC13 Lyche, Jan. TU057 Lyche Solheim, Anne. 423 Lynch, Iseult. MOPC21, TH186, TH190, WEPC06 Lyon, Delina. TH177 Lyons, Brett. 219, 552 Lyons, Danielle. 375 Lyons, Hester. 528

M Ma, Xindong. WE226 Maage, Amund. 145, 22, 69 Maboeta, Mark. 394, WE114 Mabury, Scott. 29 Machado, Ana. MO021 Machado, Ênio. TU162, TU165, WE203, WE204 Machate, Oliver. 562 Machera, Kyriaki. MO246 Macías Aragonés, Marta. WE224 Macias Mayorga, Dayanara. TH065 Mack, Pierre. 44 Mackay, Donald. 477, MO116, TH090 Mackay, Neil. 45 MacLeod, Matthew. 333, TH173, TH215

Macombe, Catherine. 504 MacPherson, Karen. TH119 MacRae, James. WE011 Madaschi, Laura. TH036 Madden, Judith. 212 Madinabeitia, Ainhoa. TH208 Madoui, Mohammed-Amin. WE015 Madzaric, Suzana. WE037 Maes, Hanna. TH034, WEPC24 Maess, Christian. MO151 Magee, Brian. WE082 Maggioni, Daniela. TH036 Magni, Stefano. TH036 Magrini, Andrea. 128, MO139 Maguire, Steve. TU259 Mahamoud Ahmed, Ayanleh. TUPC13 Mahdon, Ray. MO260 Mahieu, Maurice. TU134 Mahlke, Jana. TH032 Maia, Frederico. TU109, TU110, WE190 Maia, Joao. 8 Maïbèche, Martine. 515 Mailhac, Adélaïde. 142, MO224 Maillard, F. TU249 Maisano, Maria. TH057, TU010 Maischak, Heiko. MO151 Majeau-Bettez, Guillaume. 309, 89 Majewsky, Marius. MO052 Majid, Sanah. TU187, WE012 Makombe, Martin. MO097 Malaspina, Osmar. TU203, TUPC05 Malheiro, Catarina. 223, WE107 Mallmann, Gilvani Carla. WE115 Maloney, Erin. TU257 Maltby, Lorraine. 311, 513, TU087, TU274 Malvasi, Marco. MO177 Mampaey, Maja. TH166 Mamy, Laure. MO121 Manachini, Barbara. 338, WE112 Manariotis, Ioannis. TH181 Mancini, L. MO259 Mandiki, Robert S N M. 273 Mandrillon, Anne-Lise. MO085 Maner, Jenny. MO028 Mangé, Daan. WE175 Mannio, Jaakko. TH096 Manson, Philip. WE109 Mantilla-Aldana, Leonardo. 216 Manzo, Sonia. WE186, WE196 Manzo, Stefano. 405 Mapelli, Francesca. 233, TU158 Maples-Reynolds, Nikki. TUPC14 Maran, Uko. 325 Marcé, Rafael. TH086 Marchal, Philippe. TU049 Marchand, Adrien. 173 Marchand, L. 230 Marchi, Adrien. 428 Marcomini, Antonio. 160, 347, MO140, WE197, WE198 Marcussen, Laurits. WE039 Maremonti, Erica. TU120 Margareto Mato, Alejandro. 179 Margni, Manuele. 195, 308, 309, 89, TU217 Maria, Annick. 515 Maricchiolo, Giulia. 499, TH211 Marigómez, Ionan. 299, TU041, WE153 Marigomez Allende, Ionan. WE162 Marin, Matthieu. TU048 Marin-Navarro, Desiree. MO229

Marinova, Mariya. 454 Markiewicz, Marta. MO061 Marks, Becky. TUPC21 Markwart, Blue. TU063 Marneffe, Yves. WE191, WE234, WE239 Marquardt, Clarissa. WE199 Marques, Antonio. MO042, MO261 Marques, Sérgio. MO012 Marques Bonomo, Marina. MO137, TH044 Marques-Santos, Luis. 161 Marquez, Antonio. 146 Marsden-Jones, Sian. MO209 Marshall, Julian. 544 Marshall, Stuart. 14, 311, 411 Marsili, Letizia. TH212 Mart, Valentina. TU255 Martijn, Bram. 202 Martin, Jonathan. TH097 Martin, Timothy. MO147 Martin Aparicio, Alberto. 285 Martín-de-Lucía, Idoia. 346, TU102 Martín-Díaz, Laura. TU111 Martincigh, Bice. MO182 Martinez, Claudia B R. MO136 Martinez, Diego. MO137 Martinez, Ruben. 369, MO006 Martinez Martinez, Silvia. 447 Martínez Oró, Obdulia. MO069, WE181 Martinez-Guitarte, Jose-Luis. MO210, TH031, WE019, WE020 Martinez-Haro, Monica. MO035, MO091, MO247 Martínez-Jerónimo, Felipe Fernando. TH060 Martinez-Jeronimo, Fernando. TH062, TH066 Martínez-Madrid, Maite. 184 Martínez-Sánchez, Juan José. WE181 Martins, Marta. 497 Martins, Roberto. TU108, TU109, TU110, WE190 Martins, Rui. 519 Marty, Sue. 526 Martyniuk, Christopher. 457, WE152 Martz, Patricia. TU224, WE211 Marvin, Craig. TH104 Marvuglia, Antonino. 143 Marx, Michael Thomas. 337 Mas, Etienne. MO037 Mascolo, Giuseppe. 232 Maskrey, Benjamin. 98 Mason, Paul. TH073 Massacci, Angelo. 232 Massat, Felix. 355 Massei, Riccardo. 520 Massop, Harry. 119 Mast, Jan. TU073 Mateo, Rafael. MO034, MO035, MO091, MO247 Matezki, Steffen. MO249, TU093 Mathew, Merin. WE044 Mathies, Helena. 177 Mathieux, Fabrice. 407 Mathilde, Pigneret. WE036, WE174 Matiaki, Evelin. 301 Matson, Cole. 2 Matsuura, Yunosuke. 386 Matthiessen, Peter. TH067 Mattos, Yasna. TU050 Matzke, Marianne. MOPC21 Mauffret, aourell. 359

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | twitter.com/SETAC_World #SETACBrussels

Maul, Katrin. TU234 Maulvault, Ana Luísa. MO042 Mavragani-⁠Tsipidou, Penelope. TU075 Mayer, Christoph. TU087 Mayer, Philipp. 130, 154, 330, 331, MO161, MO162, TU130, WE078, WE097 Mayes, William. 446, WE179 Maynard, Samuel. 384, 459, TUPC22 Mazerolles, Vanessa. MO248 Mazzoni, Michela. 27 McCarty, Lynn. 477, TH090 McCoole, Matt. MOPC02, MOPC03, WE079, WE231, WE252 McDonough, Carrie. 385, WE084 McDonough, Kathleen. MO051, TH201 McDonough, Niall. K1, 46 McGee, Sean. MOPC03 McKee, Moira. 221, MO138 McKee, Richard. TU015 Mckeown, Philip. 408 McKone, Thomas. 555 McLachlan, Michael. TH173, WE092 McLeaf, Philip. 28 McMaster, Mark. 213 McMeel, O. K1 McMillan, Claire. TU175 McNally, Amanda. 300 McVey, Emily. MO248 Meador, Jim. 526 Meesters, Johannes. 533 Megarbane, Bruno. TU157 Mehrabi, Kamyar. MOPC20 Mehrsheikh, Akbar. WE109 Meier, Till. TU240 Meijer, Gerben. 306 Meijers, Erwin. MO216 Meinerling, Maria. TU176 Meire, Patrick. WE237 Mejdoub, Hafedh. 166 Mekenyan, Ovanes. 530, TH170 Meller, Michael. TU207, TUPC07 Melo, Laura. WE177 Melo e Silva, Daniela. TU105 Melvin, Steven. 324, 6, MO010 Menaballi, Luca. MO111 Menard, Dominique. 185, TU273 Mench, M. 230 Mendes, Kassio. MO098, MO099 Mendez, Annelle. MO117 Mendez, Leire. MOPC06 Mendez Fernandez, Paula. MO038 Méndez-Fernández, Leire. 184 Mendoza, Gemma. 281 Menegasso, Anally. TU203 Menon, Ratish. WE044 Merbt, Stephanie. WE143 Merchan, Angel. MO238, WE202 Merciai, Stefano. 92 Meregalli, Giovanna. MO250, MO255, TU087, WE259 Merel, Sylvain. MO040, TH095 Meriläinen, Päivi. MO198, TH240 Merino, Cesar. TU076 Meron, Noa. MO240 Merrifield, Ruth. 16 Merrington, Graham. 295, MO209, TUPC08, TUPC10, WE180, WE253 Merrington, Grahan. 390 Mertens, Jelle. TUPC21 Messiaen, Marlies. TU190 Messina, Rossella. TH224

Metzeling, Leon. WE236 Meuwissen, E. 464 Meyer, Joseph. 241, 70 Meyer, Rodolphe. TU215 Meyer-Alert, Henriette. TH045 Meza, Adriana. WE041 Mezzanotte, Valeria. TH135 Miani, Francesco. WE032 Michaud-Soret, Isabelle. MO126 Michel Prieto, Diego. WE221 Michie, Eleanor. WE158 Michiels, Ellen. 154, 371, MO190, TH046, TU029 Mićić, Bojana. WE172 Midwood, Andy. TU182 Miglioranza, Karina. TU160, WE081 Mihaich, Ellen. 456, 458, WE247 Mihan, Christine. 439, TU088 Miksch, Lukas. TU042 Mikuska, Pavel. TU086 Milanovic, Maja. WE091 Miles, Benedict. MO107 Miles, Mark. TU205, TU206, TUPC06 Miletic, Srdjan. WE163, WE164 Milic, Jelena. TU168, TU255, WE163 Miller, Elizabeth. TU091 Miller, Galen. 522 Miller, Paul. 121 Miller, Susanne. TU121 Miller, Thomas. WE011, WE057 Miltner, Anja. 334, TU132 Minguez, Laetitia. MO094, MO181 Mintenig, Svenja. TH224 Mintram, Kate. 384 Mintz, Elisabeth. MO126 Mirabella, Nadia. 139 Miraglia, Simona. 405 Miranda, Ana. WE192 Mirlocca, Julie. 234 Mishra, Priyanka. TU031 Mitchell, Chelsea. 435, WE071 Mitchell, Edward. WE120 Mitrano, Denise. MOPC20, WEPC07 Mitton, Francesca. TU160 Mmochi, Aviti. TU057 Mo, Hyoung-ho. MO159 Modise, Serero. TU083 Moe, Jannicke. 423, TH064 Moeller, Reinhard. TH040 Moenne, Alejandra. MO020 Moenne, Fabiola. MO020 Moens, Tom. WE157 Moeris, Samuel. WE248 Moeys, Julien. MO121 Mohamed Yunus, Siti Syuhaida. WE201 Möhlenkamp, Christel. TH112 Mohr, Silvia. TU096 Moinecourt, Carmen. 445 Moksnes, Arne. 112 Moldrickx, Johannes. TU007, TU032 Moletta Denat, Marina. MO157 Molitor, Anna Maria. TU191, TUPC04 Molitor, Claire. 191, TUPC04 Monapathi, Mzimkhulu. TU142 Monferrán, Magdalena. TU182 Monopoli, Marco. TU072 Montagut Pino, Gemma. 136 Monteiro, Luana. WE157 Monteiro, Marta. WE042, WE242

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Monteiro, Sara. MO132 Monteleone, Giuseppe. MO211 Montinaro, Gianpaolo. 7 Montone, Rosalinda. MO038, TH217 Moodley, Brenda. WE085 Moody, John. MO020 Moon, Hyo-Bang. TH156, WEPC21 Moon, Jongmin. TU122, WE018, WE125 Moore, Michael. 50 Moorman, Michelle. WE245 Mora, Frédéric. 62 Mora, Jose. MO083 Morabito, Giuseppe. 531 Morais, Gisele. WE145 Moral, Cigdem. MO090 Moran, Cheryl. TU235 Moreira dos Santos, Matilde. TH065, TU043, TU066 Moreno Barriga, Fabian. 447 Moreno-González, Rubén. MO101 Moreno-Ocio , Iñigo. 184 Morgado, Rui. TH140, TU115 Morin, Bénédicte. 443 Morin, Soizic. TU273 Morosini, Cristiana. 233, TU158 Morozesk, Mariana. MO137 Morris, Callum. TH004 Morris, G. TU262 Morrissey, Christy. 61 Morselli, Melissa. 233, 257, 531, TH080 Morthorst, Jane Ebsen. 215 Mos, Jochem. MO234 Mose, Maria. 297 Moser, Thomas. TH241, TU118 Mosolloane, Portia. WE106 Mota, Jessica. TU064 Mottaz, Hélène. TH057 Motte, Bernard. TUPC13 Mougeot, François. MO034, MO247 Mouneyrac, Catherine. 396, 465, TH002, TU040, TU078 Mourinha, Clarisse. 242 Moyson, Sofie. 186 Mu, Jingli. WE226 Muche, Julia. TH221 Mueller, Alexandra. 74 Mueller, Anne-Katrin. WE027 Mueller, Carina. 308, 408, TU212 Mughal, Bilal. WEPC22 Mugica, Violeta. TU244 Muir, Derek. 385, TU149, WE084 Mukherji, Suparna. TU169 Mulder, Christian. 305 Mulhearn, Brian. TH167 Müller, Anne-Katrin. TU234 Müller, Gesine. 285 Müller, Johann. 27 Müller, Maximilian. WE088 Müller, Mette. TU057 Müller, Nienke. 501 Muller, Stéphanie. WEPC11 Mullin, Joseph. 433 Muncke, Jane. 461 Munn, Sharon. 101 Muñoz, Ivan. 40 Munoz, Jean-François. MO168 Muñoz, Maria. 447 Muñoz-Arnanz, Juan. TH212 Munschy, Catherine. 377 Munz, Nicole. TU150, WE177 Muotka, Timo. 422

Murcia, Francisco. MO083 Muriana, Arantza. TH049, TU058 Murphy, Cheryl. 383 Murphy, Jill. 70 Murray, Aimee. 182, TU144 Murray, James. MO045 Muschket, Matthias. 402 Mussabek, Dauren. MOPC10 Mutel, Christopher. 36 Muz, Melis. 403 Mwakalapa, Eliezer. TU057 Myhre, Oddvar. 285 Mykrä, Heikki. 422 Mæland, Mari. WE139

N Nabb, Diane. TU154 Nadal, Marti. 146 Naderi, Mohammad. 320 Nagai, Takashi. TH235, TU185 Nagane, Rajendra. TU031 Nagorskaya, Liubov. TH018 Nahlik, Amanda. 312 Naji, Abolfazl. TH223 Nalbantlar, Beyza. TUPC15 Nalecz-Jawecki, Grzegorz. MO044 Nam, Sun-Hwa. TU122, WE126 Nannou, Christina. TH101, TH102 Napper, Imogen. 397 Naree, Park. MO026 Nascimento, Francisco. TU039 Näslund, Joacim. TH198 Nason, Sara. TU091 Nasser, Fatima. WEPC06 Nastasio, Paolo. 233, TU158 Natal da Luz, Tiago. 242 Natal-da-Luz, Tiago. WE124 Nathanail, Paul. 340 Natsch, Andreas. 210 Nau, Katja. WE199 Nauts, Robin. 188 Navarrete-Gutiérrez, Tomás. MO220 Navarro-Martin, Laia. 369, MO006 Navas, José M.. TU076 Navis, Sabine. TH083, TH245 Nawrot, Tim. 543 Ncube, Ignatious. 358 Ndungu, Kuria. 295 Neale, Peta. 400, 479 Necasova, Anezka. TH157 Nedreaas, Kjell. 22 Nedrich, Sara. MO080 Neefs, Ineke. 272 Nelemans, Bas. 164 Nelissen, Inge. TU072 Nelson, Sara. TU042 Nemery, Benoit. TH161 Nendza, Monika. 211, TU229 Nepstad, Raymond. 109 Neri, Paolo. WE210 Nerland, Inger Lise. 498 Neto, Victor. 124 Netyosova, Krystyna. TU148 Netzeva, Tatiana. 285 Neubauer, Nicole. 160 Neugebauer, Frank. TH103 Neumann, Michael. TU239, TU241 Neuwirthová, Natália. TU137 Neuwöhner, Judith. TH130 Neves, Joana. 223, WE107 Neveux, Guillaume. 245 Newbold, Lindsay. WE130 Newton, Kymberly. 82

147

Nfon, Erick. MO203 Ng, Carla. 291, 84, MO117 Nguyen, Phuong. TH241 Nguyen, Vy. TU227 Nibamureke, Marie Clementine. MO185 Nichols, Gordon. MO260 Nichols, John. 158, TU154 Nickel, Carmen. 345, TU112, WE189 Nickel, Stefan. 421, WE054, WEPC14 Nickisch, Dirk. MO102, WE065 Nicol, Elizabeth. MO208 Nicolaus, Ernst. 219 Niehus, Nora. 389 Nielsen, Asbjørn. MO196, WE094 Nielsen, Majken. WE039 Nielsen, Torkel Gissel. 109, 171 Nielson, Clara. 170, MO022 Nienstedt, Karin. 310 Nieto, Oscar. 554 Nieuwenhoven, Laura. WE256 Nieuwenhuijsen, MJ. MO259 Nilsen, Bente. 145, 22 Nilsson, Hans. 144 Nisbet, Roger. 383 Nishimura, Tetsuji. MO195, MO197, TUPC23 Niu, Jianjun. 25 Niyogi, Som. 320 Noe, Ryan. TU212 Noel, Benjamin. WE015 Nogowski, André. 17 Noguchi, Mana. WE076 Nogueira, Antonio. MOPC22 Nogueiro, Eugénia. 560 , TH244 Nolte, Thies. 31 Noordhoek, Jeroen. 222 Nopens, Ingmar. 199, 201, 208, 428 Norberg-King, Teresa. 213, 268, TU020 Norbury, Veronica. 61 Nordbo, Bard. TH096, TH106 Nordnes, Linda. 112 Nordtug, Trond. 109, WE146 Norheim Bøe, Frederik. MO113 Norman, Steve. 41 Noronha, Ron. 539 North, Michelle. MO032 Nousiainen, Aura. WE148, WE149 Novak, Jiri. 400, TH157 Novakova, Zuzana. TH157, TU086 Novakovic, Mladenka. MO056 Noventa, Seta. 159 Novo, Marta. WE019 Nowack, Bernd. 19, MOPC20, WEPC02, WEPC07 Nowaczyk, Slawomir. TU258 Nozal, Leonor. 11 Nuesser, Leonie. 356, WE150, WE162 Nugegoda, Dayanthi. WE026, WE192 Nunes, Larissa. WE102 Nunes Cardoso, Diogo Filipe. 223, 432, WE107 Nuñez, Maria del Prado. 125 Núñez, Montse. 194, MO239, TU208 Nunez, Montserrat. TU217 Nunez, Pernelle. 351 Nuutinen, Jari. WE153, WE162 Nwude, Davies. TU153 Nyman, Anna-Maija. 265, 267

148

Nyoka, Ngitheni. WE128 Nys, Charlotte. 240 Næs, Kristoffer. 144 Nørgaard, Louise Solveig. TU056

O O'brien, Timothy. TH171 O'Connor, Isabel. 487 O'Shea, Francis. MO084 Oaland, Øyvind. 94, 97 Oberbeckmann, Sonja. TH221 Oberholster, Paul. 358 Obermaier, Nathan. 341 Oberschelp, Christopher. WEPC12, WEPC13 Obrador, Ana. TU117 Obrovski, Boris. MO056, MO207, TH126, WE091 Obschernicat, Kristof. TH112 Ochoa-Acuna, Hugo. TU087 Oehl, Fritz. WE117 Oehlmann, Jörg. MO194 Oellers, Johanna. TH070, TU121, WE052, WE053 Oertel, Angelika. TU234 Oger, Laurent. TU206 Ogungbemi, Afolarin. TH071 Oh, Jeong Eun. MO167 Oh, Seok-Young. WE103 Oh, Young-Gon. TH123, TH124 Okeme, Joseph. 541, TH098, WE099 Okkerman, Peter. TH244 Okonski, Alexander. 290, 545 Okonski, Krysztof. 400 Okoth, Maurice. 134 Oksanen, Tähti. MO180 Oladipo, Oluwatosin. WE114 Oldenkamp, Rik. TH231 Olesen, Kristina. 398 Oliveira, Helena. WE190 Oliveira, Tânia. TU108, TU109, TU110 Oliveira, Thiessa Maramaldo. TH110 Oliveira e Silva, Miguel. 519 Oliviero, Maria. WE186 Olmos, Mar. 127 Olsen, Anders. 109, TH202, TH204, WE162 Olsen, Gro. WE145 Olsén, Håkan. WE046 Olsson, Jesper. 28 Olsson, Oliver. TUPC19 Olu-Owolabi, Bamidele. MO118 Ombaka, Daniel. 134 Ondarza, Paola. WE081 Ono, Yuya. MO232 Onwurah, Arinze. WE184 Onwurah, Ikechukwu. MO200 Oorts, Koen. 115, 549, MO070, TH083, WE113, WE224 Oosterhuis, Frans. TU229 Oosterloo, Marieke. TH161 Op de Beeck, Lin. 106 Opher, Tamar. MO228 Orazietti, Alexander. TH090 Orbea, Amaia. TH207, TH208, WE162 Orellana, Gabriel. 52 Oris, Jim. 213 Orjollet, Daniel. 523 Oršolić, Ana. TH010 Ortega-Calvo, José-Julio. 231, TU131, TU164

Ortego, Lisa. WE231 Ortiz, Elena. 369 Ortiz Santaliestra, Manuel. 8, 9, MO035, MO247 Ortiz-Zarragoitia, Maren. 470 Oshima, Yuji. TU065 Osman, Rima. TH061, WE063 Osset, Philippe. TU265 Ost, Norbert. TU239 Österlund, Tobias. 135 Ostfeld, Avi. 356 Othoniel, Benoit. TU214, TU219 Ott, Amelie. MO147 Ott, Katharina. TH058 Otte, Nikolaj. TH228 Ottens, Henk Jan. WE178 Otter, Ryan. 268, 269, WE055 Otteraa, Haakon. 145 Ottermans, Richard. TH133, TH145, WE052, WE053 Otto, Mathias. 467 Otton, Victoria. 286 Ottosson, Sara. TH196 Oturan, Mehmet. TU132 Ouaach, Abderrahim. 273 Oughton, Deborah. 281, TU120 Oustrière, N. 230 Overcash, Michael. 559 Owen, Stewart. 135, MO189, WE011, WE057 Owsianiak, Mikolaj. 116, 298, 307, TU266, TU267 Ozaki, Shinji. 62 Oziolor, Elias. 2 O'Neill, Bridget. 337 Øverjordet, Ida Beathe. 109, MO029, WE154

P P Diz, Angel. 216 Pablos, María Victoria. MO210 Pacchierotti, Francesca. WE186, WE196 Pachiti, Irene. MO246 Padilla-Rivera, Alejandro . WE213 Padovan, Benjamin. TH110 Pagano, Luca. 224 Pagano, Norina. TU023 Pain-Devin, Sandrine. MO073, MO094, TH002 Paini, Alicia. TH129 Palais, Frederic. TH228 Palijan, Goran. 104 Palma, Mario Sérgio. TU203 Palma, Patricia. 242 Palmai Pallag, Mihaly. TU071 Palmer Kfuban, Yerima. MO088 Palmeri, Luca. WE171 Palmqvist, Annemette. MO258, TH013, WE072 Panagopolous, Dimitrios. 333 Pancras, Tessa. 26, MO176 Pandard, Pascal. TH232, TH243 Pang, Chengfang. 160 Panizzi, Silvia. MO119 Pannetier, Pauline. 443 Panti, Cristina. 499, TH212 Pap, Sabolc. WE091 Papa, Ester. 128, MO139, TU013, TU156, WE013 Papadaki, Krystalia. TH079 Papaioannou, Nafsika. 372 Paparella, Martin. TUPC25 Papell, Gemma. MO164 Papo, Marjolein. MOPC05

Papoulias, Diana. 303 Pappa, Gerta. MO246 Pardo, Isabel. 184 Pareja Carrera, Jennifer. MO091 Parenteau, Charline. 110 Parga, M. K1 Parinet, Julien. TH122 Parissis, Nikos. TH129 Park, ByungJun. TH120 Park, Jeongim. WEPC21 Park, Jihae. TU055, WE195 Park, Jinhee. TU186, WE014 Park, Jun Chul. TH003 Park, Minseok. TU089 Park, Myung-Sook. MO009 Park, Richard. 539 Park, Younsu. WE104 Parker, Matthew. 322, WE034 Parkerton, Thomas. TU236, WE151 Parlak, Hatice. TUPC15 Parlanti, Edith. TU273 Parma, Paweł. TUPC03 Parnis, J. Mark. 477 Parnis, Jonathan. MO116 Parolini, Marco. TH036, WE040 Párraga-Aguado, Isabel. MO069, WE181 Parrott, Joanne. TH038 Parsons, Ant. WE254 Parsons, John. MO041, MO058, MO155, MO158 Parsons, Lesley. WE254 Pärt, Siim. WE162 Paschka, Michael. MO051 Paschke, Heidrun. TU240 Pascoal, Cláudia. 58 Pashami, Sepideh. TU258 Pasolli, Verena. MO211 Patel, Dipak. TH139, TU021 Patel, Nitin. TU031 Patoux, Remi. MO150, TH073 Patrolecco, Luisa. MO142, TU146, TU160, TU163 Patterson, David. 75, MO108 Pauget, Benjamin. WE182 Paul, Florian. WE199 Paul, Kai. TH171 Paul, Mucha. 292 Pauli, Bruce. WE152 Pauwels, Maxime. 1 Pavlaki, Maria. TH140, TU115, WE190 Peach, Will. MO036 Pearson, Holly. MO076 Pearson, Jonty. 129, MO153 Pedà, Cristina. 499, TH211 Pedersen, Joel. TU091 Pedersen, Knud. 215 Pedersen, Kristine. TU106 Pedersen, Nanna. TH015 Peeters, Bram. TH245 Peeters, Edwin. 43, 442, MO192 Peeters, Steffi. TU121 Peijnenburg, Willie. 220, 283, 424, WE200 Peinado, Francisco José. MO072 Peither, Armin. TH016 Pelin, Marco. TU077 Pelletier, Mia. MO073 Pellini, Giulio. TH210 Peltola-Thies, Johanna. 285 Pelz, Oliver. 131 Penaloza, Andrea. TU157 Peñalver Alcalá, Antonio. MO069, WE181 Peñarrubia, Luis. MO006

SETAC Europe 27th Annual Meeting | brussels.setac.org

Pendashte, H. TU101 Peng, Hui. WE008 Penn, Emily. 303 Pennards, Gerard. TH068 Penru, Ywann. WE241 Pepper, Tim. MO115 Perceval, Olivier. TU149 Perdichizzi, Anna. TH211 Perdrix, Esperanza. TU002 Pereira, Cecilia. 187 Pereira, M.. 323, MO033, MO036, TU036, TU247, WE038 Pereira, Susana. MOPC22 Perez, Sandra. MO145 Pérez, Sara. 554 Pérez Bairán, Gabriela. WE101 Perez Holmberg, Jenny. 20 Perez-Lopez, Paula. 39 Perez-Rojas, Alberto. TU008 Periz Stanacev, Jelena. 371, TH046 Perkola, Noora. MO198 Pernica, Marek. WE017 Perry, Iain. MO001 Persson, Kenneth. MOPC10 Pescatore, Tanita. WE032 Pesce, Stéphane. TUPC13 Peschke, Rafael. MO052 Pestana, João. 432, MO021, TH019, TH024, TU064, TU173 Peter, Sven. 431 Peters, Adam. 295, TUPC08, TUPC10, WE180 Peters, Britta. 191 Petersen, Aevar. MO030 Petit, Marie. 324 Petitjean, Michel. WE013 Petri, Anna. WE045 Petrova, Alena. TU026 Petschick, Lara. 9 Petti, Luigia. 504 Pettigrove, Vincent. TH017, WE236 Pettit, Carol-Lynne. 350 Pfister, Stephan. 90, MO219, TU210, TU216, TU217, WEPC12, WEPC13 Philibert, Danielle. 375 Philippe, Charlotte. 472 Philippe, Michel. TU224 Phillips, Claire. TU235 Phillips, Joshua. WE055 Phoenix, Vernon. TH222 Phuong, Ngoc Nam. 396 Pible, Olivier. 366 Picard, Christian. MOPC03 Pickering, Frances. MO253, MO256 Pickford, Daniel. 459, 526 Pickl, Christina. 74 Pickup, John. TH227 Pico, Yolanda. TH117 Pieczka, Paweł. TH030 Piella, Jordi. TU072 Pieper, Silvia. 338, 9, WE066, WE112, WE115, WE124 Pierron, Fabien. 445 Pietrini, Fabrizio. TU163 Pietroiusti, Antonio. 128, MO139 Pietz, Sebastian. 42 Pigatin, Livia. TU228 Pigeon, Olivier. MO114 Pignatello, Joseph. 174 Pignotti, Emanuela. MOPC08, TH109 Piir, Geven. 325 Pilehvar, Ali. 55 Pilipenko, Nadezhda. TH039

Pilling, Ed. TU206 Pimpinato, Rodrigo. MO099 Piña, Benjamí. TU067 Pina, Benjamin. 369, 518, MO006, TU068 Piñar, Guadalupe. TU166 Pineau, Pierre-Olivier. 453 Pinheiro, Carlos. MO124, MO134, TH027 Pini, Martina. WE210 Pintado-Herrera, Marina. TU111 Pinzon, Angela. MO214 Pípal, Marek. TH035 Pipicelli, Fabrizia. 222 Pirard, Eric. WE221 Pirovano, Alessandra. 267 Pittroff, Marco. WE136 Pivato, Alberto. WE171 Pizarro, Mariana. TU067 Pizzol, Lisa. 347, TU226, WE197, WE198 Planelló, Rosario. TH008 Plassmann, Merle. TH215 Platz, Klaus. WE100 Ploem, Jan-Pieter. TU003 Plósz, Benedek. 34 Plouffe, Geneviève. 503 Plusquin, Michelle. 543, TU003 Poganiuch, Sandra. 226 Poirier, Laurence. 396 Polanska, Kinga. 372 Polasky, Stephen. TU212 Polder, Anuschka. 111, 30, TU057 Polesel, Fabio. 34, WE088 Polesello, Stefano. 27, 296, MO048 Polidori, Piero. TH210 Polonskiy, Vadim. MO129 Pomaro Casali Pereira, Maressa. TU084 Pontal, Louise. TH072 Pool, Edmund. TU085 Poole, Alan. TH228 Poole, Shane. WE004 Popoola, Solomon. TU133 Porcel, Miguel. MO039 Porcher, Jean Marc. 173 Poromov, Artem. TU184 Porsch, Lucas. 238, 239 Porsch-Hällström, Inger. WE046 Porseryd, Tove. WE046 Porter, Adam. 552, TH206 Posada, Rosa. 231, TU131, TU164 Poste, Amanda. WEPC15 Posthuma, Leo. 305, 488, 534, TH231, WEPC18 Postma, Jaap. MO206, MO212 Poté, John. TU141 Potsi, Georgia. TU075 Pott, Antonia. 467 Potter, Elaine. MO033, TU036, TU247 Poulain, Julie. WE015 Poulsen, Veronique. 263, 380, MO248, TU087 Poursat, Baptiste. MO041, MO155 Powell, David. 477, TU149 Poyntner, Caroline. TU166 Prabutzki, Patricia. TU240 Pradinaud, Charlotte. TU208 Praetorius, Antonia. 125, WEPC04 Pratavieira, Marcel. TU203 Prato, Maurizio. TU077 Prenzel, Kirsten. MO131 Pretti, Carlo. 124 Preuss, Thomas. 168, 205, 260, 382, 439, 78, TU205, TUPC06,

WE067, WE068, WE168, WE169, WE170 Preux, Sara. WE059 Pribylova, Petra. TH155 Price, Edward. TU212 Price, Oliver. 14, 68, WE070 Priebojová, Jana. TH035 Prieto, Ailette. 470 Prieto, V. K1 Princz, Juliska. 391, WE118, WE119 Prindiville, John. 290 Prochazkova, Tereza. TH035, WE017 Prodana, Marija. TH025, WE107 Prokes, Roman. TH155, TH157 Prosperi, Laura. TH036 Prozmann, Viktoria. TU042 Prud'homme, Sophie. MO002, MO007 Prutz, Ines. MO199, TU237 Puchades, Elisa. TH220 Puijker, Leo. 357 Pulido-Reyes, Gerardo. 346, TU107 Puntes, Victor. TU072 Purchase, Diane. TU133 Puryear, Wendy. 218 Puska, Reetta. TH083 Pype, Casper. 371, TH046 Pyr dit Ruys, Sebastien. 367

Q Qiu, Yanling. TH132 Qualhato, Gabriel. TU105 Querino, joão. WE024, WE025 Quérouil, Sophie. MO038 Quesneville, Hadi. WE015 Quevedo, Celia. TH049 Quik, Joris. 533 Quintana, José Benito. 427, MO043 Quinteiro, Paula. TU209, TU217, TU218, WE208

R Rabaud, Suzanne. 245 Rabelo Costa, Bruno Rafael. MO011 Rachide Nunes, Ramom. TU228 Rader, Kevin. TUPC11 Radford, Freya. MO252 Radix, Pascal. WE079, WE252 Radman, Miroslav. WE005 Radonic, Jelena. MO207, WE091 Rae, Michael. MO067 Raes, Katherine. TU063 Rafael, Sandra. TU209 Ragas, Ad. 100 Rahm, Harald. TH112 Rahman, Md Shahidur. 43 Raignault, Isabelle. 234 Raimondi, Fabio. WE210 Rajs, Vladimir. TH126 Raldua, Demetrio. WE030 Ralston-Hooper, Kimberly. MO255 Ramalho, Luisa. TH199, TH220 Ramezanpoor, Zohreh. TU101 Ramirez, Mark. WE093 Ramírez-Macías, Dení. TH212 Ramo, Cristina. MO035 Ramos, Andre. 77 Ramos, Luis. TU066 Ramsden, Christopher. 41 Ramwell, Carmel. TH158

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Rana, Jigar. TH139, TU021 Randjelovic, Jasminka. TU255 Randolph, Eric. WE004 Ranke, Johannes. 561 Ranville, James. 70, MOPC22 Raoul, Francis. 62 Raqib, Rubhana. 490 Rascio, Ida. 232 Rasenberg, Mike. 267 Rashid, Harunur. 43, TH037 Rasilainen, Maj. MO180 Rasmussen, Jes. 227 Rasmussen, Lars Holm. MO242, MOPC14, MOPC18, MOPC19 Rasmussen, Pat. 25 Rasnaca, Ilze. MO001 Raspa, Giuseppe. 233, TH080, TU158 Rastetter, Nadja. TH033 Ratte, Monika. TU095 Rauch, Wolfgang. 200 Rauert, Caren. TU149, TU152 Rauseo, Jasmin. MO142, TU146, TU163 Ravagnan, Elisa. TH064 Rawlings, Jane. TUPC25 Raybould, Alan. 253 Readman, James. 18, MO261 Real Llanderal, Joaquin. MO102 Rebelo, Sandra. MO060 Recoura-Massaquant, Rémi. 355, WE241 Reddy, Narsimha. TH139 Redman, Aaron. 336, TH175, TU015, WE151 Redondo Hasselerharm, Paula Elisa. 442, TH187 Reed, Mark. WE146 Reed, Melissa. WE047 Reeg, Jette. 439 Reemtsma, Thorsten. 137, 344, MO262, TU239, TU240, WE135 Rees, Aldous. 72 Rees, Jean-François. 271, 272 Rehan, Mai. TH092 Rehberg, Christina. 190 Rehse, Saskia. TH182, TH192 Reiche, Kristin. 315 Reichenberger, Stefan. MO103 Reid, Noah. 2 Reifferscheid, Georg. 395, 535, TH099, TH112 Reilly, Katie. TH190 Rein, Arno. 334 Reinardy, Helena. TU106 Reiner, Eric. TH119 Reininghaus, Mathias. 176, 389 Reis, Filipa. 242 Reis, S. TU262 Reithel, Sarah. TU103, WE199 Rekik, Hakim Imen. 166 Rempel-Hester, MaryAnn. WE160 Remuzat, Pauline. TH176 Remy, Suzanne. MO114, TH141, TH163 Ren, Yu’ang. TH160 Renaud, Jean Mathieu. 242, 243 Renault, David. 515, MO002 Rendal, Cecilie. 14, 417, 68, TH137, WE070 Reniers, Wout. TH161 Rettinger, Klaus. 330 Reunamo, Anna. WE148, WE162 Reuter, Johannes. TH032 Rey, Sylvain. MO156 Rey-Castro, Carlos. 281

149

Reyes, Marta. WE177 Reyes López, Felipe. 273 Reylandt, Laurence. TU071 Reynaud, Stéphane. MO002, MO007 Reynders, Hans. 543 Reynolds, Steven. 4 Rezende, Maria. TU228 Ribeiro, Daniel. WE010 Ribeiro, José. TH230 Ribeiro, RGLG. 379, TH065, TU043, TU066 Ribeiro, Sara. TU109, TU110 Ribera, Marta. MO218 Ricci, Marina. WE251 Rice, Clifford. WE093 Richardson, Evan. TH097 Richardson, Katherine. 307, TU266 Richarz, Andrea-Nicole. TH129 Richter, Thomas. WE100 Rico, Andreu. 108, 11, WE166 Riedhammer, Caroline. 561 Riedl, Verena. 225 Rigarlsford, Giles. 408, TU212 Rijk, Ingrid. WE116 Rijnaarts, Huub. MO158 Rillig, Matthias. TH182 Rinaldi, Caroline. MO038 Rist, Sinja. WEPC03 Ritchie, Ellyn. 391, WE118 Ritika, Afifat Khanam. 43 Ritscher, Amelie. 455 Ritter, Amy. 122 Ritter-Gordy, Kelsey. TU104 Ritzel, Jonathan. WE048 Rivas, Daniel. MO145 Rivière, Guillaume. MO005 Rizzi, Francesco. WEPC08 Roat, Thaisa. TU203, TUPC05 Robbens, Johan. 146, TH225 Robertson, Larry. TH097 Robinson, Alex. 189 Robinson, Craig. 219, MO063 Robinson, Hilary. WE159, WE160 Robinson, Nik. 431 Roca, Carlos. 416, MO003, TU079 Rocco, Matteo. MO221 Rocha, Arthur. TH012 Rocha, Rui. MO021, TU064, WE042 Rocha, Thiago. TU105 Rocha, Ueleton. TH044 Rocha-Santos, Teresa. MO014 Rochfort, Quintin. TH038 Rodea-Palomares, Ismael. 346 Rodgers, Tim. 538, TH098 Rodil, Rosario. 427, MO043 Rodrigues, Andreia. MO021 Rodrigues, Carlos Eduardo. TU167, WE102 Rodríguez, Cristina. 451 Rodriguez, Pilar. 184 Rodríguez Fernández-Alba, Amadeo. MO055 Rodriguez Gil, Jose Luis. TU131 Rodriguez-Estival, Jaime. MO035, MO091 Rodriguez-Miguel, Alma. TH062 Rodriguez-Mozaz, Sara. MO042, TU145 Rodríguez-Serrano, Irene. WE215, WE217, WEPC10 Roelofs, Dick. 222, 335 Roels, Stefan. TU073 Roembke, Jörg. 115, 420, MO070, TH232, TU176, TU177, TU181, TU232, WE051, WE052, WE124

150

Roessink, Ivo. 164, MO178, MO179, MO192, MO193, MO254, MOPC05, TH061, TU193, TUPC04, WE063 Roex, Erwin. 387, MO216 Rogstad, Tonje. WE146 Roh, Ji-Yeon. MO009 Roig, Josep. TH068, WE111 Rojo, Verónica. WE051 Roling, Jonathan. MO155 Rollin-genetet, Francoise. MO126 Romano, Vincenza. WE186 Romão, João. MO012 Romeo, Teresa. 499, TH211 Römer, Melina-Sophie. WE135 Romero, Amaya. 11 Romero, Ana. MO072, MO073 Romero-Freire, Ana. MO181 Rongstock, Lydia. TH189 Rönnefahrt, Ines. 138, MO201 Roquete Cardoso, Júlio. TU105 Rorat, Agnieszka. 166 Rortais, Agnes. 189 Ros, Oihana. 470 Roß-Nickoll, Martina. TH133, WE052, WE053 Rosa, Derval. WE102 Rosal, Roberto. 346, MO055, TU102, TU107 Rösch, Andrea. TH128 Rose, Jerome. 224 Roseberry-Lincoln, Ann. 12 Rosén, Lars. WE127 Rosenbaum, Ralph. 194, MO239, TU208, TU213, TU217 Rosenfeldt, Ricki. 82 Rosin, Christophe. MO168 Rosique Conesa, Irene. 67 Roslev, Peter. TU056, WE039 Ross, Ian. 26, MO176, TH082 Ross, Jared. TU033 Ross-Nickoll, Martina. TH145 Rossbach, Lisa. TU120 Rostkowski, Pawel. 425 Rosy, Christophe. TUPC13 Rotchell, Jeanette. MO050 Rothhaupt, Karl Otto. TH033 Roubeau, Eva. TU097 Rouhani, Shahrokh. TH081 Roulier, Stéphanie. MO100 Roursgaard, Martin. MO213 Rousselle, Phillipe. MO094 Routledge, Edwin. 136 Routti, Heli. 111, 30 Roux, Philippe. 141, 194, MO239, TU208, TU213, TU217 Rouxel, Julien. 396, MO005, TH009, TU273 Rowe, Jill. WE159 Rowland, Steve. WEPC05 Rowles, Bob. MO147, TU235 Roy, Pierre-Marie. TU157 Rozhko, Tatiana. TU026 Rubio Montejano, Consuelo. TU174 Rückamp, Daniel. 115, MO070 Ruckelshaus, Mary. TU212 Ruckman, Steve. TH058 Ruddle, Natalie. 192 Rudelle, Elise. WE094 Ruedel, Heinz. MO064, TU149, WE050 Rugani, Benedetto. TU214, TU219, WE209 Ruhland, Saskia. TU192 Runstadler, Jonathan. 218

Rüschhoff, Judith. TU042 Rusconi, Marianna. 27, MO048 Rusina, Tatsiana. 400, TH093 Russell, Andrea. TH226 Russell, David. 420, WE052 Russo, Renato. 107 Ruttens, Ann. MO095, TU245 Ruus, Anders. MO029, WEPC15 Ryan, Paul. 546 Ryberg, Morten. 307, TU266 Rychen, Guido. TH122, TU134, TU135, TU136 Rydberg, Tomas. 556 Ryder, Kathy. 213, TUPC22 Rysgaard, Søren. 483 Ryu, Hyejin. TH092 Ryu, Songhee. TH120

S Saab, Imad. MOPC03 Saari, Travis. WE004 Saaristo, Minna. 378 Sabater, laia. MO027 Sabóia-Morais, Simone. TU105 Sabrei, Dalia. TH052 Sack, Dagmar. TU192 Sadler, Jon. TH190 Sadler, Jonathan. TH186 Saenen, Eline. 188, 244 Saes, Renan. WE190 Saez, Claudio. MO020 Sahlmann, Andrea. 277 Saint-Hilaire, Maïlie. TH122, TU136 Sakaguchi-Soeder, Kaori. TH216 Sakalli, Sidika. TH039 Sala, Serenella. 139, 196, 500, 502, 91, MO225, TU221, TU264 Salaberria, Iurgi. 109, TH202, TH204, WE134, WE162 Salahinejad, Arash. 320 Salamero, Marta. MO229 Salamon, Jörg. 420 Salas, Gorka. TU107 Salcedo, María Inmaculada. MO125 Sale, Vanna. 233, TU158 Salerno, Franco. MO048 Salgueiro-González, Noelia. 554 Salifoglou, Athanasios. 372 Salinas, Edward. 280, 547, TU100 Saling, Peter. 556 Salis, Annalisa. 161 Salomons, Elad. 356 Salvador, Arnaud. 366 Salvatierra, David. TH065, TU066 Salvito, Daniel. 15, 269, 547, TU172 Samel, Alan. MOPC03, TU195 Samet, Kamelia. 126 Samper, Raquel. TH219 Samsera, Rija. TH172, TH174, TUPC18 Samson, Rejean. 89 Samuel, Mofokeng. WE049 San Miguel, Guillermo. 452 Sanchez, Alba. 108, 11 Sanchez, Araceli. WE198 Sánchez, Javier. 450 Sanchez Marin, Paula. 216 Sánchez Martínez, Juan. MO069, TU161 Sanchez-Arguello, Paloma. TH008, TH031 Sanchís, Josep. 127, 18, MO243, TU084 Sanders, Gordon. 210

Sanderson, Hans. 268, TU020 Sándorné Bodnár, Renáta. WE206 Sanghyun, Park. MO026 Sangion, Alessandro. 128, MO139, TU156, WE013 Santiago-Morales, Javier. MO055 Santillán-Sarmiento, Alex. MO020 Santo, Nadia. TH036 Santos, José. TU244 Santos, Marcos. MO038 Santourian, Anais. MO246 Saouter, Erwan. 500, 502 Sapounidou, Maria. 212 Sardi, Adriana E. WE145 Sargis, Robert. WEPC25 Sarigiannis, DA. MO259 Sarigiannis, Denis. 274, 301, 372, 415, 493, 540, TH079, WE185 Saro, Liliana. MO021 Sarrazin, Flavie. TU049 Sastre, Salvador. TH136 Sättler, Daniel. TU239, TU241 Saunders, Leslie. 158, 286 Scalbi, Simona. WE186, WE196 Scambler, Rosie. 169 Scarcella, Giuseppe. TH210 Scenna, Lorena. WE081 Schaap, Iris. 476 Schacht, Veronika. 332, WE086 Schad, Thorsten. WE067, WE170 Schade, Stefan. 419, WE002 Schaefer, Charles. MOPC11 Schaefer, Dieter. 168, 78, WE079, WE252 Schaefer, Ralf Bernhard. 13, 227, 312, TU126, TU127 Schaefer, Sabine. TH112 Schaefers, Christoph. 468, TU018, WE050 Schaeffer, Andreas. 330, TH133, TH145, TU053, TU140, WE088, WEPC24 Schäfer, Moritz. TH195 Schaubroeck, Thomas. WE209 Schaumann, Gabrielle. TH071 Schebek, Liselotte. 247, MO057, TH216 Scheckel, Kirk. 24 Scheeder, Paul. WEPC02 Scheepmaker, Jeroen. 306 Scheffczyk, Adam. 115, 420 Scheiber, Isabella. 60 Scheifler, Renaud R. 370, 62 Schell, Theresa. 82 Scherbak, Nikolai. TH053 Scherer, Christian. TH189 Scherer, Laura. TU210, TU216, TU217 Scheringer, Martin. 291, 455, MOPC13, MOPC15 Scherpenisse, Peter. 66 Scheurer, Marco. MO191 Schiavo, Simona. WE186, WE196 Schiebel, Kirstine. WE219 Schiffers, Bruno. TH147 Schiller, Andrea. MO201 Schimmelpfennig, Heike. 560, TH244 Schiopu, Nicoleta. 142, MO224 Schipper, Aafke. 305 Schirinzi, Gabriella. 127, 343 Schirmer, Kristin. 319, 475, MO028, TH057, TH239, TU001, TU150, TUPC24, WE143 Schiwy, Andreas. 157, TU014 Schlechtriem, Christian. MO132, TU152, TU154, TU232

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Schlekat, Christian. 241, TUPC10 Schlich, Karsten. 468, TU119, WE189 Schliebner, Ivo. TU241 Schluep, Mathias. 463 Schluesener, Michael. 535 Schlummer, M. 464 Schlutow, Angela. WE054 Schmelz, Rüdiger. 420 Schmid, Rudolf. WE134 Schmidt, Christian. WE135 Schmidt, Florian. TH228 Schmidt, Gunnar. 7 Schmidt, Jannick Hoejrup. 91 Schmidt, Stine. 154, 330, TU130, WE078, WE097 Schmidt, Susanne. TH138 Schmidt, Thomas. TH040 Schmidt, Thomas. TU196, TU199 Schmidt, Torben. 297 Schmidt, Travis. 422 Schmiediche, Ronny. TU096 Schmieg, Hannah. TH197 Schmitz, Susanne. 64, MO199 Schmitzer, Stephan. TU192 Schnee, Dagmar. TU127 Schneider, Christof. 191, TUPC04 Schnetzer, Nadja. 190 Schnurr, Alexander. TUPC04 Schoenenberger, Rene. 475 Schoeters, Greet. 543, TH166 Schoeters, Ilse. WE113 Schoknecht, Ute. 177 Schollee, Jennifer. TU150 Scholz, Stefan. 520, TUPC25 Scholz Starke, Bjoern. TH145, WE052, WE053 Scholz-Böttcher, Barbara. WE137 Scholz-Starke, Bjorn. TH133 Scholze, Martin. 479, 485, 486 Schönenberger, Urs. WE177 Schönfeld, Jens. 64, MO199, TU237 Schot, Paul. WE161 Schouten, Marieke. TH068 Schowanek, Diederik. TH073, TH201, TH228 Schrama, Maarten. 229, WE165 Schreiner, Verena. 227 Schreitmüller, Jörn. TU024, TU028 Schrijvers, Dieuwertje. 354 Schriks, Merijn. WE161 Schröder, Winfried. 421, WE054, WEPC14 Schroeder, Anthony. TU004, TU054 Schubert, Kai-Volker. 87, MOPC12 Schuer, Christoph. TH193 Schuettler, Andreas. 315 Schuettrumpf, Holger. 356 Schug, Hannah. TU001 Schuhmacher, Marta. MO244 Schuijt, Lara. TU128 Schulin, Rainer. 176 Schulte, Agnes. TU234 Schulte, Christoph. 330, WE088 Schulz, Ralf. 228, 42, 467, 469, 82, TU147 Schulz, Robert. 190 Schulze, Stefanie. TU239, TU240 Schulze, Tobias. 226, 400, 403, 474, 520, MO205, TH138, WE027, WE173 Schuster, Hanna. MO252, MO253, MO256 Schüttrumpf, Holger. WE027 Schuurmann, Gerrit. 211, TU007,

TU009, TU032, TU239 Schwab, Fabienne. 224 Schwaickhardt, Rômulo. WE204 Schwartz, Thomas. TU143 Schwarz, Benjamin. TU009 Schwarz, Markus. MO146 Schwarz, Tamar. 526, 98 Schwarz-Schulz, Beatrice. 564 Schweizer, Mona. TU042 Schwertfeger, Dina. 391 Schwirn, Kathrin. 345, WE188 Scott, Alexander. 98 Scott, William. TH149, TH150 Scrimshaw, Mark. MO075, WE254 Scroggins, Rick. 391, WE118, WE119 Seabra, Camilo. TU125, WE010 Sebasky, Megan. MO051 Sebire, Marion. TU010 Secchi, Michela. MO225, TU264 Segner, Helmut. 213, TH042, TH054, TU005, TU154, TUPC24 Segura-Lepe, Marcelo. MO186, TU016 Seidensticker, Sven. 553, TH192 Seifi, Mohsen. TH004 Seiler, Thomas-Benjamin. 356, 474, TU254, TU260, WE150, WE162 Seino, Susumu. WEPC25 Seitz, Frank. 82 Seiwert, Bettina. 137, MO262 Sekine, Ryo. MOPC21 Selck, Henriette. 15, TH013, TU116 Selent, Klaus. TH112 Sellin Jeffries, Marlo. 213 Semenzin, Elena. 347, MO140, TU226, WE197, WE198 Senac, Thomas. 213 Sendra, Marta. TU111 Seo, Jong-Su. TH123, TH124 Seo, Yong-Deuk. WE103 Sergent, Jacques-Aurelien. TU049, TU100 Serôdio, João. MO124, WE190 Serra, Helene. 486 Serra-Compte, Albert. MO042, TU145 Seuntjens, Piet. 123 Seyfferth, Angelia. 270 Seyfried, Markus. MO156 Sgier, Linn. WE143 Shan, Zhengjun. TU047 Shao, Ying. 474 Shapira, Aviad. MO228 Shariati, Fatemeh. TU101 Sharma, Anežka. TH155 Sharma, Bibek. MOPC03 Sharp, Rachel. MO248 Sharp, Richard. TU212 Sharpe, Richard. MO260 Sharples, Amanda. 337, TU206 Shashkova, Tatiana. TH020, TH234 Shaw, Joe. 2, 4, 418 Sheahan, Dave. TUPC22 Shenkar, Noa. WE140 Shepard, Michael. MO160 Shi, Ning. 419 Shim, Wonjoon. TH214, WE131, WE132 Shimabukuro, Valeria. WE081 Shimasaki, Yohei. TU065 Shin, Cecilia. 539 Shin, Yongho. TH092 Shiraishi, Hiroaki. MO197, TUPC23 Shires, Kallie. TH038 Shore, Richard. 323, MO033,

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MO036, TU036, TU247, WE038 Short, Stephen. 376, TH005 Shu, Tao. 174, TH160 Shukla, Ravi. WE192 Shunthirasingham, Chubashini. 539 Siaussat, David. 515 Siciliano, Steven. 243, 392, 393, WE122 Siegl, Alexander. MO156 Sieira, Benigno Jose. 427 Sigmund, Gabriel. TU166 Sild, Sulev. 325 Siligardi, Cristina. WE210 Šillerová, Hana. MO065 Silva, Patrícia. 79, TU167 Silveira, Elizandro. TU162 Silwana, Bongiwe. MO062, MO082, MO097 Sim, Sarah. 308, 408, TU212 Simao, Fatima. MO021, TH019 Simek, Zdenek. MO109, WE017 Simmons, Rob. MO034 Simon, Kirsten. TH233, WE240 Simon, Markus. TU232 Simon, Marta. 398, TH184 Simon, Olivier. 523 Sinclair, Chris. 238 Singer, Heinz. WE177 Sinha Khetriwal, Deepali. 463 Sinnet, Brian. MO123, TUPC17 Sipos, Sandor. WE172 Sips, Adrienne. 348 Siqueira, Priscila. MO136 Sironval, Violaine. TU071 Sittig, Stephan. MO106 Sittner, Dana. TU234 Sjerps, Rosa. 357, MO216 Skeaff, Jim. TUPC12 Skodova, Alena. WE017 Sköld, Nils-Petter. 20 Skourti-Stathaki, Eirini. MOPC18 Skulcova, Lucia. TU137, TU138, TU159 Skulovich, Olya. 356 Skøgerbo, Geir. WE139 Slaby, Sylvain. TU048 Slaveykova, Vera. 316, 71, MO079, TU141, TU250, TU275 Slenders, Hans. 26, MO176 Slobodnik, Jaroslav. 400 Slomberg, Danielle. TUPC16 Slootmaekers, Bart. WE141 Sloth, Jens. 146 Smagghe, Guy. TUPC04 Smedes, Foppe. 287, 400, TH093 Smeets, Karen. TU003, TU017, TU187, WE012 Smet, Francis. TH043 Smit, Els. 424 Smit, Mathijs. 433, WE158, WE160 Smith, Andy. TU235 Smith, Balthasar. MO249 Smith, Benjamin. 300 Smith, Jim. 276, TH018, TH063 Smith, Jonathan. MO176 Smith, Kilian. TH091, TU140, WE083, WE088 Smith, Rhiannon. TH180 Smith, Robert. 338, WE112 Smith, Ross. 118, TU261 Smits, Judit. 490, MO032 Smolders, Erik. MO023 Smurov, Andrey. TU184 Smutna, Marie. TH035 Snape, Jason. 135, 169, 180, 181,

182, 32, 65, MO053, MO147, MO187, TU025, TU144, TUPC22 Snyder, Shane. MO166 Soares, Amadeu. 124, 223, 432, 518, 519, MO021, TH019, TH024, TH025, TH027, TH140, TU064, TU108, TU109, TU110, TU173, WE042, WE107, WE190, WE238, WE242 Soares, Carlos. TU069, TU070, WE024, WE025 Sobanska, Marta. 265 Sobanski, Tomasz. 285 Sobek, Anna. MO152, TU263, WE077 Sobotka, Jaromir. TH093 Sobral, P.. 497 Sobrino-Figueroa, Alma. TH050, TU008, TU046 Sogbanmu, Temitope. MO215 Sohm, Bénédicte. TH002 Sohn, Juhye. TH156 Sohn, Lauren. TU061 Soji, Jeremiah. MO182 Šojić, Lazarija. TU255 Solé, Magali. TU093, WE066 Soler, Eugenia. TUPC04 Šolević Knudsen, Tatjana. TU168, WE163, WE164 Solga, Andreas. 167, 168, 382, TU088 Soller, Matthias. TUPC05 Solomon, Keith. 529 Soltwedel, Thomas. 385 Somerset, Vernon. MO062, MO082, MO097 Son, Jino. MO159 Sonderegger, Thomas. TU220 Song, Guem-Joo. MO167 Song, Young Kyung. WE132 Sonne, Christian. 218 Sonnemann, Guido. 354, 558, MO057, WE223 Sörelius, Helene. WE224 Sorell, Tamara. MO183 Soriano Disla, Jose Martin. 447, MO068, MO083, TU243 Sorlí, Juan. 191 Sosa, Silvio. TU077 Sosanwo, Adesina. MO215 Soto, Manu. WE153 Soto, Manuel. 299, TU041, TU080, TU252, WE162 Sotty, Jules. TU002 Souleman, Dima. 1 Soupe, D. 230 Sousa, Jose Paulo. 242, 243, 338, WE112, WE115, WE124 Soussou, Souhir. 234 Southwell, Rebecca. 129, MO153 Souza, Iara. TU182 Sowig, Peter. 10, TU088 Soyoung, Lee. MO026 Spence, Mike. 31, MO176, MO206, MO212 Spencer, Kate. MO084 Spickermann, Gregor. MO100 Spinelli, Rosangela. WE210 Spira, Denise. TH112 Spirhanzlova, Petra. WEPC20, WEPC22 Spokas, Kurt. MO098 Sprangers, Katrien. 317 Sprecher, Benjamin. WE220 Sprenger, Dennis. TH058 Springer, Andrea. TU234 Springer, Timothy. TU033

151

Spurgeon, David. 189, 441, MO001, WE130 Spycher, Barbara. WE177 Spyropoulou, Anastasia. MO246 Srocka, Michael. 38 Stachowski, Sabine. 185, TU273 Stadnicka-Michalak, Julita. 475, TH239, TUPC24 Staehler, Matthias. MO104 Staelens, Jeroen. TH166 Stahlschmidt, Peter. 190 Stam, Gea. TU211 Stamatis, Haralambos. TU075 Stamm, Christian. WE177 Standaert, Arnout. 491, TH153 Standaert, Simon. 248 Stang, Christoph. 564 Stanton, Isobel. 182, TU144 Stanton, John. WE245 Stanton, Kathleen. 266 Stanton, Thomas. 340 Staples, Charles. WE247 Stark, John. WE071 Stark-Rogel, Véronique. TH078 Staudenmaier, Horst. MO107 Staveley, Jane. MOPC03 Steber, Josef. 330 Steen Mikkelsen, Peter. 201, 259 Stefani, Sonja. 42 Stefanović – Kojić, Jovana. WE164 Steger-Hartmann, Thomas. MO186, TU016 Steinbach, Christoph. WE199 Steinmann, Zoran. TU211 Stelling, Joerg. WE003 Stelter, Norbert. TH227 Stenrød, Marianne. MO113 Stenton, Craig. TH021 Stephan, Chady. 16, MO054 Stephansen, Cathrine. WE146 Stephansen, Diana. 398, TH184 Stephens, Martin. 505 Stephenson, Gladys. 529 Stevens, An-Sofie. TU003 Stevens, Brooke. 24 Steyer, Jean-Philippe. 37 Stibany, Felix. 330, WE088 Stichnothe, Heinz. TU222 Stieger, Greta. 291 Stier, Britta. WE135 Stiers, Iris. 252 Stinckens, Evelyn. 154, 371, TH046, TU004, TU054 Stoddart, Gilly. TUPC25 Stoger, Reinhard. TUPC05 Stokke, Bård. 112 Stoks, Robby. 105, 106, 54, 57, MO019 Stolte, Stefan. MO061 Stone, Vicki. 160, TU081, WE198 Storck, Florian. WE136 Stotz, Wolfgang. TU050 Strange, Richard. TU104 Strassemeyer, Joern. MO104, MO105 Strathmann, Timothy. MOPC11 Straub, Jürg Oliver. TU025 Strauss, Tido. 260, WE068, WE072, WE167 Stravinskene, Ekaterina. MO074, TH234 Strbac, Dragana. MO056 Strbac, Goran. MO056 Strehmel, Alexander. 75 Streissl, Franz. 8, 9, TU087 Strempel, Sebastian. 211

152

Stresius, Ivonne. 302 Strobel, Anneli. TH042 Strobel, Bjarne. MOPC14, MOPC16, MOPC17 Struijs, Jaap. 204, TH073 Strøm, Hallvard. MO030 Strømman, Anders. 89 Stubblefield, Bill. 430, MO077, WE151 Sturve, EL. TU060 Sturve, Joachim. TU061, TU074, TUPC20, WE023 Stutt, Edward. 390 Stuyfzand, Pieter. 357 Stylianou, Katerina. 544, 557, TU227 Su, JianQiang. 180 Su, Ky. 539 Su, Shu. TH160 Suaria, Giuseppe. WE142 Subramanian, Vrishali. 347, WE197, WE198 Suciu, Nicoleta. 289, MO119 Suessenbach, Dirk. TU207, TUPC07 Suh, Sangwon. 558 Suhring, Roxana. TU235 Sujetoviene, Gintare. TU188 Sukiene, Vilma. 492 Sullivan, Cheryl. TH038 Sumetzberger-Hasinger, Marion. TU130 Summerfield, Stephen. 548 Summers, Stephen. TH220 Sumon, Kizar. TH037 Sumon, Kizar Ahmed. 43 Sun, Caoxin. 385 Sun, Hongying. TU047 Sun, Jianxian. WE008 Sundh, Henrik. TH196 Sundh, Ingvar. 338, WE112 Supple, Steven. TU235 Sur, Robin. MO103 Sussarellu, Rossana. 396, MO005, TH009 Suter, Marc. MO028 Sutherland, Cary. TU027 Sutton, Peter. WE109 Suzuki, Toshinari. MO195 Svalin, Joel. TH196 Svendsen, Claus. 189, 441, MO141, MOPC21, TH185, WE130 Swankie, Nathan. WE147 Swarowsky, Klaus. WE112 Swart, Elmer. WE130 Swartz, Estée. MO049 Sweeney, Paul. MO108 Sweetlove, Cyril. MO157, TH243 Swiatek, Zuzanna. TU114 Swinny, Jerome. TH004 Sybertz, Alexandra. TH133, TH145 Sychrova, Eliska. WE017 Szegedi, Krisztian. TH085 Szentes, Csaba. MO246 Szilágyi, Artúr. WE206 Szita Toth, Klara. WE206 Szymoszek, Andrzej. TU238 Sørnes, Tom. WE146 Sørup, Hjalte. 405

T Tabureau, Olivier. WE013 Tack, Filip. TH225 Tagliati, Alice. MO018, TUPC16 Tambjerg, Lau. 408

Tang, Song. WE008 Tangaa, Stine. TU116 Tange, Lein. 464 Taniguchi, Satie. MO038, TH217 Tanneberger, Katrin. 475 Tänzler, Verena. TUPC04 Tappin, Alan. 32, MO053 Tarazona, José. 412 Tarroux, Arnaud. 113 Tartu, Sabrina. 110, 111, 30 Tassetti, Nora. TH210 Tatarazako, Norihisa. MO197, TH023, TU270, TUPC23, WE076 Tauler, Romà. 369, 518, MO006 Taylor, Astrid. WE127 Taylor, Nadine. 419, WE002 Taylor, T. TU262 Tecklenburg, Julia. MO104, MO105 Tedim, João. TU108, TU109, TU110, WE190 Tediosi, Alice. 146 Teigeler, Matthias. TU018, WE050 Teiser, Bernhard. 27 Tejedor, Marisa. MO038 Tell, Joan. TU025 Tellbüscher, Anil. MOPC08 Temple, Diana. TU033 Tenji, Dina. WE172 Tennert, Ellen. MO201 Tenney, Joel. 542 Teodorovic, Ivana. 401, WE172, WE173 ter Horst, Mechteld. 436 ter Laak, Thomas. MO216, TU179 Tercero Gómez, María del Carmen. MO069, TU161, WE181 Terech-Majewska, Elżbieta. TH041 Terekhova, Vera. MO066 Termes, Montserrat. MO229 Ternes, Thomas. 27, 535 Terry, Claire. WE259 Terzaghi, Elisa. 233, TH080, TU158 Terzic, Senka. 481 Tessum, Christopher. 544 Teuchies, Johannes. WE237 Teulon, Helene. TU265 Tez, Serkan. TUPC15 Thalmann, Beat. 157, TU014 Theis, Mario. TU192 Thevenot, Amelie. WE223 Thiele, Christina. TH226 Thiele-Bruhn, Sören. TU176 Thiemann, Gregory. 111 Thierbach, Claudia. MO202 Thit Jensen, Amalie. TH013 Thoma, Greg. MO240 Thomas, David. WE090 Thomas, Kevin. 498 Thomas, Paul. 329, TH169, TH172, TH174, TH176, TH179, TUPC18 Thome, Jean-Pierre. TU059, TU136 Thöming, Jorg. 17 Thompson, Helen. 192 Thompson, Richard. 397, WEPC05 Thomsen, Anja. 563 Thöns, Sebastian. 405 Thorbek, Pernille. 205, 384, WE167 Thornton, Barry. TU182 Thys, Frederic. TU157 Ti, Bowen. 85 Tian, Zhexi. TH213 Tiberg, Charlotta. TH242 Tiede, Christian. MO045 Tiemersma, Truus. 556 Tien, Henning. 114

Tierney, Keith. 375 Tiktak, Aaldrik. 338, WE112 Timm, Alexander. MO052 Timmer, Niels. TU139, WE087 Tinant, Gilles. 271 Tindall, Andrew. 155, 402 Tirez, Kristof. TU072 Tirler, Werner. MO211 Tisler, Selina. MO040 Titelman, Josefin. 277 Tixier, Thomas. TU177 Tjensvoll, Ingrid. 144 Tkaczyk, Alan. TU223 Tlili, Ahmed. 35, WE143 Todeschini, Roberto. 326, 328 Tolkkinen, Mari. 422 Tolls, Johannes. TH073 Tomlinson, Darren. MO045 Tonny, Israt. TH037 Toogood, Lisa. WE026 Toose, Liisa. TU230 Töpel, Mats. TU060 Topkaya, Bülent. TH148 Topp, Ed. TU176 Topping, Christopher. 338 , TU207, TUPC07, WE112 Torget, Vidar. 111, 30 Tornisielo, Valdemar. MO098, MO099 Torrents, Alba. WE093 Torres Ramírez, Eduardo. WE101 Torres-Orozco Bermeo, Roberto. TH050 Torrijos, Manuel. MO210 Tort, Lluis. 273 Toschi, Nicola. 128, MO139 Toschki, Andreas. 420, TH070, TU121, WE052, WE053 Touak, Gerald. 402 Toumi, Khaoula. TH147 Touwen, Jelle. MOPC05 Towa, Edgar. MO223, WE205 Townsend, Kathryn. 495 Trac, Lam. WE078 Tran, Olivia. WE180, WE253 Tran, Thanh Tam. MO019 Trantallidi, Marilena. TH159 Trantopoulos, Epameinondas. WE009 Trapp, Judith. 366, WE006 Trapp, Stefan. 334, WE088, WE089 Traub, Martin. WE100 Traudt, Elizabeth. 70 Traunspurger, Walter. MO178, WE157 Trellu, Clement. TU132 Trevisan, Marco. MO119 Triebe, Jutta. TH129 Triebskorn, Rita. TH197, TU042, TU044, TU129 Trier, Xenia. TU242 Trigaux, Damien. 140 Trigo, Dolores. WE019 Trijau, Marie. 3 Tröger, Rikard. 482 Trombini, Chiara. 516 Trottier, Gabrielle. 195, TU217 Trudeau, Vance. WE152 Truong, Jimmy. 538, TH098 Tsaioun, Katya. 505 Tsamou, Maria. 543 Tsang, Michael. 558, MO057 Tsarpali, Vasiliki. TU062 Tsatsakis, Aris. WE185 Tsilimigka, Foteini. TU075 Tsirlin, Dina. 541

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Tsitsiou, Eleni. 533 Tsou, Ming-Chien. MO071 Tsoukatou, Georgia. TUPC20 Tsouloufa, Argyro. TH181 Tubaro, Aurelia. TU077 Turek, Tina. TH041 Turgeon, Katrine. 195 Turies, Cyril. 173 Turja, Raisa. WE148, WE149, WE153, WE162 Turk-Sekulic, Maja. MO207, WE091 Turlin, François. MO073 Turner, David. 352 Turpin, Christian. 195 Turpin Torrano, Cristian. MO072 Turtiainen, Tuukka. 244 Twaalfhoven, Anne. WE175 Tyler, Charles. 135, 181, 384, 440, 83 Tysklind, Mats. MO089

U Uchanov, Pavel. MO066 Ufer, Andreas. 10 Uhama, Chukwuka. WE183 Uhama, Kingsley. WE184 Uhl, Philipp. 190, TU207, TUPC07 Uhlig, Steffen. TH233, WE240 Ullah, Asif. MO172 Umbuzeiro, Gisela. MO078, TH012 Undas, Anna. 81 Undeman, Emma. 288, 33 Unger, Michael. 175 Urban, Mathias. WE048 Uricchio, Vito Felice. 232, WE142 Urionabarrenetxea, Erik. 299, TU080, TU252 Urmann, Karina. TH078 Urtiaga, Ane. 86, MOPC11 Usenko, Sascha. 2 Utermann, Jens. 115, MO070

V Vaananen, Kristiina. MO180 Vaca, Mabel. TU244 Vadas, George. 175 Vaerewyck, Jean-François. WE239 Vaillancourt, Kathleen. 453, 454 Vaiopoulou, Eleni. 548, TH175, TU236 Valdersnes, Stig. 145 Vale, Peter. 73 Valenti, Theodore. 269, MOPC03 Valera Pérez, Miguel Ángel. WE101 Valkenborg, Dirk. TH047 Vallejo, Asier. 470 Vallotton, Nathalie. 431 Valot, Benoît. 62 Valsecchi, Sara. 27, MO048, MO181 Vamshi, Raghu. 207, MO051, TUPC14 Van Acker, Emmanuel. 51 Van Acker, Karel. 409, WE220, WE225 Van Ael, Evy. TH143 Van Arkel, Kim. 443 Van Assche, Frank. TUPC08, TUPC09 Van Belleghem, Frank. TU017 van Beusekom, Bas. 404 Van Bodegom, Peter. 441 van Broekhuizen, Fleur. WE258 Van Camp, Kristien. 365, TH047

Van Cruchten, Steven. 151, 371, MO190, TH046, TU029 Van de Meent, Dik. 204, 488, 533, 534, TH073, TH231 van de Meer, Froukje. 404 van de Water , Bob. 413 Van de Zande, Jan. 119, MO120 van den Berg, Hans. 60, 81 van den Brande, Ewoud. MO193 van den Brink, Nico. 60, 81 van den Brink, Paul. 255, 257, 311, 43, 436, 437, 438, 510, 531, TH061, TU128, WE063, WE064, WE166 van den Brule, Sybille. TU071 Van Den Heuvel, Rosette. TH166 van den Hurk, Floris. MO216 van der Heuvel, Freek. 146 Van der Heyden, Sara. TU073 van der Hoeven, Nelly. WE247 Van der Horst, C. MO062, MO082, MO097 Van Der Kraak, Glen. 213 Van der Linden, Sander. TH129 van der Oost, Ron. 404, WE176 Van der Steen, Jozef. TU193, TUPC04 van der Wal, Leon. TU156 Van Driessche, Isabel. WE194 van Eck, Andre. TH068 van Egmond, Roger. 68, TUPC22 van Gestel, C.A.M.. 117, 222, 56, 79, 80, TH071, TU114, WE121 van Gils, Jos. 530 Van Ginneken, Inge. TU025 Van Ginneken, Marjolein. MO017 Van Gompel, Axel. 188 Van Hees, May. 188, 244 Van Holderbeke, Mirja. 491, TH153 van Houdt, Chris. TH068 Van Hulle, Stijn. 428 van Hullebusch, Eric. TU132 van Kleunen, Mark . 251 Van Langenhove, Herman. 134, 388, 428, 483, TH114, TH115, TH116, WE248 Van Langenhove, Kersten. MO049, TH105 Van Larebeke, Mélusine. 271, 273 Van Larebeke, Nicolas. 543 van Leeuwen, C.J.. TH073 van Lente, Harro. 348 Van Meulebroek , Lieven. 96 van Miert, Erik. 556 Van Nuijs, Alexander. 371, TH046 van Overbeke, Elisabeth. 248 van Oyen, Albert. TH216, WE134 van Pomeren, Marinda. 283 Van Poucke, Charlotte. 543 Van Poucke, Reinhart. TH225 Van Regenmortel, Tina. 240, TU185 Van Rompay, An. TU011 Van Smeden, Jasper. TU128 van Spanning, Rob. MO155 Van Sprang, Patrick. MO087, WE073 van Straalen, Nico. 222 van Teulingen, Corné. WE175 van Wezel, Annemarie. 348, 357, MO216, TH224, WE138, WE161 van Wijngaarden, René. 164 , TU093 Van Zelm, Rosalie. 67, MO231, TU211 Vanassche, Stella. WE224 Vanbever, Rita. TU071 Vandaele, Karel. 123

Vanden Bosch, An. MO251 Vandenberg, Bert. 490 Vandenbulcke, Franck. 166, MO096, TU092 Vandenhove, Hildegarde. 244 Vangheluwe, Marnix. WE232 Vanhaecke, Lynn. 388, 52, 96, TH114, TH115 Vanham, Hélène. 271 Vannoni, Marta. 219 Vannuci-Silva, Monizze. MO078 Vanoirbeek, Jeroen. MO004, TH161 Vanryckeghem, Francis. 388, 483, TH114, TH115, WE248 Vargas Gonzalez, Marcial. WE211 Vatland Krøvel, Anne. WE139 Vázquez Fernández-Pacheco, Ester. TU077 Vázquez-Campos, Socorro. MO130, TH152 Vecera, Zbynek. TU086 Vecerkova, Jaroslava. WE017 Velki, Mirna. 521 Veltman, K. 478 Velzen, Martin. 460 Venâncio, Cátia. 379, MO124, WE238 Vendemiati, Josiane. TH012 Vera-Vera, Victoria. TH065, TU066 Verbruggen, Bas. 135 Verbruggen, Eric. 285 Verbueken, Evy. 371, TH046 Verdonck, Frederik. 262, MO087, TH143, TH245, TH247, TUPC09, WEPC17 Verdonschot, Piet. 404, WE176 Verdú, Irene. WE019 Vered, Gal. WE140 Vergauwen, Lucia. 154, 217, 371, 473, MO190, TH046, TU004, TU029, TU037, TU054 Verge, Emmanuelle. TU191 Vergeynst, Leendert. 134, 483 Verheijen, Dr Frank. TH025 Verheyen, Julie. 106 Vermeir, Pieter. WE194 Vermeirssen, Etienne. 507 Verones, Francesca. TU211, TU217 Verougstraete, Violaine. 549, TH168, WE232 Verschoor, Anja. MO086, WE200 Versieren, Liske. MO023 Verslycke, Tim. 526 Versonnen, Bram. 267 Verstraelen, Sandra. TU011, WE193 Verweij, Rudo A. 79, 80 Veschkens, Mathieu. TH141 Vey, Daniele. MO037 Vey, Matthias. TU172 Vezzaro, Luca. 200, 259 Viaene, Karel. 257, WE073 Viant, Mark. 419, WE002 Viberg, Henrik. 368 Vicente, María José. TU161 Vidal, Alice. MO171 Vidal, Martín. MO038 Vidaud, Claude. MO126 Vidaurre, Rodrigo. 238, 239 Vieira, Eny. TH110, TU084 Vieira, Marisa. TU211 Vierke, Lena. TU239 Vighi, Marco. 108, 11, 328 Vignati, Davide. 296, MO073, MO094, MO181 Vignet, Caroline. TH057

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Vigon, Bruce. MO237 Vijver, Martina. 220, 283, 342, 424, 441, MO086, WE165, WE200 Viketoft, Maria. WE127 Vila, Mercedes. MO060 Vilà-Cano, Judit. MO261 Vila-Costa, Maria. TU067 vila-costa, maria. TU068 Vile, Denis. MO096 Villa, Raffaella. 77 Villa, Sara. 328, TH135, WE032 Villanueva-Rey, Pedro. TU218 Villeneuve, Daniel. 150, TU004, TU054, WE004 Villeneuve, Jacques. WEPC11 Villez, Kris. 199 Viñas, Jordi. MO006 Vink, Daphne. WE175 Vink, Jos P.M.. MO086 Vishnivetskaya, Tatiana. TU104 Vitale, Chiara Maria. WE108 Vitali, Vera Maria. TU167, WE102 Viviano, Gaetano. MO048 Vladimirov, Victor. MO233 Vlaeminck, Karel. WE073 Vlastos, Dimitrios. TH181, TU075 Vleminckx, Christiane. TH147 Vlieg, Mathilde. 246, MO226, TU268 Voegelin, Andreas. MO123 Vogelbein, Mary Ann. 175 Vogt, Roland. WE238, WE242 Voigt, Astrid. MO064 Vojinovic MIloradov, Mirjana. MO056, MO207, TH126 Volat, Bernadette. TUPC13 Volchko, Yevheniya. WE127 Völkel, Wolfgang. TH236, TU176 Vollertsen, Jes. 398, MO196, TH184, WE094 Vollmar, Pia. 561 Vollmer, Tobias. WE110, WE123 Volpi Ghirardini, Annamaria. MO140 Volz, David. TU004 von Dassow, Peter. TU183 von der Assen, Niklas. 556 Von der Kammer, Frank. MO123, WEPC04 Von der Ohe, Peter. TU231 Von Goetz, Natalie. 492 Von Hellfeld, Rebecca. TH207 von Mérey, Georg. MO160, WE109, WE229 von Stackelberg, Katherine. 435, WE071 Vonk, J Arie. MO179, MOPC05 Voua Otomo, Patricks. MO059, TU083, WE106, WE128 Vrana, Branislav. 287, 400, TH093 Vriens, Bas. MO123 Vriens, Hanne. TH161 Vrijens, Karen. 543 Vrvić, Miroslav. TU168, WE163, WE164 Vulliet, Emmanuelle. TH011

W Waara, Sylvia. TU258 Waegeneers, Nadia. MO095, TU073, TU245 Waeterschoot, Hugo. 549 Wagelmans, Marlea. 335, WE129 Wagenaar, Ina. MO185 Wagenhoff, Eiko. TH241 Wäger, Patrick. 463, WE257

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Wagner, Bettina. 35 Wagner, Martin. MO094, TH189, TH193 Wagner, Stephan. 344, WE135, WEPC04 Wagner, Thomas. MO158 Waldron, Susan. TH222 Walgraeve, Christophe. TH116 Walker, John. MO033 Walker, Lee. TU036, TU247 Walker, Samantha. TH248 Walter-Rohde, Susanne. TUPC25 Walters, Chavon. MO082 Walton, Alexander. TH185 Walton, Helen. TU052, TU235 Wang, Bin. TH160 Wang, Hongtao. 197, 353 Wang, Jiafan. MOPC03 Wang, Juying. WE226 Wang, Magnus. 260, MO263, TH059, TU194, TUPC01, TUPC02, WE067 Wang, Xianglan. TU047 Wang, Ying. WE226 Wang, Ying-Lin. MO071 Wang, Zhanyun. 291, 455, MOPC13 Wang, Zhen. TH149, TH150 Wannaz, Cedric. 532 Wannijn, Jean. 188 Wanzenböck, Josef. WE238, WE242 Warner, Nicholas. 288 Warwick, Oliver. 294 Wassenaar, Pim. WE258 Wassenaar, Tom. TH229 Watanabe, Haruna. TU010, WE076 Watanabe, Karen. WE004 Watanabe, Kimiyo. MO195 Watermann, Burkard. 563 Wathelet, Alain. 556 Watts, Andrew. 552 Waugh, Courtney. WE056 Weber, Jan. 560, TH244 Wee, June. MO159, WE074 Weeks, John. TU154 Weemaes, Marjoleine. 428 Wege, Franziska. WE050 Weichert, Fabian. WE041 Weidema, Bo. 92 Weidle, India. TU182 Weijers, Stefan. 208 Weil, Mirco. 469, TU232 Weinbeck, Xandra. 556 Weis, Wilson. TU069 Weiss, Jana. 373, 471, 485, WE127 Weiss-Cohen, Tami. 542 Weisshappel, Jóhanna. TH096 Welham, Kevin. MO050 Welker, Jeffrey. 111, 30 Weltens, Reinhilde. TH232, WE193 Weltje, Lennart. 10, TH054, TH067 Wenger, Delphine. WEPC02 Weniger, Anne-Kathrin. MO112, TH218 Wennberg, Aina Charlotte. MO149 Wennermark, Henrik. 562 Wenning, Richard. WE159, WE160 Wepener, Victor. MO128, WE031 Werner, Inge. 507, MOPC06, TU150, WE120 Wernet, Gregor. 36 Wess, Ralf Arno. TH131 Wessel, Nathalie. 359

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Westphal-Settele, Kathi. MO202 Weyand, Steffi. MO057 Weyman, Gabriel. TU206, WE047 Whale, Graham. 213, 31, MO147, MO206, MO212, TH177, TH180, TUPC22, WE158 Wheeler, James. 102, TH067, TUPC22 Whelan, Jonathan. 73 Whelan, Mick. 288, 77 Whitacre, Shane. 24 White, Jason. 224 White, Kelly. 219 White, M. K1, MO259 Whitehead, Andrew. 2 Whitehead, Paul. TH180 Whitehouse, Paul. TUPC08 Whitlock, Sophia. 323, WE038 Wiberg, Karin. 28, 482, MO046, WE127 Wicht, Jorina. MOPC24, TH192 Widmer, Rolf. 463, WE257 Wiech, Martin. 145, 69 Wieck, Stefanie. TUPC19 Wiemann, Astrid. MO199, TU232, TU237 Wiewel, Julian. TH034 Wijntjes, Christiaan. TH236 Wik, Ola. TH242 Wilczynska, Malgorzata. TU235 Wildi, Michel. MOPC06 Wilkins, Terry. WE197 Wilkinson, Helen. TUPC08 Wilkinson, John. MO054 Willems, Maxime. TU003 Williams, Daniel. TU104 Williams, Mike. MO204 Williams, Spencer. TH149, TH150 Williams, Tim. TU010 Willius, Nadine. TH070, TU121 Willoughby, Jamin. TU011 Willrodt, Christine. 244 Wilmot, Lucy. 294 Wilson, Peter. 213, 268, TU020 Winckelmans, Ellen. 543 Wincker, Patrick. WE015 Windfeld, Ronja. 15 Winfield, Zach. 2 Winkel, Lenny. MO123 Winkelmann, Carola. TU126 Winkelmans, Ellen. TU003 Winther-Nielsen, Margrethe. TU116 Wipfler, Louise. 436 Wirtensohn, Stefan. TH032 Wiseman, Clare. 25 Wiseman, Steve. 156, WE008 Withagen, Cees. TU214 Witt, Gesine. 176, 389 Witt, Johannes. MO106 Witte, François. WE211 Witte, Klaudia. MO131, MO133 Witters, Hilda. TU004, TU054 Witton, Joanna. WE047 Wittwer, Torben. TH069 Witzig, Cordula. WE136 Woelz, Jan. WE247 Wogram, Joern. WE066 Wohde, Manuel. TU176 Wohlleben, Wendel. WE198 Wolf, Raoul. 277 Wolf, T. MO259 Wolf, Thomas. TH073

Wolff, Anastasia. TU269 Wolleben, Wendel. 160 Wollert, Stefanie. TU192 Wollmann, Claudia. 190 Wong, Bob. 378 Wong, Hie Ling. TH158 Wood, Richard. 309, 89 Woodburn, Kent. TU233 Worden, Joy. 431, TH137 Worms, Isabelle. 316, MO126, TU275 Worsfold, Paul. MO076 Worth, Andrew. TH129 Wouterse, Marja. 220 Wowra, Karoline. 247 Wright, Laurence. 72 Wright, Serena. 219, TU253 Wright, Stephanie. 550 Wróbel, Anna. TH030 Wrona, Frederick. 223, 432 Wu, Linlin. 351 Wu, Yen-Ting. MO184 Wucherer, Matthias. TH034, WEPC24 Wujits, S. K1, MO259 Wunderlin, Daniel. TU182

X Xiao, Hongxia. 157, 474, TU014 Xie, Li. 275 Xie, Yufeng. MO230 Xing, Baoshan. 174 Xu, Tianbo. WE079 Xuereb, Benoit. 278, TU051

Y Yakoub, Yousof. TU071 Yamada, Takashi. MO197, TUPC23 Yamagishi, Takahiro. TU270 Yamamoto, Hiroshi. MO197, TUPC23, WE076 Yamamura, Hirochi. WE010 Yamazaki, Kunihiko. TH142, WE227 Yanez Heras, Jorge. MO040 Yang, Congqiao. 538, 541 Yang, Fangxing. WE173 Yang, Gongda. TH005 Yang, JiSu. MO009 Yang, Ki Jun. TU098 Yang, YingFei. TH162 Yehya, Sarah. TU135 Yemadje-Lammoglia, SabineKaren. MO121 Yeom, Jaehoon. TU186 Yeung, Leo. 29 Yıldız, Merve. MO090 Yilmaz, Eser. 84 Yin, DaQiang. 521 Yin, Xiaohui. MO254 Yoccoz, Nigel. 30 Yokoi, Norihide. WEPC25 Yonkos, Lance. 175 Yoon, Seokjoo. TH048 Yordanova, Darina. TH170 You, Hongyu. 541 Youds, Lorraine. WE201 Young, Kimberly. 2 Younghun, Choi. MO026, MO047 Ysebaert, Tom. WE237 Yuan, Bo. WE077 Yuan, Xiu. TH092

Z Zabeo, Alex. 347, TU226, WE197, WE198 Zacchini, Massimo. TU163 Zahlsen, Kolbjørn. TH205 Zahn, Daniel. 292, TH100 Zahorszki, Sieglinde. 64 Zaldibar, Beñat. TH207 Zalouk-Vergnoux, Aurore. 396 Zaltauskaite, Jurate. TU094, TU188 Zamaratskaia, Galia. TH039 Zampori, Luca. 500 Zanardini, Elisabetta. 233, TU158 Zappelini, C. TU249 Zarfl, Christiane. 553, MO084, TH182, TH192 Zati, Dario. WE108 Zeller, Vanessa. 93, MO223, WE205 Zenker, Armin. TH016, TUPC17 Zerwes, Filipe. TU165 Zeumer, Richard. MO132 Zgadzaj, Anna. MO044 Žgajnar Gotvajn, Andreja. TH188 Zhai, Yujia. 220, WE200 Zhang, Chao. 57 Zhang, Jing. 197 Zhang, Lihong. 182, TU144 Zhang, Lulu. 117 Zhang, Xin. MO138 Zhang, Yanyan. 174 Zhao, Gaofeng. TH118 Zhao, Jianfu. TH132 Zhou, Jiarui. 419 Zhou, Junying. 339, TU047 Zhou, Yihui. TH132 Zhu, Yong Guan. 180 Zhu, Zhiliang. TH132 Zhuravel, Iryna. TU148 Ziesemann, Birgit. MO245 Zijp, Michiel. 305, TU211 Ziksari, M. TU101 Zilles, Victoria. 292 Zimmer, Elke. 199, WE168, WE169 Zlabek, Vladimir. MO021, TH039 Zonja, Bozo. MO145 Zornoza, Raul. 447 Zubrod, Jochen. 226, 228, 42, 469, TU126, TU147 Zupanic, Anze. 319, TH239, WE003 Zwiener, Christian. MO040, TH095

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Floor Plan Level +5 Panoramic Hall

Level +4

Session Rooms

Hall 400

Level +3

Session Rooms

Meeting Studio 313 & 315

Hall 300 The Arc

Meeting Studio 314 & 316 Meeting Studio 311 & 312

Level +2

Meeting Rooms

Meeting Studio 206

Meeting Studio 213 Meeting Studio 215 Meeting Studio 216 Meeting Studio 214 Meeting Studio 211 & 212

Meeting Studio 201 A/B Meeting Studio 202 Meeting Studio 204

Level +1

Session Rooms

Hall 100 Gold Hall

Level 0

Session Rooms

Silver Hall Copper Hall

Level -1 Entrance Registration Area

Level -2 Exhibition Hall

SETAC Europe Office

SETAC North America Office

Avenue de la Toison d´Or 67 B-1060 Brussels, Belgium T +32 2 772 72 81 F +32 2 770 53 86

229 South Baylen Street, 2nd Floor Pensacola, FL 32502, USA T +1 850 469 1500 F +1 850 469 9778

[email protected]

[email protected]

setac.org

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Cover picture: Grand Place, Flower Carpet; Back cover picture: Mont des Arts, ©Eric Danhier, visit.brussels