Beate Escher
ETH Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Beate Escher.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2012
Andreas Kretschmann; Roman Ashauer; Juliane Hollender; Beate Escher
A mechanistic toxicokinetic and toxicodynamic model for acute toxic effects (immobilization, mortality) of the organothiophosphate insecticide diazinon in Daphnia magna is presented. The model was parameterized using measured external and internal (whole-body) concentrations of diazinon, its toxic metabolite diazoxon, and the inactive metabolite 2-isopropyl-6-methyl-4-pyrimidinol, plus acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity measured during exposure to diazinon in vivo. The toxicokinetic and toxicodynamic model provides a coherent picture from exposure to the resulting toxic effect on an organism level through internally formed metabolites and the effect on a molecular scale. A very fast reaction of diazoxon with AChE (pseudo first-order inhibition rate constant k(i) = 3.3 h(-1)) compared with a slow formation of diazoxon (activation rate constant k(act) = 0.014 h(-1)) was responsible for the high sensitivity of D. magna toward diazinon. Recovery of AChE activity from inhibition was slow and rate-determining (99% recovery within 16 d), compared with a fast elimination of diazinon (99% elimination within 17 h). The obtained model parameters were compared with toxicokinetic and toxicodynamic parameters of Gammarus pulex exposed to diazinon from previous work. This comparison revealed that G. pulex is less sensitive because of a six times faster detoxification of diazinon and diazoxon and an approximately 400 times lower rate for damage accrual. These differences overcompensate the two times faster activation of diazinon to diazoxon in G. pulex compared to D. magna. The present study substantiates theoretical considerations that mechanistically based effect models are helpful to explain sensitivity differences among different aquatic invertebrates.
Archive | 2002
Martin Scheringer; Dirk Steinbach; Beate Escher; Konrad Hungerbühler
There is an ongoing discussion whether in the environmental risk assessment for chemicals the so called ‘deterministic’ approach using point estimates of exposure and effect concentrations is still appropriate. Instead, the more detailed and scientifically sounder probabilistic methods that have been developed over the last years are widely recommended. Here, we present the results of a probabilistic effect assessment for the aquatic environment performed for the pesticide methyl parathion and compare them with the results obtained with the common deterministic approach as described in the EU Technical Guidance Document. Methyl parathion was chosen because a sufficient data set (acute toxicity data for about 70 species) was available. The assumptions underlying the probabilistic effect assessment are discussed in the light of the results obtained for methyl parathion. Two important assumptions made by many studies are: (i) a sufficient number of ecologically relevant toxicity data is available, (ii) the toxicity data follow a certain distribution such as log-normal. Considering the scarcity of data for many industrial chemicals, we conclude that these assumptions would not be fulfilled in many cases if the probabilistic assessment was applied to the majority of industrial chemicals. Therefore, despite the well-known limitations of the deterministic approach, it should not be replaced by probabilistic methods unless the assumptions of these methods are carefully checked in each individual case, which would significantly increase the effort for the assessment procedure.
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2005
Thomas Knacker; Karen Duis; Thomas A. Ternes; Kathrin Fenner; Beate Escher; Heike Schmitt; Jörg Römbke; Jeanne Garric; Thomas H. Hutchinson; Alistair B.A. Boxall
Eawag News [engl. ed.] | 2009
Kathrin Fenner; Susanne Kern; Judith Neuwöhner; Heinz Singer; Beate Escher; Juliane Hollender
Eawag News [engl. ed.] | 2009
Juliane Hollender; Beate Escher
GWA Gas, Wasser, Abwasser | 2007
Juliane Hollender; Christa S. McArdell; Beate Escher
Science ot the Total Environment | 2015
Werner Brack; Rolf Altenburger; Gerrit Schuurmann; Martin Krauss; David López Herráez; Jos van Gils; Jaroslav Slobodník; John Munthe; Bernd Manfred Gawlik; Annemarie P. van Wezel; Merijn Schriks; Juliane Hollender; Knut-Erik Tollefsen; Ovanes Mekenyan; Saby Dimitrov; Dirk Bunke; Ian T. Cousins; L. Posthuma; Paul J. Van den Brink; MirenLopez de Alda; Damià Barceló; Michael Faust; Andreas Kortenkamp; Mark D. Scrimshaw; Svetlana Ignatova; Guy Engelen; Gudrun Massmann; Gregory F. Lemkine; Ivana Teodorovic; Karl-Heinz Walz
Science ot the Total Environment | 2015
Rolf Altenburger; Selim Ait-Aissa; Philipp Antczak; Thomas Backhaus; Damià Barceló; Thomas-Benjamin Seiler; François Brion; Wibke Busch; Kevin Chipman; MirenLopez de Alda; Gisela de Aragão Umbuzeiro; Beate Escher; Francesco Falciani; Michael Faust; Andreas Focks; Klára Hilscherová; Juliane Hollender; Henner Hollert; Felix Jaeger; Annika Jahnke; Andreas Kortenkamp; Martin Krauss; GregoryF. Lemkine; John Munthe; Steffen Neumann; Emma L. Schymanski; Mark D. Scrimshaw; Helmut Segner; Jaroslav Slobodník; Foppe Smedes
246th National Meeting of the American-Chemical-Society (ACS) | 2013
Marcella L. Card; Beate Escher
SETAC Europe 21st Annual Meeting | 2011
Etienne Vermeirssen; Conrad Dietschweiler; Beate Escher; Jürgen van der Voet; Juliane Hollender
Collaboration
Dive into the Beate Escher's collaboration.
Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
View shared research outputsSwiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
View shared research outputs