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Dive into the research topics where Robert Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Smith.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Towards a landscape scale management of pesticides: ERA using changes in modelled occupancy and abundance to assess long-term population impacts of pesticides.

Chris J. Topping; Peter S. Craig; Frank de Jong; Michael Klein; Ryszard Laskowski; Barbara Manachini; Silvia Pieper; Robert Smith; José Paulo Sousa; Franz Streissl; Klaus Swarowsky; A. Tiktak; Ton Van Der Linden

Pesticides are regulated in Europe and this process includes an environmental risk assessment (ERA) for non-target arthropods (NTA). Traditionally a non-spatial or field trial assessment is used. In this study we exemplify the introduction of a spatial context to the ERA as well as suggest a way in which the results of complex models, necessary for proper inclusion of spatial aspects in the ERA, can be presented and evaluated easily using abundance and occupancy ratios (AOR). We used an agent-based simulation system and an existing model for a widespread carabid beetle (Bembidion lampros), to evaluate the impact of a fictitious highly-toxic pesticide on population density and the distribution of beetles in time and space. Landscape structure and field margin management were evaluated by comparing scenario-based ERAs for the beetle. Source-sink dynamics led to an off-crop impact even when no pesticide was present off-crop. In addition, the impacts increased with multi-year application of the pesticide whereas current ERA considers only maximally one year. These results further indicated a complex interaction between landscape structure and pesticide effect in time, both in-crop and off-crop, indicating the need for NTA ERA to be conducted at landscape- and multi-season temporal-scales. Use of AOR indices to compare ERA outputs facilitated easy comparison of scenarios, allowing simultaneous evaluation of impacts and planning of mitigation measures. The landscape and population ERA approach also demonstrates that there is a potential to change from regulation of a pesticide in isolation, towards the consideration of pesticide management at landscape scales and provision of biodiversity benefits via inclusion and testing of mitigation measures in authorisation procedures.


PeerJ | 2015

Large-scale structure of brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) populations in England: effects on rodenticide resistance.

Mohd Z.H. Haniza; Sally Adams; Eleanor P. Jones; Alan MacNicoll; Eamonn B. Mallon; Robert Smith; Mark Lambert

The brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) is a relatively recent (<300 years) addition to the British fauna, but by association with negative impacts on public health, animal health and agriculture, it is regarded as one of the most important vertebrate pest species. Anticoagulant rodenticides were introduced for brown rat control in the 1950s and are widely used for rat control in the UK, but long-standing resistance has been linked to control failures in some regions. One thus far ignored aspect of resistance biology is the population structure of the brown rat. This paper investigates the role population structure has on the development of anticoagulant resistance. Using mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA, we examined 186 individuals (from 15 counties in England and one location in Wales near the Wales–England border) to investigate the population structure of rural brown rat populations. We also examined individual rats for variations of the VKORC1 gene previously associated with resistance to anticoagulant rodenticides. We show that the populations were structured to some degree, but that this was only apparent in the microsatellite data and not the mtDNA data. We discuss various reasons why this is the case. We show that the population as a whole appears not to be at equilibrium. The relative lack of diversity in the mtDNA sequences examined can be explained by founder effects and a subsequent spatial expansion of a species introduced to the UK relatively recently. We found there was a geographical distribution of resistance mutations, and relatively low rate of gene flow between populations, which has implications for the development and management of anticoagulant resistance.


EFSA Journal | 2018

Scientific Opinion about the Guidance of the Chemical Regulation Directorate (UK) on how aged sorption studies for pesticides should be conducted, analysed and used in regulatory assessments

Colin Ockleford; Antonio F Hernandez‐Jerez; Susanne Hougaard Bennekou; Michael Klein; Thomas Paulien Adriaanse; Philippe Berny; Theodorus Brock; Sabine Duquesne; Sandro Grilli; Thomas Kuhl; Ryszard Laskowski; Kyriaki Machera; Olavi Pelkonen; Silvia Pieper; Michael Stemmer; Ingvar Sundh; Ivana Teodorovic; Chris J. Topping; G. Wolterink; Robert Smith; Anne Louise Gimsing; Roy Kasteel; Arnaud Boivin; Ton van der Linden; Jose Oriol Magrans; Mark Egsmose; A. Tiktak

Abstract The EFSA Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues reviewed the guidance on how aged sorption studies for pesticides should be conducted, analysed and used in regulatory assessment. The inclusion of aged sorption is a higher tier in the groundwater leaching assessment. The Panel based its review on a test with three substances taken from a data set provided by the European Crop Protection Association. Particular points of attention were the quality of the data provided, the proposed fitting procedure of aged sorption experiments and the proposed method for combining results obtained from aged sorption studies and lower‐tier studies on degradation and adsorption. Aged sorption was a relevant process in all cases studied. The test revealed that the guidance could generally be well applied and resulted in robust and plausible results. The Panel considers the guidance suitable for use in the groundwater leaching assessment after the recommendations in this Scientific Opinion have been implemented, with the exception of the use of field data to derive aged sorption parameters. The Panel noted that the draft guidance could only be used by experienced users because there is no software tool that fully supports the work flow in the guidance document. It is therefore recommended that a user‐friendly software tool be developed. Aged sorption lowered the predicted concentration in groundwater. However, because aged sorption experiments may be conducted in different soils than lower‐tier degradation and adsorption experiments, it cannot be guaranteed that the higher tier predicts lower concentrations than the lower tier, while lower tiers should be more conservative than higher tiers. To mitigate this problem, the Panel recommends using all available higher‐ and lower‐tier data in the leaching assessment. The Panel further recommends that aged sorption parameters for metabolites be derived only from metabolite‐dosed studies. The formation fraction can be derived from parent‐dosed degradation studies, provided that the parent and metabolite are fitted with the best‐fit model, which is the double first‐order in parallel model in the case of aged sorption.


EFSA Journal | 2018

Scientific opinion on pesticides in foods for infants and young children

Colin Ockleford; Paulien Adriaanse; Susanne Hougaard Bennekou; Philippe Berny; Theodorus Brock; Sabine Duquesne; Sandro Grilli; Antonio F Hernandez‐Jerez; Michael Klein; Thomas Kuhl; Ryszard Laskowski; Kyriaki Machera; Olavi Pelkonen; Silvia Pieper; Robert Smith; Michael Stemmer; Ingvar Sundh; Ivana Teodorovic; A. Tiktak; Christopher J. Topping; Ursula Gundert-Remy; Mathilde Kersting; Ine Waalkens‐Berendsen; Arianna Chiusolo; Daniele Court Marques; Bruno Dujardin; G. E. N. Kass; Luc Mohimont; Alexandre Nougadere; Hermine Reich

Abstract Following a request from the European Commission, the EFSA Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues (PPR Panel) prepared a scientific opinion to provide a comprehensive evaluation of pesticide residues in foods for infants and young children. In its approach to develop this scientific opinion, the EFSA PPR Panel took into account, among the others, (i) the relevant opinions of the Scientific Committee for Food setting a default maximum residue level (MRL) of 0.01 mg/kg for pesticide residues in foods for infants and young children; (ii) the recommendations provided by EFSA Scientific Committee in a guidance on risk assessment of substances present in food intended for infants below 16 weeks of age; (iii) the knowledge on organ/system development in infants and young children. For infants below 16 weeks of age, the EFSA PPR Panel concluded that pesticide residues at the default MRL of 0.01 mg/kg for food for infants and young children are not likely to result in an unacceptable exposure for active substances for which a health‐based guidance value (HBGV) of 0.0026 mg/kg body weight (bw) per day or higher applies. Lower MRLs are recommended for active substances with HBGVs below this value. For infants above 16 weeks of age and young children, the established approach for setting HBGVs is considered appropriate. For infants below 16 weeks of age the approach may not be appropriate and the application of the EFSA guidance on risk assessment of substances present in food intended for infants below 16 weeks of age is recommended. The contribution of conventional food to the total exposure to pesticide residues is much higher than that from foods intended for infants and young children. Because of the increased intake of conventional food by young children, these have the highest exposure to pesticide residues, whereas infants 3–6 months of age generally have lower exposure. The impact of cumulative exposure to pesticide residues on infants and young children is not different from the general population and the EFSA cumulative risk assessment methodology is also applicable to these age groups. Residue definitions established under Regulation (EC) No 396/2005 are in general considered appropriate also for foods for infants and young children. However, based on a tier 1 analysis of the hydrolysis potential of pesticides simulating processing, the particular appropriateness of existing residue definitions for monitoring to cover processed food, both intended for infants and young children as well as conventional food, is questionable.


7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016

Beam Characterisation and Machine Developments at VELA

Deepa Angal-Kalinin; S.D. Barrett; Alexander Brynes; Christopher Edmonds; Frank Jackson; S. P. Jamison; James Jones; Julian McKenzie; Boris Militsyn; Bruno Muratori; Tim Noakes; Mark D. Roper; Yuri Saveliev; Duncan Scott; Robert Smith; Edward Snedden; Chris J. Topping; Peter Williams; A. Wolski

Copyright


Austral Ecology | 2007

Larval competition within seeds: From the behaviour process to the ecological outcome in the seed beetle Callosobruchus maculatus

Raul Narciso C. Guedes; Nelsa Maria Pinho Guedes; Robert Smith


EFSA Journal | 2017

Investigation into experimental toxicological properties of plant protection products having a potential link to Parkinson's disease and childhood leukaemia†

Colin Ockleford; Paulien Adriaanse; Philippe Berny; Theodorus Brock; Sabine Duquesne; Sandro Grilli; Antonio F Hernandez‐Jerez; Susanne Hougaard Bennekou; Michael Klein; Thomas Kuhl; Ryszard Laskowski; Kyriaki Machera; Olavi Pelkonen; Silvia Pieper; Robert Smith; Michael Stemmer; Ingvar Sundh; Ivana Teodorovic; A. Tiktak; Chris J. Topping; G. Wolterink; Karine Angeli; Ellen Fritsche; Marcel Leist; Alberto Mantovani; Pablo Menendez; Anna Price; Barbara Viviani; Arianna Chiusolo; Federica Ruffo


EFSA Journal | 2018

Scientific Opinion on the state of the science on pesticide risk assessment for amphibians and reptiles

Colin Ockleford; Paulien Adriaanse; Philippe Berny; Theodorus Brock; Sabine Duquesne; Sandro Grilli; Antonio F Hernandez‐Jerez; Susanne Hougaard Bennekou; Michael Klein; Thomas Kuhl; Ryszard Laskowski; Kyriaki Machera; Olavi Pelkonen; Silvia Pieper; Michael Stemmer; Ingvar Sundh; Ivana Teodorovic; A. Tiktak; Chris J. Topping; G. Wolterink; Annette Aldrich; Cecilia Berg; Manuel Ortiz‐Santaliestra; Scott Weir; Franz Streissl; Robert Smith


EFSA Journal | 2018

Scientific Opinion on the state of the art of Toxicokinetic/Toxicodynamic (TKTD) effect models for regulatory risk assessment of pesticides for aquatic organisms

Colin Ockleford; Paulien Adriaanse; Philippe Berny; Theodorus Brock; Sabine Duquesne; Sandro Grilli; Antonio F Hernandez‐Jerez; Susanne Hougaard Bennekou; Michael Klein; Thomas Kuhl; Ryszard Laskowski; Kyriaki Machera; Olavi Pelkonen; Silvia Pieper; Robert Smith; Michael Stemmer; Ingvar Sundh; A. Tiktak; Christopher J. Topping; G. Wolterink; Nina Cedergreen; Sandrine Charles; Andreas Focks; Melissa Reed; Maria Arena; Alessio Ippolito; Harry Byers; Ivana Teodorovic


EFSA Journal | 2017

Scientific Opinion of the PPR Panel on the follow‐up of the findings of the External Scientific Report ‘Literature review of epidemiological studies linking exposure to pesticides and health effects’

Colin Ockleford; Paulien Adriaanse; Philippe Berny; Theodorus Brock; Sabine Duquesne; Sandro Grilli; Susanne Hougaard; Michael Klein; Thomas Kuhl; Ryszard Laskowski; Kyriaki Machera; Olavi Pelkonen; Silvia Pieper; Robert Smith; Michael Stemmer; Ingvar Sundh; Ivana Teodorovic; A. Tiktak; Chris J. Topping; G. Wolterink; Matteo Bottai; Thorhallur Halldorsson; Paul Hamey; Marie‐Odile Rambourg; Ioanna Tzoulaki; Daniele Court Marques; Federica Crivellente; Hubert Deluyker; Antonio F Hernandez‐Jerez

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A. Tiktak

Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency

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Ingvar Sundh

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Susanne Hougaard Bennekou

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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