0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Practical considerations to optimize aquatic testing of particulate material, with focus on nanomaterials

Environmental Science Nano 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Stephan Wagner, Simon Luederwald, Stephan Wagner, Simon Luederwald, Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Jordan Davies, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Teresa F. Fernandes, Stephan Wagner, Teresa F. Fernandes, Stephan Wagner, Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Teresa F. Fernandes, Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Jacques‐Aurélien Sergent, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Stephan Wagner, Kristi Tatsi, Stephan Wagner, Antonia Praetorius Kristi Tatsi, Antonia Praetorius Joan G. Tell, Niels Timmer, Stephan Wagner, Teresa F. Fernandes, Antonia Praetorius Stephan Wagner, Jacques‐Aurélien Sergent, Stephan Wagner, Teresa F. Fernandes, Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius Antonia Praetorius

Summary

This paper discusses the practical challenges researchers face when applying existing OECD test guidelines to aquatic toxicity testing of particulate materials including nanomaterials and microplastics. Harmonizing test protocols is essential for generating results that can be meaningfully compared across studies and used to inform regulatory risk assessments for microplastic pollution.

Following available approaches included e.g. , in existing OECD Test Guidelines and Guidance Documents for the aquatic testing of particulate materials such as nanomaterials and microplastics leads to various challenges to be considered.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper