Title of article :
Compartmentalization in environmental science and
the perversion of multiple thresholds
Author/Authors :
Werner BurkartU، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Nature and living organisms are separated into compartments. The self-assembly of phospholipid micelles was as
fundamental to the emergence of life and evolution as the formation of DNA precursors and their self-replication.
Also, modern science owes much of its success to the study of single compartments, the dissection of complex
structures and event chains into smaller study objects which can be manipulated with a set of more and more
sophisticated equipment. However, in environmental science, these insights are obtained at a price: firstly, it is
difficult to recognize, let alone to take into account what is lost during fragmentation and dissection; and secondly,
artificial compartments such as scientific disciplines become self-sustaining, leading to new and unnecessary
boundaries, subtly framing scientific culture and impeding progress in holistic understanding. The long-standing but
fruitless quest to define dose]effect relationships and thresholds for single toxic agents in our environment is a
central part of the problem. Debating single-agent toxicity in splendid isolation is deeply flawed in view of a modern
world where people are exposed to low levels of a multitude of genotoxic and non-genotoxic agents. Its potential
danger lies in the unwarranted postulation of separate thresholds for agents with similar action. A unifying concept
involving toxicology and radiation biology is needed for a full mechanistic assessment of environmental health risks.
The threat of synergism may be less than expected, but this may also hold for the safety margin commonly thought to
be a consequence of linear no-threshold dose]effect relationship assumptions.
Keywords :
Combined effects , environmental health , Low-level risks , protection philosophy , Dose effectrelationships , Holistic risk assessment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment