Bioavailability is, to an increasing extent, recognised as the key issue linking the increased levels of toxicants to actually occurring adverse effects in ecosystems, whilst taking the modifying effects of the abiotic components of the environment into account. Various factors may affect bioavailability in the field, and these factors are often time and space dependent. This is one of the main reasons why legislators have been reluctant to implement bioavailability in risk assessment procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioavailability is increasingly recognised as the key issue linking increased levels of toxicants with actually occurring adverse effects in ecosystems, whilst taking the modifying effects of the abiotic components of the environment into account. Various factors may affect bioavailability in the field, and often these factors are time- and space-dependent. This is one of the main reasons why legislators have been reluctant in implementing bioavailability in risk assessment procedures.
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