Process / pipelineEnvironmental toxicology and hazard assessment

Ecotoxicological Testing

Ecotoxicological testing is a suite of standardized laboratory and field methods to assess the toxicity of chemical substances to aquatic and terrestrial organisms (fish, invertebrates, algae, plants, soil fauna). Developed by regulatory agencies (OECD, EPA, EMEA) since the 1970s, these tests measure lethal concentration (LC50, EC50) and sublethal endpoints (growth, reproduction, behavior) under controlled conditions. Ecotoxicological data support chemical hazard classification, environmental risk assessment, and regulatory approval of new substances.

Open in MethodMindSoonVideoSoon

Read the full method

Members only

Sign in with a free account to read this section.

Sign in

Sources

  1. OECD. (2011). Test Guidelines for Chemicals. OECD Publishing. link
  2. US Environmental Protection Agency. (2002). Aquatic Toxicity Test Methods. EPA 600/4-90/027. link
  3. Newman, M. C. (1998). Fundamentals of Ecotoxicology. CRC Press. ISBN: 978-1566701167

Related methods

Referenced by

ScholarGateEcotoxicological Testing (Assessment of Toxicity to Aquatic and Terrestrial Organisms). Retrieved 2026-06-04 from https://scholargate.app/en/environmental-engineering/ecotoxicological-testing