Environmental stress in the form of chemical pollution is now being recognised as an environmental emergency due to the potential impacts on public and animal health. This emergency has been recognised by the United Nations Environment Programme and is part of a triple threat, alongside climate change and biodiversity loss.
The main challenge here is that many knowledge gaps concerning chemicals in the environment remain despite decades of research.
One of these gaps is related to the potential accumulation of chemicals in exposed organisms (i.e. bioaccumulation). We know that chemicals are taken up by wildlife in the environment and evidence has demonstrated that bioaccumulation can vary depending on several factors including the type of chemical and species. Moreover, experimentally determining bioaccumulation has significant costs and requires high animal usage that opposes current policy aimed at reducing animal testing.
To overcome the issues mentioned above, this project will develop novel machine learning approaches that will enable us to better understand how chemicals bioaccumulate and then predict the bioaccumulation potential for; (a) chemicals across different species and (b) chemicals that have not been previously studied.
This predictive approach represents one of the only feasible ways to assess chemical risk in the environment due to the number of chemicals available in the global market and could significantly reduce the need for animal testing during environmental risk assessments as required by national and international policy.
By developing and validating these machine learning tools to reliably predict bioaccumulation we will enable better protection of the environment from the impact of chemical pollution.
Publications
Thomas H. Miller, Matteo D. Gallidabino, James I. MacRae, Christer Hogstrand, Nicolas R. Bury, Leon P. Barron, Jason R. Snape, and Stewart F. Owen. (2018). . Environ. Sci. Technol. 52(22), 12953–12955.
Thomas H. Miller, Matteo D. Gallidabino, James I. MacRae, Stewart F. Owen, Nicolas R. Bury and Leon P. Barron. (2019). . Science of The Total Environment. 648, 80-89.