As essential components of aquatic ecosystems, fish has been widely used in environmental monitoring, ecotoxicology studies, and risk assessments. Environmental stressors can either evoke adaptive responses in fish or threaten the fish's health and well-being. Early life stages of fish are more susceptible to environmental stress, and impaired development at their early life stages may have significant impact on their population fitness with significant ecological consequences. Fish behavioral changes can serve as sensitive and important endpoints for toxicological study and risk assessment. In this talk, I will introduce the role of fish in the ecosystem, the early development of fish, case studies on fish ecotoxicology, their potential ecological implications, as well as some of their current biomonitoring and risk assessment applications.

27 May 2022
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Where
TBC
Speakers/Performers
Jinping CHENG
HKUST
Organizer(S)
Department of Ocean Science
Contact/Enquiries
Payment Details
Audience
Language(s)
English
Other Events
21 Jun 2024
Seminar, Lecture, Talk
IAS / School of Science Joint Lecture - Alzheimer’s Disease is Likely a Lipid-disorder Complication: an Example of Functional Lipidomics for Biomedical and Biological Research
Abstract Functional lipidomics is a frontier in lipidomics research, which identifies changes of cellular lipidomes in disease by lipidomics, uncovers the molecular mechanism(s) leading to the chan...
24 May 2024
Seminar, Lecture, Talk
IAS / School of Science Joint Lecture - Confinement Controlled Electrochemistry: Nanopore beyond Sequencing
Abstract Nanopore electrochemistry refers to the promising measurement science based on elaborate pore structures, which offers a well-defined geometric confined space to adopt and characterize sin...