M
Michael Gundlach
Researcher at RWTH Aachen University
Publications - 3
Citations - 493
Michael Gundlach is an academic researcher from RWTH Aachen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Zebrafish & Hypoactivity. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications receiving 281 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Quantitative investigation of the mechanisms of microplastics and nanoplastics toward zebrafish larvae locomotor activity.
TL;DR: New insights are provided into plastic particles' effects on zebrafish larvae, improving the understanding of their environmental risks to the aquatic environment and changing the larvae swimming behavior when co-exposed with EE2.
Journal ArticleDOI
Screening and risk management solutions for steroidal estrogens in surface and wastewater
Robert Kase,Barbora Javurkova,Eszter Simon,Kees Swart,Sebastian Buchinger,Sarah Könemann,Sarah Könemann,Beate I. Escher,Mario Carere,Valeria Dulio,Selim Ait-Aissa,Henner Hollert,Sara Valsecchi,Stefano Polesello,Peter A. Behnisch,Carolina Di Paolo,Daniel Olbrich,Eliška Sychrová,Michael Gundlach,Rita Schlichting,Lomig Leborgne,Manfred Clara,Christoph Scheffknecht,Yves Marneffe,Carole Chalon,Petr Tusil,Premysl Soldan,Brigitte von Danwitz,Julia Schwaiger,Antonio Moran Palao,Francesca Bersani,Olivier Perceval,Cornelia Kienle,Etiënne L.M. Vermeirssen,Klára Hilscherová,Georg Reifferscheid,Inge Werner +36 more
TL;DR: Konemann et al. as discussed by the authors compared bioanalytical and chemical analytical results with regard to their application for aquatic status assessment, and concluded that water quality assessment can progress from a purely analytical approach to effect-based monitoring, from single substance to known and unknown mixture assessment and from in-vitro screening to population-relevant risk assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of the antidepressant mirtazapine on the swimming behaviour and gene expression rate of Danio rerio embryos - Is the sedating effect seen in humans also evident for fish?
Michael Gundlach,Marc Augustin,Kilian E. C. Smith,David Kämpfer,Michael Paulzen,Henner Hollert,Henner Hollert +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the sedative effect of mirtazapine in humans was also found for a specific concentration range in zebrafish embryos (1333.4 μg/L - 2666.9 μg /L).