About the National Exposure Research Laboratory (NERL)
NERL Organization
Who Are We?
The National Exposure Research Laboratory (NERL) is one of three national laboratories that conduct research for EPA's Office of Research and Development. NERL headquarters and two of its research Divisions are located in Research Triangle Park, NC. Other research Divisions are located in Athens, GA, Cincinnati, OH, and Las Vegas, NV. (Division links are found at the bottom of each page and the Exposure Research homepage.) NERL conducts research and development that leads to improved methods, measurements and models to assess and predict exposures of humans and ecosystems to harmful pollutants and other conditions in air, water, soil, and food.
What is Environmental Exposure?
Exposure is the contact of people (or other organisms) with an environmental stressor for a specific duration of time. Stressors can include chemical pollutants, microbes or pathogens, or physical agents, like radiation or even processes such as alteration of wildlife habitat.
Assessing environmental exposure involves a number of elements:
- Characterizing sources of pollution, including mobile sources such as automobiles; point sources such as industrial plants; and non-point sources such as agricultural run-off and land-management practices.
- Understanding and modeling the processes that control the distribution, transport, transformation, and fate of these pollutants - stressors, as they move through the environment, from sources to "receptors" (the humans, plants, animals or ecosystems that may be exposed).
- Characterizing actual exposure - measuring and modeling how humans and ecosystems come into contact with pollutants - stressors. Since exposure involves both the pollutant - stressor and the "receptor" (e.g., the human or ecosystem) which is exposed, together with duration of exposure, exposure assessment requires a variety of efforts, including:
- measuring and modeling pollutants - stressors in various media - for example, measuring pollutant levels in the food people eat, in the water they drink, in the air they breathe, and on the things they touch; and
- describing the behavior patterns of people or animals that affect their exposure - like the daily activities of people (the what, when, where and how long) that bring them into contact with pollutants or the distribution of sensitive ecosystems within a polluted watershed.
- Assessing the effectiveness of an exposure, including making measurements on receptors that provide evidence that they have been exposed. NERL's research may include: determination and modeling of uptake or transfer efficiencies or describing the dose to target organs; characterizing indicators of exposure, like measuring biological markers of exposure in people or animals; identifying antibodies in humans resulting from exposure to pathogens; characterizing changes in wetlands or forest cover; or measuring changes induced in the community composition in ecosystems.
Why is Environmental Exposure Important?
In carrying out its mission to protect the environment and safeguard human health, EPA must understand the risks posed by pollutants and other stressors. Exposure assessment is one critical input used by EPA and others to assess those risks. Chemicals that are quite toxic may pose little actual risk if exposures are low; conversely, relatively nontoxic stressors may pose substantial risks if people or wildlife are highly exposed. As a result, understanding exposure is essential in assessing the risks that may arise from current or new technologies, policies and regulations, and even increased growth in populations, changes in energy use, and fluctuations in the economy. NERL research improves risk assessment through characterizing pollution sources; developing environmental fate and transport computer models that can be used to quantify how risk management options are likely to affect exposures; developing and enhancing measurement methods for pollutants and exposure indicators; and developing exposure models that reflect individual behaviors and microenvironments. Exposure measurements, methods, and models also are important (1) in determining whether or not a pollutant or stressor represents an unacceptable risk; (2) in selecting the most appropriate approaches to reduce that risk; and (3) in tracking compliance with environmental regulations and achieving environmental goals.
How Does NERL Conduct Research?
The Laboratory has an in-house workforce of more than four hundred scientists, engineers, and other permanent federal employees. In addition, a staff of research meteorologists from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration work to support NERL's mission under an inter-agency agreement.
NERL also provides temporary training opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students and post-doctoral trainees, and sponsors senior citizens through the Senior Environmental Employment Program.
A significant portion of the NERL's research is conducted in collaboration with the other Laboratories and Centers of ORD whose missions are health and ecological effects research, risk assessment, and risk management. This linkage allows ORD to achieve its overall mission of understanding environmental problems and developing tools and technologies to prevent or reduce them. Other NERL projects rely on extensive external collaboration with entities such as other federal agencies, states, industry, utilities, universities, and other non-profit organizations.
Research and Technical Support for Regulatory Programs
NERL scientists provide a wide range of research and regulatory technical support to EPA program and regional offices, and to the States, and foreign governments. In particular, NERL provides substantial support in regulatory monitoring methods, waste site characterization, computer modeling of pollutant transport and fate, remote sensing, monitoring network design, environmental indicators, and design of exposure assessment studies. NERL uses a variety of mechanisms to communicate it's research products to program offices, to the public, and to the international community.
NERL Branch Descriptions - This page contains a listing of the divsions and their branches and a description of their major research areas.
National Exposure Research Laboratory
Director, Dr. Lawrence W. ReiterDeputy Director, Jewel F. Morris
Acting Associate Director for Health, Linda Sheldon
Associate Director for Ecology, Dr. Rochelle Araujo
109 TW Alexander
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709