Effects of Soil Properties on the Toxicity and Bioaccumulation of Lead in Soil Invertebrates
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] E. Smolders,et al. Toxicity in lead salt spiked soils to plants, invertebrates and microbial processes: Unraveling effects of acidification, salt stress and ageing reactions. , 2015, The Science of the total environment.
[2] E. Smolders,et al. Lead phytotoxicity in soils and nutrient solutions is related to lead induced phosphorus deficiency. , 2012, Environmental pollution.
[3] J. Buekers,et al. Effect of long-term equilibration on the toxicity of molybdenum to soil organisms. , 2012, Environmental pollution.
[4] J. Römbke,et al. Improving ecological risk assessment in the Mediterranean area: Selection of reference soils and evaluating the influence of soil properties on avoidance and reproduction of two oligochaete species , 2011, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.
[5] Colin R. Janssen,et al. Toxicity of Trace Metals in Soil as Affected by Soil Type and Aging After Contamination: Using Calibrated Bioavailability Models to Set Ecological Soil Standards , 2009, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[6] W. de Vries,et al. Impact of soil properties on critical concentrations of cadmium, lead, copper, zinc, and mercury in soil and soil solution in view of ecotoxicological effects. , 2007, Reviews of environmental contamination and toxicology.
[7] E. Smolders,et al. Labile lead in polluted soils measured by stable isotope dilution , 2007 .
[8] J. Römbke,et al. Adaptation of the enchytraeid toxicity test for use with natural soil types , 2006 .
[9] Colin R. Janssen,et al. Terrestrial biotic ligand model. 2. Application to Ni and Cu toxicities to plants, invertebrates, and microbes in soil. , 2006, Environmental science & technology.
[10] Colin R. Janssen,et al. Effect of leaching and aging on the bioavailability of lead to the springtail Folsomia candida , 2006, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[11] Karen D Bradham,et al. Evaluating the contribution of soil properties to modifying lead phytoavailability and phytotoxicity , 2006, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[12] C. P. Rooney,et al. Comparison of soil solution speciation and diffusive gradients in thin‐films measurement as an indicator of copper bioavailability to plants , 2006, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[13] E. Smolders,et al. Discrepancy of the microbial response to elevated copper between freshly spiked and long‐term contaminated soils , 2006, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[14] Karen D Bradham,et al. Effect of soil properties on lead bioavailability and toxicity to earthworms , 2006, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[15] R. Blust,et al. Metal blood levels and hematological characteristics in wood mice (Apodemus sylvaticus L.) along a metal pollution gradient , 2006, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[16] L. Haanstra,et al. Short-term and long-term effects of cadmium, chromium, copper, nickel, lead and zinc on soil microbial respiration in relation to abiotic soil factors , 1984, Plant and Soil.
[17] M. Vijver,et al. Internal metal sequestration and its ecotoxicological relevance: a review. , 2004, Environmental science & technology.
[18] L. Haanstra,et al. Short- and long-term effects of heavy metals on phosphatase activity in soils: An ecological dose-response model approach , 1989, Biology and Fertility of Soils.
[19] N. Basta,et al. The bioavailability of chemicals in soil for earthworms. , 2004, Ecotoxicology and environmental safety.
[20] D. Stevens,et al. Determining toxicity of lead and zinc runoff in soils: Salinity effects on metal partitioning and on phytotoxicity , 2003, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.
[21] I Thornton,et al. The solid-solution partitioning of heavy metals (Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb) in upland soils of England and Wales. , 2003, Environmental pollution.
[22] Stephen Lofts,et al. Complexation with dissolved organic matter and solubility control of heavy metals in a sandy soil. , 2002, Environmental science & technology.
[23] H. Kettles,et al. Is soil acidification the cause of biochemical responses when soils are amended with heavy metal salts , 1999 .
[24] E. Tipping. Humic Ion-Binding Model VI: An Improved Description of the Interactions of Protons and Metal Ions with Humic Substances , 1998 .
[25] B. Jagetiya,et al. Relative toxicity of cadmium, lead, and zinc on barley , 1997 .
[26] D. Spurgeon,et al. Extrapolation of the laboratory-based OECD earthworm toxicity test to metal-contaminated field sites , 1995, Ecotoxicology.
[27] G. Vimpani,et al. Environmental exposure to lead and children's intelligence at the age of seven years. The Port Pirie Cohort Study. , 1992, The New England journal of medicine.
[28] E. Pulliainen,et al. Influence of pH on the accumulation of cadmium and lead in earthworms (Aporrectodea calignosa) under controlled conditions , 1992 .
[29] D. H. Khan,et al. Cellulolytic activity and root biomass production in some metal-contaminated soils , 1984 .
[30] W. Ma,et al. Uptake of cadmium, zinc, lead, and copper by earthworms near a zinc-smelting complex: Influence of soil pH and organic matter , 1983, Bulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology.
[31] F. Broadbent,et al. Influence of Trace Metals on Some Soil Nitrogen Transformations , 1982 .
[32] J. Havlin,et al. A nitric acid plant tissue digest method for use with inductively coupled plasma spectrometry , 1980 .
[33] M. P. Ireland. Metal accumulation by the earthworms Lumbricus rubellus, Dendrobaena veneta and Eiseniella tetraedra living in heavy metal polluted sites , 1979 .
[34] J. E. Gillott. Book reviewProceedings of the International Clay Conference, 1975 (Mexico City, Mexico, July 16–23): S.W. Bailey (Editor-in-Chief). Applied Publishing Ltd., Wilmette, Ill., 1976, 691 pp , 1976 .