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- Toxins produced in cyanobacterial water blooms – toxicity and . . .
Degradation of aquatic ecosystems by nutrient pollution resulting in massive cyanobacterial water blooms is a global problem representing serious health and ecosystem risks Although significant research attention has been paid to selected cyanotoxins (mostly microcystins), it is nowadays recognized that cyanobacteria may produce wide range of
- Toxic cyanobacteria in water - Second edition
It provides technical background information to support hazard identification and the assessment, prioritisation and management of the risks posed by cyanobacteria and their toxins at each step of the water-use system
- Potential health risk assessment of cyanobacteria across . . .
Cyanobacterial blooms can degrade water quality in freshwater ecosystems by producing various toxic secondary metabolites or cyanotoxins (12), including neurotoxins, hepatotoxins, cytotoxins, and dermatotoxins (13)
- Toxic Cyanobacteria: A Growing Threat to Water and Air Quality
A critical review of current research on Cyanobacterial cells and associated toxins in aquatic environments: occurrence, impact, and treatment methods Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 2024 , vol 14 , 113931
- Toxic Cyanobacteria: A Growing Threat to Water and Air Quality
Several cyanobacterial genera produce a suite of toxins across variable environments, including anatoxin (ATX), cylindrospermopsin (CYN), microcystin (MC), nodularin (NOD), and saxitoxin (STX)
- Cyanobacterial Blooms in Environmental Water: Causes and . . .
The increasing frequency, magnitude, and duration of cyanobacterial blooms (CyBs) in coastal and inland waters globally are causing serious concern because of the infiltration of cyanotoxins into water reservoirs and their negative effects on aquatic ecosystems and human health
- Toxicology and risk assessment of freshwater cyanobacterial . . .
Calculated guideline values in Section X show that a relatively high risk posed by the toxins to these animals is likely to occur, even at low cell densities The occurrence of cyanobacterial toxins affects aquatic organisms, terrestrial animals (both wild and domestic), and humans
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