Retinoids and oestrogenic endocrine disrupting chemicals in saline sewage treatment plants: Removal efficiencies and ecological risks to marine organisms
Discharge of partially treated effluent from sewage treatment plants (STPs) is a significant source of chemical contaminants, such as retinoids and oestrogenic endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), which are continuously input into the marine environments of densely populated and urbanized coastal...
Main Authors: | Guang-Jie Zhou, Xiao-Yan Li, Kenneth Mei Yee Leung |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Elsevier
2019-06-01
|
Series: | Environment International |
Online Access: | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412018327570 |
Similar Items
-
Endocrine disrupters. The case of oestrogenic xenobiotics II: synthetic oestrogens
by: N. Olea Serrano, et al.
Published: (2001-11-01) -
Potamonautes spp. As a bioindicator for oestrogenic endocrine disrupting chemicals
by: Schoeman, Dewald
Published: (2018) -
Sewage sludge as source of activated carbon for the removal of endocrine disrupting chemical in wastewater
by: Pullket, Suangusa
Published: (2015) -
Endocrine-Disrupting Compounds: Measurement in Tampa Bay, Removal from Sewage and Development of an Estrogen Receptor Model
by: Cook, Monica Mion
Published: (2015) -
Oestrogenic Endocrine Disruptors in the Placenta and the Fetus
by: Zi-Run Tang, et al.
Published: (2020-02-01)