Early life stages of Northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis) are sensitive to fish feed containing the anti-parasitic drug diflubenzuron
Aquatic Toxicology ()
open accessAuthors
1 Akvaplan-niva (current employee)
- Renée Katrin Bechmann
- International Research Institute of Stavanger
- Emily Lyng
- International Research Institute of Stavanger
- Stig Westerlund
- International Research Institute of Stavanger
- Shaw Bamber
- International Research Institute of Stavanger
- Mark Berry
- International Research Institute of Stavanger
- Maj Arnberg
- International Research Institute of Stavanger
- Alfhild Kringstad
- Norwegian Institute for Water Research
- Piero Calosi
- Université du Québec à Rimouski
- Paul J. Seear
- University of Leicester
Metadata
- type
- research article
- license
- CC-BY-NC-ND
- language
- English
- pubs.fulltext
- https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Early_life_stages_of_Northern_shrimp_Pandalus_borealis_are_sensitive_to_fish_feed_containing_the_anti-parasitic_drug_diflubenzuron_/10230959/1/files/18459218.pdf
- cited (count)
- 15
- funding
- Norges Forskningsråd
- machine readable metadata
- Crossref
- OpenAlex
- updated
- 2024-09-10