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Population-level impacts of pesticide-induced chronic effects on individuals depend more on ecology than toxicology
T. Dalkvist
, C. J. Topping
, V. E. Forbes
Administration (CBS)
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
65
Scopus citations
Overview
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Dive into the research topics of 'Population-level impacts of pesticide-induced chronic effects on individuals depend more on ecology than toxicology'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Pesticides
100%
Chronic Effects
100%
Population Level
100%
Toxicology
100%
Population Impact
100%
Ecological Realism
66%
Risk Assessment
33%
Recovery Rate
33%
Risk Perception
33%
Ecological Understanding
33%
Regulatory Agencies
33%
Long-run Risk
33%
Exposure Factors
33%
Nonlinear Model
33%
Depression Rate
33%
Simulation Outputs
33%
Voles
33%
Toxic Factors
33%
Modeling Assessment
33%
Animal Ecology
33%
Epigenetic Transmission
33%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Nonlinear Model
100%
Animal Ecology
100%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Epigenetics
100%
Microtus
100%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Toxicology
100%
Microtus
50%