Impacts of Aquatic Toxicology on Environment

Impacts of Aquatic Toxicology on Environment

by Corey Johnson

ISBN9781806241996
PublisherDigital Drive Learning
Copyright Year2026
Price$272.00
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Description

Aquatic pollution is the phrase used to describe the contamination of aquatic systems (such as lakes, rivers, oceans, aquifers, and groundwater) by significant volumes of garbage that negatively alter the water. When dangerous contaminants are directly or indirectly released into aquatic systems without removing harmful chemicals, this sort of ecological deprivation occurs. Amphibians, as well as other aquatic species and vegetation, suffer directly from aquatic pollution. By incorporating knowledge and methods from the majority of branches of biochemistry, biology, chemistry, genetics, mathematics, medicine, pharmacology, physiology, and physics, as well as applying safety evaluation and risk assessment to the discipline, modern toxicology goes beyond the study of the harmful effects of exogenous agents. Instead, scientists investigate how chemicals cause harmful effects in biological systems in all areas of toxicology. Applications of this information to the science and art of toxicology are made possible by activities in five major areas that support toxicological study. The current book updates the subject matter, images, and puzzles to include new ideas and challenges relating to aquatic ecosystems and environmental toxicology. It deals primarily with aquatic environmental issues, pollution, and environmental toxicology. This book has a classical presentation style, including environmental toxicity, aquatic ecosystems, and environmental pollution.

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