Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 15
pro vyhledávání: '"Thomas Tixier"'
Publikováno v:
Annales des Mines - Réalités industrielles. :86-93
Autor:
Rolf-Alexander Düring, Jörg Römbke, Adam Scheffczyk, Kevin D. Floate, Wolf U. Blanckenhorn, Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Manuel Wohde, Joost Lahr, Thomas Tixier
Publikováno v:
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 35:1924-1933
Cattle treated with the veterinary parasiticide ivermectin fecally excrete residues. The authors report the exposition and dissipation characteristics of these residues in dung of ivermectin-treated cattle and in soil beneath this dung on pastures in
Autor:
Jörg Alfred Salamon, Wolf U. Blanckenhorn, Adam Scheffczyk, Manuel Wohde, Andrea Klockner, Kevin D. Floate, Joost Lahr, Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Rolf-Alexander Düring, Jörg Römbke, Thomas Tixier
Publikováno v:
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 35:1959-1969
The authorization of veterinary medicinal products requires that they be assessed for nontarget effects in the environment. Numerous field studies have assessed these effects on dung organisms. However, few studies have examined effects on soil-dwell
Autor:
Thomas Tixier, Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Kevin D. Floate, Rolf-Alexander Düring, Manuel Wohde, Adam Scheffczyk, Joost Lahr, Wolf U. Blanckenhorn, Jörg Römbke
Publikováno v:
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 35:1953-1958
By degrading the dung of livestock that graze on pastures, coprophilous arthropods accelerate the cycling of nutrients to maintain pasture quality. Many veterinary medicinal products, such as ivermectin, are excreted unchanged in the dung of treated
Autor:
Joost Lahr, Priska Jud, Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Kevin D. Floate, Manuel Wohde, Lucille Sautot, Wolf U. Blanckenhorn, Jörg Römbke, Thomas Tixier, Jamal Hanafi, Rolf-Alexander Düring, Adam Scheffczyk
Publikováno v:
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 35:1934-1946
Registration of veterinary medical products includes the provision that field tests may be required to assess potential nontarget effects associated with the excretion of product residues in dung of treated livestock (phase II, tier B testing). Howev
Publikováno v:
European Journal of Soil Biology. 69:88-93
Across the globe and in a multitude of environments, the preservation of the quality of pastures is partly due to the coprophilous communities that degrade dung. They contribute to ecological functions such as nutrient recycling and soil aeration, an
Publikováno v:
Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 87:197-202
We have previously shown that ecological habit (e.g., arboreal, terrestrial, amphibious) correlates with thermoregulatory behaviors and water balance physiology among species of hylid frogs in northern Australia. We hypothesized that these frogs woul
Autor:
Thomas Tixier, Keith A. Christian, Christopher R. Tracy, Alyssa M. Cornall, Camille Le Noëne, Beau J. Austin, Sebastian Iglesias, Nicole Burnip, Stephen J. Reynolds
Publikováno v:
Austral Ecology. 38:476-483
Amphibians are typically intolerant of high temperatures and dehydrating conditions, and small species are particularly susceptible to desiccation. The rockhole frog, Litoria meiriana (Hylidae), is diurnal and is often observed on rocks in the sun ne
Autor:
Manuel, Wohde, Wolf U, Blanckenhorn, Kevin D, Floate, Joost, Lahr, Jean-Pierre, Lumaret, Jörg, Römbke, Adam, Scheffczyk, Thomas, Tixier, Rolf-Alexander, Düring
Publikováno v:
Environmental toxicology and chemistry. 35(8)
Cattle treated with the veterinary parasiticide ivermectin fecally excrete residues. The authors report the exposition and dissipation characteristics of these residues in dung of ivermectin-treated cattle and in soil beneath this dung on pastures in
Autor:
Thomas, Tixier, Wolf U, Blanckenhorn, Joost, Lahr, Kevin, Floate, Adam, Scheffczyk, Rolf-Alexander, Düring, Manuel, Wohde, Jörg, Römbke, Jean-Pierre, Lumaret
Publikováno v:
Environmental toxicology and chemistry. 35(8)
By degrading the dung of livestock that graze on pastures, coprophilous arthropods accelerate the cycling of nutrients to maintain pasture quality. Many veterinary medicinal products, such as ivermectin, are excreted unchanged in the dung of treated