Publications by authors named "A M Wagenvoort"

Heavy metals are naturally omnipresent in aquatic systems. Excess amounts of heavy metals can accumulate in organisms of pollution impacted systems and transfer across a food web. Analysing the food web structure and metal contents of the organisms can help unravel the pathways of biomagnification or biodilution and gain insight in trophic linkages.

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Article Synopsis
  • Invertebrates like Asellus aquaticus and various copepods were found to be common in Dutch drinking water distribution systems, highlighting their ecological presence in this environment.
  • The research over eight years revealed that surface water treatment plants had higher invertebrate biomass compared to those using groundwater, attributed to the nutrient levels in the source water.
  • Most invertebrates present were small, adaptable species that primarily reproduce asexually and are able to thrive in the oligotrophic conditions of drinking water distribution systems.
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Diagnostic imaging in pregnant patients often causes worries about radiation effects and IV contrast. We use a step-by-step plan to choose the right method and illustrate this with a case. First, we choose the method of imaging, non-ionizing imaging being preferred over ionizing.

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The higher proportion of males of the invasive round goby Neogobius melanostomus in samples from two activity selective passive fishing gears compared with one activity non-selective fishing gear in three Dutch lakes is related to higher male locomotory activity and is a sex-dependent trait. This difference in activity reflects the different ecology of male and female N. melanostomus.

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Surface water used for drinking water production is frequently monitored in The Netherlands using whole organism biomonitors, with for example or mussels, which respond to changes in the water quality. However, not all human-relevant toxic compounds can be detected by these biomonitors. Therefore, a new on-line biosensor has been developed, containing immobilized genetically modified bacteria, which respond to genotoxicity in the water by emitting luminescence.

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