Publications by authors named "Guuske Tiktak"

Threatened shark species are caught in large numbers by artisanal and commercial fisheries and traded globally. Monitoring both which shark species are caught and sold in fisheries, and the export of CITES-restricted products, are essential in reducing illegal fishing. Current methods for species identification rely on visual examination by experts or DNA barcoding techniques requiring specialist laboratory facilities and trained personnel.

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This manuscript presents a systematic review of PCB half-lives reported in the scientific literature. The review was completed in accordance with PRISMA guidelines and included a review of almost 1000 peer-reviewed publications. In total, 26 articles were found to report half-lives in humans, with the majority of data coming from studies performed in North America on individuals suspected to have been exposed to PCBs.

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Multivariate modelling techniques are used by a wide variety of investigations in environmental chemistry. It is surprisingly rare for studies to show a detailed understanding of uncertainties created by modelling or how uncertainties in chemical analysis impact model outputs. It is common to use untrained multivariate models for receptor modelling.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were analyzed in muscle tissue samples from 11 marine mammal species stranded along the UK coast, revealing significant contamination levels, particularly in a killer whale and a Risso's dolphin, with most samples exceeding toxic thresholds.
  • - Many PCB profiles found in the marine mammals did not match typical 'Aroclor' patterns, indicating the presence of congeners resistant to metabolism, while a unique PCB signature was discovered in a sei whale, suggesting atmospheric deposition as a primary source of exposure.
  • - Chiral analysis indicated selective metabolism of certain PCB enantiomers, emphasizing the ongoing health risks posed by PCBs to marine mammals, despite a growing focus on newer pollutants in
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This review represents a comprehensive analysis on pollutants in elasmobranchs including meta-analysis on the most studied pollutants: mercury, cadmium, PCBs and DDTs, in muscle and liver tissue. Elasmobranchs are particularly vulnerable to pollutant exposure which may pose a risk to the organism as well as humans that consume elasmobranch products. The highest concentrations of pollutants were found in sharks occupying top trophic levels (Carcharhiniformes and Lamniformes).

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Dormouse numbers are declining in the UK due to habitat loss and fragmentation. We know that dormice are nocturnal, arboreal, and avoid crossing open spaces between habitats, yet how they navigate around their canopy is unknown. As other rodents use whisker touch sensing to navigate and explore their environment, this study investigates whether Hazel dormice (Muscardinus avellanarius) employ their whiskers to cross between habitats.

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