Litcius/Paper detail

Elevated methylmercury concentration and trophic position of the non-native bloody red shrimp (Hemimysis anomala) increase biomagnification risk in nearshore food webs

Meghan E. Brown, Kayleigh L. Buffington, Lisa B. Cleckner, N. Roxanna Razavi

2021Journal of Great Lakes Research13 citationsDOI

Topics & Concepts

BiomagnificationShrimpTrophic levelMethylmercuryFisheryEnvironmental scienceOceanographyBiologyEcologyGeologyBioaccumulationMercury impact and mitigation studiesIsotope Analysis in EcologyFish Ecology and Management Studies
Elevated methylmercury concentration and trophic position of the non-native bloody red shrimp (Hemimysis anomala) increase biomagnification risk in nearshore food webs | Litcius