2019
DOI: 10.3390/md17110623
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Sediment as a Potential Pool for Lipophilic Marine Phycotoxins with the Case Study of Daya Bay of China

Abstract: Marine sediments can reserve many environmental pollutants. Lipophilic marine phycotoxins (LMPs) are natural toxic substances widespread in the marine environment; however, evidence of their existence in sediment is scarce. In the present study, in order to explore the occurrence and distribution characteristics of LMPs in sediment, surface sediment samples collected from a tropical area of Daya Bay (DYB) at different seasons, were analyzed using liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Emerging studies are also investigating the analysis of concentrations of marine biotoxins in seawater (Bosch-Orea et al, 2021), in aerosols (Ciminiello et al, 2014) and in sediments (Liu et al, 2019) as a toxin reservoir and potential accumulation paths for benthic organisms. Recent advances have been made for portable toxin sensing and biosensing assays for on-site rapid .…”
Section: Analysis Methods For Hab Toxin Detection and Quantificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Emerging studies are also investigating the analysis of concentrations of marine biotoxins in seawater (Bosch-Orea et al, 2021), in aerosols (Ciminiello et al, 2014) and in sediments (Liu et al, 2019) as a toxin reservoir and potential accumulation paths for benthic organisms. Recent advances have been made for portable toxin sensing and biosensing assays for on-site rapid .…”
Section: Analysis Methods For Hab Toxin Detection and Quantificationmentioning
confidence: 99%