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Minnows
Known as:
minnow
National Institutes of Health
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Related topics
Related topics
1 relation
Broader (1)
Cyprinidae
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
Highly Cited
2010
Highly Cited
2010
Anthropogenic tracers, endocrine disrupting chemicals, and endocrine disruption in Minnesota lakes.
J. H. Writer
,
L. Barber
,
+6 authors
H. Schoenfuss
Science of the Total Environment
2010
Corpus ID: 34772956
Highly Cited
2009
Highly Cited
2009
Antidepressants at environmentally relevant concentrations affect predator avoidance behavior of larval fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)
Meghan M. Painter
,
Megan A. Buerkley
,
+6 authors
H. Schoenfuss
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
2009
Corpus ID: 25189716
The effects of embryonic and larval exposure to environmentally relevant (ng/L) concentrations of common antidepressants…
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Highly Cited
2007
Highly Cited
2007
Environmental estrogens suppress hormones, behavior, and reproductive fitness in male fathead minnows
D. Martinovic
,
William T. Hogarth
,
Rachel E. Jones
,
P. Sorensen
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
2007
Corpus ID: 11636359
—This study explored the possibility that environmental estrogens in sewage effluent may reduce the reproductive fitness of adult…
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Highly Cited
2005
Highly Cited
2005
Life‐cycle exposure of fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) to an ethinylestradiol concentration below 1 ng/L reduces egg fertilization success and demasculinizes males
J. Parrott
,
B. R. Blunt
Environmental Toxicology
2005
Corpus ID: 43657285
Forty‐eight hours after fertilization, fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) eggs were exposed to the synthetic estrogen 17…
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Highly Cited
2004
Highly Cited
2004
Toxicity of oil sands to early life stages of fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)
M. Colavecchia
,
S. Backus
,
P. Hodson
,
J. Parrott
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
2004
Corpus ID: 23311457
The present study examines the effects of exposure to oil sands on the early life stages (ELS) off fathead minnows (Pimephales…
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Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
Effects of the androgenic growth promoter 17‐β‐trenbolone on fecundity and reproductive endocrinology of the fathead minnow
G. Ankley
,
K. Jensen
,
+10 authors
L. Gray
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
2003
Corpus ID: 2665558
Trenbolone acetate is a synthetic steroid that is extensively used in the United States as a growth promoter in beef cattle. The…
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Review
2003
Review
2003
Micronucleus test in freshwater fish species: an evaluation of its sensitivity for application in field surveys.
A. Rodríguez-Cea
,
F. Ayllón
,
E. Garcia-Vazquez
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
2003
Corpus ID: 42904840
Highly Cited
1997
Highly Cited
1997
Toxicity of acid aluminium-rich water to seven freshwater fish species: a comparative laboratory study.
A. B. Poléo
,
Kjartan Østbye
,
Sigurd A. Øxnevad
,
Ronny A. Andersen
,
Erik Heibo
,
L. A. Vøllestad
Environmental Pollution
1997
Corpus ID: 13685044
Highly Cited
1997
Highly Cited
1997
The role of turbidity as a constraint on predator-prey interactions in aquatic environments
M. Abrahams
,
Michael G. Kattenfeld
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
1997
Corpus ID: 24748783
Abstract Many of the world's most productive aquatic ecosystems usually contain turbid water. Paradoxically, many fish species…
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Highly Cited
1993
Highly Cited
1993
Fathead minnows, Pimephales promelas, learn to recognize northern pike, Esox lucius, as predators on the basis of chemical stimuli from minnows in the pike's diet
A. Mathis
,
R.Jan F. Smith
Animal Behaviour
1993
Corpus ID: 53204660
Abstract Abstract. Predator recognition by naive prey may be facilitated if a predator's diet chemically 'labels' the predator…
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