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Aquatic hypoxia is a teratogen and affects fish embryonic development
Eva H. H. SHANG
,
Shiu Sun Rudolf WU
Department of Science and Environmental Studies (SES)
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Articles
›
peer-review
216
Citations (Scopus)
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Keyphrases
Hypoxia
100%
Embryonic Development
100%
Teratogen
100%
Aquatic Hypoxia
100%
Malformation
50%
Copyright
25%
Testosterone
25%
Aquatic Systems
25%
Aquatic Organisms
25%
Sex Hormones
25%
Population Decline
25%
Estradiol
25%
Fertilization
25%
Sexual Development
25%
Sublethal
25%
Population Change
25%
Species Fitness
25%
Teratogenic Effects
25%
Embryonic Stage
25%
Natural Population Decline
25%
Medicine and Dentistry
Hypoxia
100%
Embryo Development
100%
Teratogenic Agent
100%
Congenital Malformation
40%
Sex Hormone
20%
Diethylstilbestrol
20%
Fertilization
20%
Teratogenesis
20%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Hypoxia
100%
Teratogenic Agent
100%
Congenital Malformation
40%
Sex Hormone
20%
Diethylstilbestrol
20%
Elimination
20%
Teratogenesis
20%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Embryogenesis
100%
Estradiol
25%
Natural Population
25%
Teratogenesis
25%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Hypoxemia
100%
Estradiol
20%
Sex Hormone
20%
Immunology and Microbiology
Embryo Development
100%
Natural Population
25%