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Bradley O Clarke

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  61
Citations -  4033

Bradley O Clarke is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polybrominated diphenyl ethers & Biosolids. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 53 publications receiving 2737 citations. Previous affiliations of Bradley O Clarke include RMIT University & Imperial College London.

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Review of ‘emerging’ organic contaminants in biosolids and assessment of international research priorities for the agricultural use of biosolids

TL;DR: A literature review of 'emerging' OCs in biosolids has been conducted for a selection of chemicals of potential concern for land application based upon human toxicity, evidence of adverse effects on the environment and endocrine disruption, and the number and quality of studies focussed on the contaminant internationally.
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Assimilation of polybrominated diphenyl ethers from microplastics by the marine amphipod, allorchestes compressa

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that MPPs can act as a vector for the assimilation of POPs into marine organisms and pose a risk of contaminating aquatic food chains with the potential for increasing public exposure through dietary sources.
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Chemical Pollutants Sorbed to Ingested Microbeads from Personal Care Products Accumulate in Fish.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that MBs from personal care products are capable of transferring sorbed pollutants to fish that ingest them and that BDE-99 did not appear to bioaccumulate in the fish.
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A review of analytical techniques for quantifying microplastics in sediments

TL;DR: In this article, the analytical techniques for measuring microplastics in sediment have been evaluated and four primary areas of the analytical process have been identified that include sampling, extraction, quantitation and quality assurance/quality control.
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A critical review of nitrogen mineralization in biosolids-amended soil, the associated fertilizer value for crop production and potential for emissions to the environment.

TL;DR: The review suggested that some international fertilizer recommendations may underestimate mineralizable N in biosolids, and the N fertilizer value, and greater economic and environmental savings in mineral N fertilizer application are potentially possible than are currently realized from biosolid recycling programmes.