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Guang-Jie Zhou

Researcher at University of Hong Kong

Publications -  55
Citations -  1842

Guang-Jie Zhou is an academic researcher from University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1169 citations. Previous affiliations of Guang-Jie Zhou include City University of Hong Kong & Chinese Academy of Sciences.

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Antibiotics in typical marine aquaculture farms surrounding Hailing Island, South China: Occurrence, bioaccumulation and human dietary exposure

TL;DR: Erythromycin-H2O was the dominant antibiotic in the adult Fenneropenaeus penicillatus and trimethoprim was found to be bioaccumulative in young Lutjanus russelli, and presented a potential risk to human safety.
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Biotransformation of progesterone and norgestrel by two freshwater microalgae (Scenedesmus obliquus and Chlorella pyrenoidosa): transformation kinetics and products identification.

TL;DR: Biotransformation was found to be the main mechanism for progesterone and norgestrel loss in the aqueous solutions, and it followed the first-order kinetic model.
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Biosorption of zinc and copper from aqueous solutions by two freshwater green microalgae Chlorella pyrenoidosa and Scenedesmus obliquus.

TL;DR: Both strains of the microalgae had proven effective in removing zinc and copper from aqueous solutions, with the highest removal efficiency being near 100%.
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Simultaneous removal of inorganic and organic compounds in wastewater by freshwater green microalgae

TL;DR: These four algae species were found to be efficient in removing most of the selected organic compounds with >50% removal, and the estrogenic activity with removal efficiencies ranging from 46.2 to 81.1% from the wastewater, suggesting algae could be harnessed to simultaneously remove various contaminants in wastewater.
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Antibiotics in the coastal environment of the Hailing Bay region, South China Sea: Spatial distribution, source analysis and ecological risks

TL;DR: The source analysis indicated that untreated domestic sewage was the primary source of antibiotics in the study region and risk assessment indicated that oxytetracycline, norfloxacin and erythromycin-H2O posed high risks to aquatic organisms.