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Jing You

Researcher at Jinan University

Publications -  155
Citations -  5586

Jing You is an academic researcher from Jinan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bioaccumulation & Pyrethroid. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 145 publications receiving 4396 citations. Previous affiliations of Jing You include Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory & Southern Illinois University Carbondale.

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Distribution and toxicity of sediment-associated pesticides in agriculture-dominated water bodies of California's Central Valley.

TL;DR: This study provides one of the first geographically broad assessments of pyrethroids in areas highly affected by agriculture and suggests there is a greater need to examine sediment-associated pesticide residues and their potential for uptake by and toxicity to benthic organisms.
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Aquatic Toxicity Due to Residential Use of Pyrethroid Insecticides

TL;DR: The pyrethroid bifenthrin is implicated as the primary cause of the toxicity, with additional contributions to toxicity from the pyrethroids cyfluthrin and cypermethrin.
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Pyrethroid insecticides and sediment toxicity in urban creeks from California and Tennessee.

TL;DR: Bifenthrin, cyfluthrin, and lambda-cyhalothrin may have originated either from professional structural pest control or from lawn and garden care by homeowners, and none of the sediments collected from the 12 Tennessee creeks were toxic, and pyrethroids were rarely detectable.
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Global occurrence of pyrethroid insecticides in sediment and the associated toxicological effects on benthic invertebrates: An overview.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that pyrethroids are not only commonly detected in the aquatic environment, but also can cause toxic effects to benthic invertebrates, and calls for better development of accurate sediment quality criteria and effective ecological risk assessment methods for this emerging class of insecticides.
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Bioavailability and soil-to-crop transfer of heavy metals in farmland soils: A case study in the Pearl River Delta, South China.

TL;DR: The results supported the notion that the bioavailability of the investigated heavy metals in the soil was largely responsible for their crop uptake, and suggested that Cu, As and Hg in soils of the study area had greater tendency to be accumulated in the vegetables than other heavy metals.