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Qiuguo Fu

Researcher at Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Publications -  31
Citations -  1104

Qiuguo Fu is an academic researcher from Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bioaccumulation & Hyalella azteca. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 28 publications receiving 713 citations. Previous affiliations of Qiuguo Fu include University of California, Riverside & Zhejiang University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Chiral pharmaceuticals: A review on their environmental occurrence and fate processes

TL;DR: A systematic approach including occurrence, fate and transport in various environmental matrices is needed to minimize uncertainties in risk assessment of chiral pharmaceuticals as emerging environmental contaminants.
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Pharmaceutical and Personal Care Products: From Wastewater Treatment into Agro-Food Systems.

TL;DR: A tiered framework is proposed as a path forward to prioritize PPCPs that could have a high potential for plant accumulation and thus pose greatest risk and a process-driven scheme is outlined to derive a short list that may be used to refocus future research efforts on PPCP and other analogous emerging contaminants in agro-food systems.
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Biotransformation Changes Bioaccumulation and Toxicity of Diclofenac in Aquatic Organisms.

TL;DR: Diclofenac was used as a model compound to study the impact of biotransformation on the bioaccumulation potential and toxicity in two keystone aquatic invertebrates and revealed possible catalysis by an S-adenosylmethionine-dependent -carboxylic acid methyltransferase.
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Imidacloprid induces adverse effects on fish early life stages that are more severe in Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) than in zebrafish (Danio rerio)

TL;DR: The results underline the importance of taking species sensitivity differences into account especially when considering that medaka responded at imidacloprid concentrations that have been measured in the environment.
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Metabolism of pharmaceutical and personal care products by carrot cell cultures.

TL;DR: Results from this study showed that plant cell cultures may be a useful tool for initially exploring the potential metabolites of PPCPs in plants as well as for rapidly screening the metabolism potentials of a variety of P PCPs or other emerging contaminants, and therefore may be used for prioritizing compounds for further comprehensive evaluations.