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Article
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Tier 2
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Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence.
Marine & Wildlife
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Data and supplementary material for publication - Petroleum-derived and biopolymer microplastics affect fast start escape performance and aerobic metabolism in a marine fish.
Figshare
2023
Score: 30
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
A Hawke,
A Hawke,
Indrawati Oey,
Bridie J. M. Allan
José E. Trujillo,
Bridie J. M. Allan
José E. Trujillo,
José E. Trujillo,
José E. Trujillo,
José E. Trujillo,
Bridie J. M. Allan
José E. Trujillo,
José E. Trujillo,
Indrawati Oey,
Bridie J. M. Allan
José E. Trujillo,
Stephen G. Giteru,
Indrawati Oey,
Bridie J. M. Allan
Stephen G. Giteru,
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Bridie J. M. Allan
Summary
This is a dataset and code supporting a study on how petroleum-derived and biopolymer microplastics affect escape performance and aerobic metabolism in a marine fish species.
The data collected on escape behaviour, routine swimming behaviour and oxygen uptake in <em>Forsterygion capito</em>. It contains the R code used to statistically analyse the data stated above and the supplementary material (Heavy metal analysis) which is referenced in the publication.
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