In Monirith
Ehime University
17 Papers
514 Citations
In Monirith is an academic researcher from Ehime University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Freshwater fish & Risk assessment. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 17 publications. Previous affiliations of In Monirith include National Institute for Environmental Studies.
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Papers
Asia-Pacific mussel watch: monitoring contamination of persistent organochlorine compounds in coastal waters of Asian countries
In Monirith,D. Ueno,Shin Takahashi,Haruhiko Nakata,Agus Sudaryanto,Annamalai Subramanian,Subramanian Karuppiah,Ahmad Ismail,Muswerry Muchtar,J. Zheng,Bruce J. Richardson,Maricar S. Prudente,Ngyen Duc Hue,Touch Seang Tana,A.V. Tkalin,Shinsuke Tanabe +15 more
TL;DR: Considerable residue levels of p,p(')-DDT and alpha-HCH were found in mussels and the concentrations of DDTs and HCHs found in Mussels from Asian developing countries were higher than those in developed nations suggesting present usage of DDT and H CHs along the coastal waters of Asian developing nations.
408
Exposure assessment for trace elements from consumption of marine fish in Southeast Asia
Tetsuro Agusa,Takashi Kunito,Agus Sudaryanto,In Monirith,Supawat Kan-atireklap,Hisato Iwata,Ahmad Ismail,Joompol Sanguansin,Muswerry Muchtar,Touch Seang Tana,Shinsuke Tanabe +10 more
TL;DR: Some marine fish showed Hg levels higher than the guideline values by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) suggests that consumption of these fish may be hazardous to the people.
226
Mussel-based monitoring of trace metal and organic contaminants along the east coast of China using Perna viridis and Mytilus edulis.
C.N. Fung,James Lam,Gene J. Zheng,Des Connell,In Monirith,Shinsuke Tanabe,Bruce J. Richardson,Paul K.S. Lam +7 more
TL;DR: An assessment of potential risks to human health due to consumption of the mussels was undertaken, and the results indicated that all metals, except Ni, could pose a health risk to heavy seafood consumers, while Hg appears to be of concern even for low level consumers.
164
Asia-pacific mussel watch: Monitoring of butyltin contamination in coastal waters of asian developing countries
Agus Sudaryanto,Shin Takahashi,In Monirith,Ahmad Ismail,Muswerry Muchtar,J. Zheng,Bruce J. Richardson,Annamalai Subramanian,Maricar S. Prudente,Nguyen Duc Hue,Shinsuke Tanabe +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, butyltin compounds were detected in green mussels collected from all the sampling location investigated, suggesting widespread contamination of BTs along the coastal waters of Asian developing countries, such as Cambodia, China (Hong Kong and southern China), Malaysia, India, Indonesia, Philippines, and Vietnam, to elucidate the contamination status, distribution, and possible sources and assess the risks on aquatic organisms and humans.
118
Contamination by organochlorine compounds in sturgeons from Caspian Sea during 2001 and 2002.
TL;DR: When comparing residue levels among same species, OC residues were highest in sturgeons from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan and lowest in Turkmenistan, however, the concentrations of HCHs, dieldrin, and heptachlor epoxide inSturgeons showed less geographical variability.
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