Peter Šalamún
Slovak Academy of Sciences
19 Papers
26 Citations
Peter Šalamún is an academic researcher from Slovak Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vermicompost & Bioaccumulation. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 19 publications.
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Papers
Nematodes as bioindicators of soil degradation due to heavy metals
Peter Šalamún,Marek Renčo,Eva Kucanová,Tímea Brázová,Ingrid Papajová,Dana Miklisová,Vladimíra Hanzelová +6 more
TL;DR: Results showed that the free-living nematodes are useful tools for bioindication of contamination and could be used as an alternative to the common approaches based on chemical methods.
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Perch and Its Parasites as Heavy Metal Biomonitors in a Freshwater Environment: The Case Study of the Ružín Water Reservoir, Slovakia
TL;DR: Results allow proposing both parasite models as useful tools to monitor aquatic environmental quality and the decreasing heavy metal burden of the reservoir and its gradual recovery in the course of time to be proposed.
The effect of two compost soil amendments, based on municipal green and penicillin production wastes, on plant parasitic nematodes
TL;DR: In this article, two composts, applied at five doses (0 %, 1 %, 2.5 %, 5 % and 10 % w/w), were studied on spring barley to control different genera of plant parasitic nematodes in potting mixtures.
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Diversity and food web structure of nematode communities under high soil salinity and alkaline pH.
TL;DR: With increasing distance from the pollution source, the nematode communities were more structured and complex, with an increase in proportion of sensitive c-p 4 and 5 nematodes, composed mainly of carnivores and omnivores.
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Transfer of Heavy Metals Through Three Components: Sediments, Plants and Fish in the Area with Previous Mining Activity
Tímea Brázová,Peter Šalamún,Dana Miklisová,Oľga Šestinová,Lenka Findoráková,Vladimíra Hanzelová,Mikuláš Oros +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the ecological risk and distribution of heavy metals in sediment, plants and fish in a seriously polluted water reservoir in Krompachy, Slovakia, and found that the degree of heavy metal contamination in sediments decreased in the order Cu, Pb, Cr, Hg, and Cd, and their mutual proportion was largely consistent with concentrations found in aquatic plants.
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