Selwyn Hoeks
Radboud University Nijmegen
25 Papers
4 Citations
Selwyn Hoeks is an academic researcher from Radboud University Nijmegen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental science & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications.
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Papers
A high-resolution spatial model to predict exposure to pharmaceuticals in European surface waters: ePiE
Rik Oldenkamp,Rik Oldenkamp,Selwyn Hoeks,Mirza Čengić,Valerio Barbarossa,Emily E. Burns,Alistair B.A. Boxall,Ad M.J. Ragas,Ad M.J. Ragas +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present ePiE (exposure to pharmaceuticals in the environment), a spatially explicit model calculating concentrations of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) in surface waters across Europe at similar to 1 km resolution.
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An open source physiologically based kinetic model for the chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus): Calibration and validation for the prediction residues in tissues and eggs.
TL;DR: In vitro data were also used as model input to predict internal concentration of the coccidiostat monensin, and 71% of the model predictions were within a 3-fold change of the measured data for chicken.
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Plant functional and taxonomic diversity in European grasslands along climatic gradients
Coline C.F. Boonman,Luca Santini,Luca Santini,Bjorn J. M. Robroek,Selwyn Hoeks,Steven Kelderman,Jürgen Dengler,Ariel Bergamini,Idoia Biurrun,Maria Laura Carranza,Bruno Enrico Leone Cerabolini,Milan Chytrý,Ute Jandt,Tatiana Lysenko,Angela Stanisci,Irina V. Tatarenko,Solvita Rūsiņa,Mark A. J. Huijbregts +17 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed taxonomic and functional richness in European grassland communities along continental-scale temperature and precipitation gradients and found that functional and taxonomic richness was high at intermediate minimum temperatures and wide temperature ranges.
Sediment availability provokes a shift from Brownian to Lévy‐like clonal expansion in a dune building grass
Valérie C. Reijers,Valérie C. Reijers,Selwyn Hoeks,Jim van Belzen,Koen Siteur,Koen Siteur,Anne J. A. de Rond,Clea N. van de Ven,Carlijn Lammers,Carlijn Lammers,Johan van de Koppel,Johan van de Koppel,Tjisse van der Heide,Tjisse van der Heide,Tjisse van der Heide +14 more
TL;DR: Results reveal a consistent shift in expansion pattern from more clumped, Brownian‐like, movement in sediment‐poor conditions, to patchier, Lévy‐ like, movement under high sediment supply rates, which may allow landscape‐forming plants to optimise their engineering ability depending on their physical landscape.
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