Wei Cai
Hohai University
19 Papers
30 Citations
Wei Cai is an academic researcher from Hohai University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Relative species abundance. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications. Previous affiliations of Wei Cai include Yangzhou University.
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Papers
Occurrence of endocrine disrupting compounds in aqueous environment and their bacterial degradation: A review
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed recent studies on the occurrence of the six categories of EDCs in different aqueous environment, namely surface water, groundwater, drinking water, and wastewater in WWTPs all over the world.
182
Sediment bacterial communities in a eutrophic lake influenced by multiple inflow-rivers.
TL;DR: This study provides a reference to understand the influence of inflow-rivers on the lake ecosystem, which offered a basic guidance for maintaining the ecological system and protecting the water environment of lacustrine basin.
63
New insights into the spatial variability of biofilm communities and potentially negative bacterial groups in hydraulic concrete structures.
TL;DR: This study contributed to the optimization of microbial control and the improvement of the safety management for water conservation structures by investigating the composition and distribution characteristics of bacterial communities in biofilms attached to hydraulic concrete structure (HCS) surfaces.
40
Altitude-scale variation in nitrogen-removal bacterial communities from municipal wastewater treatment plants distributed along a 3600-m altitudinal gradient in China
TL;DR: Although the variations of nitrogen-removal bacterial community in WWTPs were driven dominantly by wastewater and operational variables, altitude was also an important variable influencing the quantitative relationships and community structures of nitrogen -removal bacteria inWWTPs particularly above 1500masl.
24
Effect of the pollution level on the functional bacterial groups aiming at degrading bisphenol A and nonylphenol in natural biofilms of an urban river
TL;DR: The spatial distribution characteristics of the bacterial groups involved in the degradation of BPA and NP within biofilms in an urban river using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism based on 16S rRNA gene sequences were investigated to provide effective data on bacterial group changes in polluted urban rivers.