Fate of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) from River Yamuna, India: An ecotoxicological risk assessment approach

PK Mutiyar, SK Gupta, AK Mittal - Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 2018 - Elsevier
The river Yamuna is a major tributary of river Ganges and is a major source of freshwater in
the National Capital Territory (NCT) catering 16.8 million people. This is the first report on …

[引用][C] Fate of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) from River Yamuna, India: An ecotoxicological risk assessment approach

PK Mutiyar, SK Gupta, AK Mittal - Ecotoxicology and Environmental …, 2018 - cir.nii.ac.jp
Fate of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) from River Yamuna, India: An
ecotoxicological risk assessment approach | CiNii Research CiNii 国立情報学研究所 学術情報 …

Fate of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) from River Yamuna, India: An ecotoxicological risk assessment approach

PK Mutiyar, SK Gupta, AK Mittal - … and Environmental Safety, 2018 - ui.adsabs.harvard.edu
The river Yamuna is a major tributary of river Ganges and is a major source of freshwater in
the National Capital Territory (NCT) catering 16.8 million people. This is the first report on …

Fate of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) from River Yamuna, India: An ecotoxicological risk assessment approach

PK Mutiyar, SK Gupta, AK Mittal - Ecotoxicology and …, 2018 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The river Yamuna is a major tributary of river Ganges and is a major source of freshwater in
the National Capital Territory (NCT) catering 16.8 million people. This is the first report on …

Fate of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) from River Yamuna, India: an ecotoxicological risk assessment approach.

PK Mutiyar, SK Gupta, AK Mittal - 2018 - cabidigitallibrary.org
The river Yamuna is a major tributary of river Ganges and is a major source of freshwater in
the National Capital Territory (NCT) catering 16.8 million people. This is the first report on …