Author:
Rastmanesh Fatemeh,Farrash-Alvar Somayeh,Shalbaf Fatemeh
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference101 articles.
1. Alahabadi, A., Ehrampoush, M. H., Miri, M., Aval, H. E., Yousefzadeh, S., Ghaffari, H. R., Ahmadi, E., Talebi, P., Fathabadi, Z. A., & Babai, F. (2017). A comparative study on capability of different tree species in accumulating heavy metals from soil and ambient air. Chemosphere, 172, 459–467.
2. Almehdi, A., El-Keblawy, A., Shehadi, I., El-Naggar, M., Saadoun, I., Mosa, K. A., & Abhilash, P. C. (2019). Old leaves accumulate more heavy metals than other parts of the desert shrub Calotropis procera at a traffic-polluted site as assessed by two analytical techniques. International Journal of Phytoremediation, 21, 1254–1262.
3. Amadi, C. N., Frazzoli, C., & Orisakwe, O. E. (2022). Sentinel species for biomonitoring and biosurveillance of environmental heavy metals in Nigeria. Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part C, 38, 21–60.
4. Ang, H., & Lee, K. (2005). Analysis of mercury in Malaysian herbal preparations. JMBR: A Peer-review Journal of Biomedical Sciences, 4(1), 31–36.
5. Aricak, B., Cetin, M., Erdem, R., Sevik, H., & Cometen, H. (2020). The usability of Scotch pine (Pinus sylvestris) as a biomonitor for traffic-originated heavy metal concentrations in Turkey. Polish Journal of Environmental Studies, 29, 1051–1057.