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71 results on '"Quilliam RS"'

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1. Urban waste piles are reservoirs for human pathogenic bacteria with high levels of multidrug resistance against last resort antibiotics: A comprehensive temporal and geographic field analysis.

2. Fluvial flooding and plastic pollution - The delivery of potential human pathogenic bacteria into agricultural fields.

3. Multi-pollutant removal dynamics by aquatic plants in monoculture or mixed communities.

4. Insecticide tolerance of the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae following larval exposure to microplastics and insecticide.

5. Rapid colonisation of environmental plastic waste by pathogenic bacteria drives adaptive phenotypic changes.

6. The plastisphere can protect Salmonella Typhimurium from UV stress under simulated environmental conditions.

7. Plastic pollution and human pathogens: Towards a conceptual shift in risk management at bathing water and beach environments.

8. Survival and transfer potential of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium colonising polyethylene microplastics in contaminated agricultural soils.

9. A perspective on the impacts of microplastics on mosquito biology and their vectorial capacity.

10. Salmonella Typhimurium and Vibrio cholerae can be transferred from plastic mulch to basil and spinach salad leaves.

11. Eliciting expert judgements to underpin our understanding of faecal indicator organism loss from septic tank systems.

12. Persistence of 'wet wipes' in beach sand: An unrecognised reservoir for localised E. coli contamination.

13. Can plastic pollution drive the emergence and dissemination of novel zoonotic diseases?

14. Engineering aquatic plant community composition on floating treatment wetlands can increase ecosystem multifunctionality.

15. Enduring pathogenicity of African strains of Salmonella on plastics and glass in simulated peri-urban environmental waste piles.

16. Toxigenic Vibrio cholerae can cycle between environmental plastic waste and floodwater: Implications for environmental management of cholera.

17. Evidence of interspecific plasmid uptake by pathogenic strains of Klebsiella isolated from microplastic pollution on public beaches.

18. Plastic pollution as a novel reservoir for the environmental survival of the drug resistant fungal pathogen Candida auris.

19. Self-reported benefits and risks of open water swimming to health, wellbeing and the environment: Cross-sectional evidence from a survey of Scottish swimmers.

20. Microplastics in agriculture - a potential novel mechanism for the delivery of human pathogens onto crops.

21. Plastic pollution and fungal, protozoan, and helminth pathogens - A neglected environmental and public health issue?

22. Clinically important E. coli strains can persist, and retain their pathogenicity, on environmental plastic and fabric waste.

23. Open defaecation by proxy: Tackling the increase of disposable diapers in waste piles in informal settlements.

24. Environmental reservoirs of the drug-resistant pathogenic yeast Candida auris.

25. Persistence of E. coli in Streambed Sediment Contaminated with Faeces from Dairy Cows, Geese, and Deer: Legacy Risks to Environment and Health.

26. From wastewater discharge to the beach: Survival of human pathogens bound to microplastics during transfer through the freshwater-marine continuum.

27. Time since faecal deposition influences mobilisation of culturable E. coli and intestinal enterococci from deer, goose and dairy cow faeces.

28. Predicting the dispersal of SARS-CoV-2 RNA from the wastewater treatment plant to the coast.

29. Binding, recovery, and infectiousness of enveloped and non-enveloped viruses associated with plastic pollution in surface water.

30. Sewage-associated plastic waste washed up on beaches can act as a reservoir for faecal bacteria, potential human pathogens, and genes for antimicrobial resistance.

31. Quantifying the importance of plastic pollution for the dissemination of human pathogens: The challenges of choosing an appropriate 'control' material.

32. Survival of human enteric and respiratory viruses on plastics in soil, freshwater, and marine environments.

33. Daily changes in household water access and quality in urban slums undermine global safe water monitoring programmes.

34. Chronic urban hotspots and agricultural drainage drive microbial pollution of karst water resources in rural developing regions.

35. The microbial safety of seaweed as a feed component for black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens) larvae.

36. Freshwater blue space and population health: An emerging research agenda.

37. Impact of Freeze-Thaw Cycles on Die-Off of E. coli and Intestinal Enterococci in Deer and Dairy Faeces: Implications for Landscape Contamination of Watercourses.

38. COVID-19: The environmental implications of shedding SARS-CoV-2 in human faeces.

39. Power, danger, and secrecy-A socio-cultural examination of menstrual waste management in urban Malawi.

40. Valuing inland blue space: A contingent valuation study of two large freshwater lakes.

41. Angiosperm symbioses with non-mycorrhizal fungal partners enhance N acquisition from ancient organic matter in a warming maritime Antarctic.

42. Rainfall-driven E. coli transfer to the stream-conduit network observed through increasing spatial scales in mixed land-use paddy farming karst terrain.

43. High resolution characterisation of E. coli proliferation profiles in livestock faeces.

44. Quantifying stakeholder understanding of an ecosystem service trade-off.

45. The disparity between regulatory measurements of E. coli in public bathing waters and the public expectation of bathing water quality.

46. Colonisation of plastic pellets (nurdles) by E. coli at public bathing beaches.

47. How can we improve understanding of faecal indicator dynamics in karst systems under changing climatic, population, and land use stressors? - Research opportunities in SW China.

48. The seaweed fly (Coelopidae) can facilitate environmental survival and transmission of E. coli O157 at sandy beaches.

49. A catchment-scale model to predict spatial and temporal burden of E. coli on pasture from grazing livestock.

50. Predicting diffuse microbial pollution risk across catchments: The performance of SCIMAP and recommendations for future development.

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