Toxicity of Nitrofen in Aquatic Systems
The nitrofen
data frame has 50 rows and 5 columns.
Nitrofen is a herbicide that was used extensively for the control of broad-leaved and grass weeds in cereals and rice. Although it is relatively non-toxic to adult mammals, nitrofen is a significant tetragen and mutagen. It is also acutely toxic and reproductively toxic to cladoceran zooplankton. Nitrofen is no longer in commercial use in the U.S., having been the first pesticide to be withdrawn due to tetragenic effects.
The data here come from an experiment to measure the reproductive toxicity of nitrofen on a species of zooplankton (Ceriodaphnia dubia). 50 animals were randomized into batches of 10 and each batch was put in a solution with a measured concentration of nitrofen. Then the number of live offspring in each of the three broods to each animal was recorded.
nitrofen
This data frame contains the following columns:
conc
The nitrofen concentration in the solution (mug/litre).
brood1
The number of live offspring in the first brood.
brood2
The number of live offspring in the second brood.
brood3
The number of live offspring in the third brood.
total
The total number of live offspring in the first three broods.
The data were obtained from
Bailer, A.J. and Oris, J.T. (1994) Assessing toxicity of pollutants in aquatic systems. In Case Studies in Biometry. N. Lange, L. Ryan, L. Billard, D. Brillinger, L. Conquest and J. Greenhouse (editors), 25–40. John Wiley.
Davison, A.C. and Hinkley, D.V. (1997) Bootstrap Methods and Their Application. Cambridge University Press.
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