Item talk:Q229549

From geokb
Revision as of 23:25, 17 August 2024 by Sky (talk | contribs) (added USGS web article schema.org data to item talk page)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

{

 "@context": "http://schema.org/",
 "@type": "WebPage",
 "additionalType": "Activity",
 "url": "https://www.usgs.gov/programs/environmental-health-program/science/endocrine-disrupting-compounds-chesapeake-bay",
 "headline": "Endocrine Disrupting Compounds in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Science Team",
 "datePublished": "April 30, 2017",
 "author": [
   {
     "@type": "Person",
     "name": "Kelly Smalling",
     "url": "https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/kelly-smalling",
     "identifier": {
       "@type": "PropertyValue",
       "propertyID": "orcid",
       "value": "0000-0002-1214-4920"
     }
   }
 ],
 "description": [
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "The Chesapeake Bay is the largest estuary in the United States and provides critical resources to fish, wildlife and people. For more than a decade, recreational fish species have been plagued with skin lesions and intersex conditions (the presence of male and female sex characteristics in the same fish) that biologists attributed to exposures to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs). Interdisciplinary teams of hydrologists, chemists, geologists, geographers and biologists on the Chesapeake Bay EDC project of the U.S. Geological Survey's Environmental Health Mission Area work collaboratively at field sites and in highly specialized U.S. Geological Survey laboratories with Federal, State and academic research partners. This work provides science to inform decisions on agricultural best management practices, urban storm water management, municipal wastewater treatment and other factors related to sources, movement and possible health effects of EDCs on recreational fish species. This research teams is in its final completion stages."
   }
 ],
 "funder": {
   "@type": "Organization",
   "name": "Environmental Health Program",
   "url": "https://www.usgs.gov/programs/environmental-health-program"
 },
 "about": [
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Geology"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Energy"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Methods Development"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Ecosystems"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Endocrine Disruption"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Bioassays"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Water"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Science Technology"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Health Risks"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Climate"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Health Effects"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Sublethal Effects"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Exposure Pathways"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Food Resources"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Geospatial Analyses"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Environmental Health"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Methods and Analysis"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Information Systems"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Municipal and Industrial Wastewaters"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Biology"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Contaminant Transport and Effects"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Fishing and Hunting"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Immunomodulation"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Organic Chemistry Research"
   }
 ]

}