Antioxidative defense and fertility rate in the assessment of reprotoxicity risk posed by global warming

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Abstract

The objective of this review is to briefly summarize the recent progress in studies done on the assessment of reprotoxicity risk posed by global warming for the foundation of strategic tool in ecosystem-based adaptation. The selected animal data analysis that was used in this paper focuses on antioxidative markers and fertility rate estimated over the period 2000–2019. We followed a phylogenetic methodology in order to report data on a panel of selected organisms that show dangerous effects. The oxidative damage studies related to temperature fluctuation occurring in biosentinels of different invertebrate and vertebrate classes show a consistently maintained physiological defense. Furthermore, the results from homeothermic and poikilothermic species in our study highlight the influence of temperature rise on reprotoxicity.

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Parisi, C., & Guerriero, G. (2019, December 1). Antioxidative defense and fertility rate in the assessment of reprotoxicity risk posed by global warming. Antioxidants. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox8120622

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