Review of Florida red tide and human health effects
Lora E. Fleming(University of Exeter), Daniel G. Baden(University of North Carolina Wilmington), Tainya C. Clarke(University of Miami), William M. Abraham(Mount Sinai Medical Center), Andrea J. Bourdelais(University of North Carolina Wilmington), Adam Wanner(University of Miami), Stuart L. Shalat, Jocalyn Clark(University of Miami), Janet M. Benson(Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute), Margaret Byrne(University of Miami), Sharon Watkins(Florida Department of Health), Lorraine C. Backer(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Porter Hoagland(Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), Gary J. Kirkpatrick(Mote Marine Laboratory), Wendy Stephan(University of Miami), Julie Hollenbeck(National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences), Barbara Kirkpatrick(Mote Marine Laboratory), Julia Zaias(University of Miami), Jérôme Naar(University of North Carolina Wilmington), Cathy J. Walsh(Mote Marine Laboratory), Andrew Reich(Florida Department of Health), Yung Sung Cheng(Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute), Judy A. Bean(Miami VA Healthcare System), Richard H. Pierce(Mote Marine Laboratory), Eliana Mendes(University of Miami), Kate Nierenberg(Mote Marine Laboratory)
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