Nonmetric multidimensional scaling of PFAS results from fish (A) muscle and (B) liver from Abiquiu Reservoir, Cochiti Reservoir, and from the Rio Grande.

<p>Points and triangles represent the PFAS composition results (detects and non-detects) from each fish sample; axes are arbitrary. The four most detected PFAS for each sample type (muscle, liver) are displayed on each figure (A, B) relative to the location where they were detected. Muscle sam...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Justin Clements (2180824) (author)
Other Authors: Jenna Stanek (22647964) (author), Cyler Conrad (20197353) (author), Jessica Celmer (22647967) (author), Hanna Mora (22647970) (author), Zachary Jones (5196206) (author), Kylie Gallegos (22647973) (author), Chauncey Gadek (5010266) (author), Shannon Gaukler (22647976) (author)
Published: 2025
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Summary:<p>Points and triangles represent the PFAS composition results (detects and non-detects) from each fish sample; axes are arbitrary. The four most detected PFAS for each sample type (muscle, liver) are displayed on each figure (A, B) relative to the location where they were detected. Muscle samples collected from the Rio Grande were significantly different than those collected from Cochiti Reservoir (p = 0.003; <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0336856#pone.0336856.g006" target="_blank">Fig 6A</a>). For the liver samples, those collected from Abiquiu Reservoir were different from Cochiti Reservoir (p = 0.006), and both reservoirs were different from the Rio Grande samples (Abiquiu p = 0.003; Cochiti p = 0.027).</p>