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Wildlife as sentinels of human health effects in the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Basin

Dates

Year
2001

Citation

Fox, G.A., 2001, Wildlife as sentinels of human health effects in the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence Basin: v. 109, p. 853-861.

Summary

There is no existing formal, long-term program for gathering evidence of the incidence and severity of the health effects of toxic substances in wildlife. However, research-based studies of bald eagles, herring gulls, night herons, tree swallows, snapping turtles, mink, and beluga over the past 30 years have revealed a broad spectrum of health effects in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence basin including thyroid and other endocrine disorders, metabolic diseases, altered immune function, reproductive impairment, developmental toxicity, genotoxicity, and cancer. These effects occurred most often and were most severe in the most contaminated sites (Green Bay, Saginaw Bay, Lake Ontario, the St. Lawrence estuary, and more recently, Lake Erie), [...]

Contacts

Author :
Fox, G.A.

Attached Files

Communities

  • Western Energy Citation Clearinghouse

Tags

Additional Information

Alternate Titles

  • Environmental Health Perspectives

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
ISBN WECC 0091-6765

Citation Extension

citationTypeGeneric
parts
typePages
value853-861
typeVolume
value109

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