Title of article
Assessment and management of risk to wildlife from cadmium
Author/Authors
JOANNA BURGER، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
9
From page
37
To page
45
Abstract
Cadmium, a nonessential heavy metal that comes from natural and anthropogenic sources, is a teratogen, carcinogen, and a possible mutagen. Assessment of potential risk from cadmium requires understanding environmental exposure, mainly from ingestion, although there is some local exposure through inhalation. Chronic exposure is more problematic than acute exposure for wildlife. There is evidence for bioaccumulation, particularly in freshwater organisms, but evidence for biomagnification up the food chain is inconsistent; in some bird studies, cadmium levels were higher in species that are higher on the food chain than those that are lower. Some freshwater and marine invertebrates are more adversely affected by cadmium exposure than are birds and mammals. There is very little experimental laboratory research on the effects of cadmium in amphibians, birds and reptiles, and almost no data from studies of wildlife in nature. Managing the risk from cadmium to wildlife involves assessment (including ecological risk assessment), biomonitoring, setting benchmarks of effects, regulations and enforcement, and source reduction.
Keywords
CadmiumInvertebratesFishAmphibiansReptilesBirdsMammalsAssessment and managementBiomonitoring
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
986218
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