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citations
Cited by 41 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 1,021 publications
(1,701 reference statements)
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“…A number of studies have established criteria for assessing the risk of lead exposure. Herring et al (2017) summarized the most recent studies and found for liver samples (wet weight): background: < 2.0 ppm; subclinical: 2.0–6.0 ppm; clinical toxicity: 6.0–15.0 ppm; severe clinical poisoning: > 15.0 ppm. Of all the samples in the present study, only five lead concentrations exceeded 1 ppm and only one exceeded the criterion for subclinical poisoning (2 ppm).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A number of studies have established criteria for assessing the risk of lead exposure. Herring et al (2017) summarized the most recent studies and found for liver samples (wet weight): background: < 2.0 ppm; subclinical: 2.0–6.0 ppm; clinical toxicity: 6.0–15.0 ppm; severe clinical poisoning: > 15.0 ppm. Of all the samples in the present study, only five lead concentrations exceeded 1 ppm and only one exceeded the criterion for subclinical poisoning (2 ppm).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, Herring et al. , ), are commonly sites of intensive recreational and pest management shooting activity which provide subsidies (Herring et al. , McTee et al.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, Herring et al. ). Further, little is known about how local subsidies associated with recreational shooting/hunting and pest management shooting on or near agricultural lands during the breeding season influence nestling health or Pb exposure.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These life-history traits make it difficult for short-term field studies to quantify effects of threats associated with renewable energy development, because long time lags may separate disturbance events from their population-level consequences (Krauss et al 2010, Hylander andEhrlén 2013). In addition, emergent risks from wind energy development may interact with existing, more pervasive threats (e.g., lead or rodenticide contamination; Herring et al 2017), making it especially difficult for traditional field studies to identify the relative importance of different anthropogenic threats. This problem of assessing effects of multiple interacting stressors is particularly challenging with long-lived, wide-ranging apex predators like the Golden Eagle.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%