1958
DOI: 10.2307/4082101
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Some Effects of X-Irradiation on the Breeding Biology of Eastern Bluebirds

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Few studies are available for comparison. Apparently the four bluebird nestlings irradiated up to ~I 0.5 Gy by Norris (1958) grew and developed normally. This contrasts with a more extensive study by Willard (1963), which showed that radiation exposure ofbluebirds when 9 d old is much less damaging than exposure when 2 d old.…”
Section: Growthmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…Few studies are available for comparison. Apparently the four bluebird nestlings irradiated up to ~I 0.5 Gy by Norris (1958) grew and developed normally. This contrasts with a more extensive study by Willard (1963), which showed that radiation exposure ofbluebirds when 9 d old is much less damaging than exposure when 2 d old.…”
Section: Growthmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Our results clearly show that nestling Tree Swallows, acutely exposed to gamma radiation at levels up to 4.5 Gy immediately after hatching, suffer no detectable radiation-induced mortality during the 20-d nestling period (Table 1). In a study by Norris (1958), four Eastern Bluebird nestlings (Sialia sialis) fledged successfully after acute exposures of 3.5 to 10.5 Gy at 7-14 d of age. Willard (1963) speculated that the 50% lethal dose for young bluebirds over a 16-d nestling period (LD50116) is ~ 21.7 Gy, and that exposures > 26.1 Gy are almost always lethal.…”
Section: Mortalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…White Leghorn male chickens x-irradiated before puberty with dosages from 1200 to 8400 r showed no treatment effects on mating behavior (Sturkie et al, 1949). Norris (1958) subjected adult bluebirds to doses of x-rays varying from 200 to 600 r at 23.5 r per , minute. He found no observable effects on clutch size, length of incubation period, hatching success, or productivity.…”
Section: Reproductive Behaviormentioning
confidence: 97%
“…He also concluded that nestling bluebirds seemed to be more resistant to gamma radiation than young chickens. Norris (1958) indicated that week-old songbirds might also have greater radioresistance than laboratory chicks and ducklings of the same age. He also exposed several groups of adult female eastern bluebirds and several eggs to a dose rate of 23.5 R/m for accumulated doses of 200-600 R. The number of eggs laid, incubation period, hatching success, nestling period, and general reproductive success were essentially the same for treated and control females.…”
Section: Speciesmentioning
confidence: 99%