Heavy metals in white-tailed deer living near a zinc smelter in Pennsylvania.

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Abstract

White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus (Zimmermann) shot within 20 km of the zinc smelters in the Palmerton, Pennsylvania area contained extremely high renal concentrations of cadmium (372 ppm dry weight (dw] and zinc (600 ppm dw). The deer with the highest renal zinc concentration was shot 4 km from the smelters and had joint lesions similar to those seen in zinc-poisoned horses from the same area. The highest concentrations of lead in both hard and soft tissues were relatively low, 10.9 ppm dw in a sample of teeth, 17.4 ppm dw in a metacarpus, and 4.9 ppm dw in a kidney.

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Sileo, L., & Beyer, W. N. (1985). Heavy metals in white-tailed deer living near a zinc smelter in Pennsylvania. Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 21(3), 289–296. https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-21.3.289

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