2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvrad.2012.01.013
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Are radiosensitivity data derived from natural field conditions consistent with data from controlled exposures? A case study of Chernobyl wildlife chronically exposed to low dose rates

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Cited by 176 publications
(104 citation statements)
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“…The study calculated the effective dose based on the consumption of meat from the cattle in this region. The study reported high activity concentration of 40 K in the studied cattle organs. However, there are some deficiencies of the study design and presentation that raise questions concerning the validity of the findings.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 64%
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“…The study calculated the effective dose based on the consumption of meat from the cattle in this region. The study reported high activity concentration of 40 K in the studied cattle organs. However, there are some deficiencies of the study design and presentation that raise questions concerning the validity of the findings.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…It is our opinion that given the small sample size, the lack of controls, and an incomplete radioecological analysis, the suggestion that mine tailings are the underlying cause of higher activity concentration of 40 K cannot be justified. In Nigeria, cattle graze on harvested fields and on byproducts of farming that are not needed by the peasant farmers for food.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…The second is 40 lGy h -1 which is often used by governmental and intergovernmental groups as a level of significance for terrestrial animals [IAEA (1992), UNSCEAR (1996), and USDoE (2002)]. However, it is worth noting that recent ecological studies have suggested chronic exposure to radiation levels below 40 lGy h -1 often result in measurable population effects, and there is currently much discussion of these levels given controversial studies of organisms living in Chernobyl (e.g., Møller and Mousseau 2011;Garnier-Laplace et al 2013).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ecologists have long known that perturbations induced by stressors such as harvesting (Fogarty and Murawski, 1998), species introductions (Mack et al, 2000), nutrient addition (Carpenter et al, 1998) or chemical discharges (Fleeger et al, 2003) cannot be entirely grasped from knowledge of the stressor's effects on individual organisms or single-species populations, even when addressed through statistical approaches such as species sensitivity distributions (Forbes and Calow, 2002;Garnier-Laplace et al, 2013;Posthuma et al, 2001). Such effects may act as triggers of perturbation, which propagate through higher levels of biological organization within ecosystems, with ultimate system consequences that may differ radically from those expected based on effects observed at the organism-level.…”
Section: Scientific Limits Of Current Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%