Pollock, Elizabeth. Health Parameters of Three Terrestrial Wildlife Species Harvested by Innu Hunters in Labrador, Canada, in Relation to Tissue Concentrations of Environmental Contaminants. 2005. University of Prince Edward Island, Dissertation/Thesis, https://scholar2.islandarchives.ca/islandora/object/ir%3A21794.

Genre

  • Dissertation/Thesis
Contributors
Thesis advisor: Daoust, Pierre-Yves
Thesis advisor: VanLeeuwen, John
Author: Pollock, Elizabeth
Date Issued
2005
Publisher
University of Prince Edward Island
Place Published
Charlottetown, PE
Extent
265
Abstract

It has been shown that environmental contaminants such as metals and organochlorines (OC) have the potential to cause a wide range of negative health effects in numerous animal species.

The general purpose of this study was to assess, in collaboration with Innu hunters and their families, the health of important wildlife species harvested by Innu hunters in Labrador in relation to tissue concentrations of environmental contaminants measured in the animals.

Specific objectives included: identifying, through harvest surveys, wildlife species important to the community members; assessing the overall health of each species by measuring selected health parameters in animals killed during regular seasonal hunts; determining tissue concentrations of a variety of common environmental contaminants in the animals; and assessing the relationship between contaminant concentrations and health parameters for each species, using multiple regression analyses. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).

Note

Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 44-03, page: 1302.

Language

  • English

ETD Degree Name

  • Master of Science

ETD Degree Level

  • Master

ETD Degree Discipline

  • Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. Department of Pathology and Microbiology.
Degree Grantor
University of Prince Edward Island

Subjects

  • Biology, Veterinary Science
  • Environmental Sciences
ISBN
9780494103524
LAC Identifier
TC-PCU-21794