Biomonitoring of blood is commonly used to identify and quantify occupational or environmental exposure to chemical contaminants. Increasingly, this technique has been applied to wildlife contaminant monitoring, including for green turtles, allowing for the non-lethal evaluation of chemical exposure in their nearshore environment. The sources, composition, bioavailability and toxicity of metals in the marine environment are, however, often unknown and influenced by numerous biotic and abiotic factors. These factors can vary considerably across time and space making the selection of the most informative elements for biomonitoring challenging. This study aimed to validate an ICP-MS multi-element screening method for green turtle blood in orde...
The concentration of heavy metals (Zn, Cd, Ni, Cu, Mn) and selenium (Se) was analyzed in blood colle...
Sea turtle populations are declining worldwide due to a number of anthropogenic factors: fishery byc...
Sea turtles including the green turtle Chelonia mydas and the hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricat...
Marine megafauna that forage in proximity to land can be exposed to a diverse mixture of chemicals t...
A large number of nesting loggerhead sea turtles (n=201) were sampled to establish the blood levels ...
Green turtles spend a large part of their lifecycle foraging in nearshore seagrass habitats, which a...
Heavy metals and other inorganic elements (mainly from anthropogenic sources) have an increased impa...
This study determined the concentrations of heavy metals in blood collected from Pacific Ridley sea ...
This study reports the largest inorganic elements database in the blood of live marine turtles (Lepi...
Environmental pollution due to heavy metals is having an increased impact on marine wildlife accentu...
Organisms are exposed to mixtures of both known and unknown chemicals which are diverse and variable...
Blood is considered a suitable biomonitoring matrix for evaluating relatively recent exposure to env...
Marine turtles face numerous anthropogenic threats, including that of chemical contaminant exposure....
Metals are persistent worldwide being harmful for diverse organisms and having complex and combined ...
The Loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) is a marine reptile belonging to a monophyletic group of...
The concentration of heavy metals (Zn, Cd, Ni, Cu, Mn) and selenium (Se) was analyzed in blood colle...
Sea turtle populations are declining worldwide due to a number of anthropogenic factors: fishery byc...
Sea turtles including the green turtle Chelonia mydas and the hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricat...
Marine megafauna that forage in proximity to land can be exposed to a diverse mixture of chemicals t...
A large number of nesting loggerhead sea turtles (n=201) were sampled to establish the blood levels ...
Green turtles spend a large part of their lifecycle foraging in nearshore seagrass habitats, which a...
Heavy metals and other inorganic elements (mainly from anthropogenic sources) have an increased impa...
This study determined the concentrations of heavy metals in blood collected from Pacific Ridley sea ...
This study reports the largest inorganic elements database in the blood of live marine turtles (Lepi...
Environmental pollution due to heavy metals is having an increased impact on marine wildlife accentu...
Organisms are exposed to mixtures of both known and unknown chemicals which are diverse and variable...
Blood is considered a suitable biomonitoring matrix for evaluating relatively recent exposure to env...
Marine turtles face numerous anthropogenic threats, including that of chemical contaminant exposure....
Metals are persistent worldwide being harmful for diverse organisms and having complex and combined ...
The Loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) is a marine reptile belonging to a monophyletic group of...
The concentration of heavy metals (Zn, Cd, Ni, Cu, Mn) and selenium (Se) was analyzed in blood colle...
Sea turtle populations are declining worldwide due to a number of anthropogenic factors: fishery byc...
Sea turtles including the green turtle Chelonia mydas and the hawksbill turtle Eretmochelys imbricat...