Bird Mortality after Spraying for Dutch Elm Disease with DDT
- 2 April 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 148 (3666) , 90-91
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.148.3666.90
Abstract
In Hanover, New Hampshire, where elms were sprayed with DDT, 151 dead birds were found; 10 dead birds were found in Norwich, Vermont, where no DDT was used. Chemical analyses of dead birds, observation of symptoms of DDT poisoning, and a population decline after spraying all indicate severe mortality among certain species in Hanover.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Persistence of DDT in Soils of Heavily Sprayed Forest StandsScience, 1964
- Poisoning by DDT: Relation between Clinical Signs and Concentration in Rat BrainScience, 1963
- Disappearance and Visibility of Quail RemainsThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1963
- Initial Songbird Mortality Following a Dutch Elm Disease Control ProgramThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1960
- Songbird Breeding Populations in DDT-Sprayed Dutch Elm Disease CommunitiesThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1960
- Notes on Some Ecological Effects of DDT Sprayed on ElmsThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1958
- Effects of Five-Year DDT Application on Breeding Bird PopulationThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1951
- Effects on Wildlife of DDT Used for Control of Dutch Elm DiseaseThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1951
- Effects of DDT on Bird Population of Scrub ForestThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1949
- Effect on Forest Birds of DDT Used for Gypsy Moth Control in PennsylvaniaThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1946