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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Sports, Hunting, Fishing & Wildlife
Elk
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<blockquote data-quote="J Hoy" data-source="post: 1831581" data-attributes="member: 16398"><p>Since you just said calves, I was not sure which species to which you were referring. Actually, simultaneous exposure to high levels of imidacloprid, chlorothalonil and glyphosate in food, water and air appears to affect wild and domestic grazing animals similarly.</p><p></p><p>In a study concerning elk calves, those born after 1994 were weak and lethargic and many died soon after they were born, similar to bovine calves with WCS. The elk calves that survived took 49 days to join the nurse herd. Elk calves studied in 1991-1992, right before 1994 were healthy and joined the nurse herd in just 12 days. The difference between the health of the calves born before 1994 and those born after 1994 was huge. What appeared to cause the serious adverse health effects based on studies of grazing animals since that elk calf study, was that the elk calves born after 1994 were exposed as fetuses simultaneously to high levels of imidacloprid, chlorothalonil and glyphosate. Before 1994, no fetuses had ever been exposed to those three teratogenic pesticides - not ever!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J Hoy, post: 1831581, member: 16398"] Since you just said calves, I was not sure which species to which you were referring. Actually, simultaneous exposure to high levels of imidacloprid, chlorothalonil and glyphosate in food, water and air appears to affect wild and domestic grazing animals similarly. In a study concerning elk calves, those born after 1994 were weak and lethargic and many died soon after they were born, similar to bovine calves with WCS. The elk calves that survived took 49 days to join the nurse herd. Elk calves studied in 1991-1992, right before 1994 were healthy and joined the nurse herd in just 12 days. The difference between the health of the calves born before 1994 and those born after 1994 was huge. What appeared to cause the serious adverse health effects based on studies of grazing animals since that elk calf study, was that the elk calves born after 1994 were exposed as fetuses simultaneously to high levels of imidacloprid, chlorothalonil and glyphosate. Before 1994, no fetuses had ever been exposed to those three teratogenic pesticides - not ever! [/QUOTE]
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