Publication | Closed Access
Selenium-responsive diseases of animals in New Zealand
183
Citations
52
References
1968
Year
EcotoxicityEngineeringBotanyPathologyInorganic SaltsAbstract ExtractEnvironmental ChemistrySoil PollutionToxicologyAnimal TestingSelenium PoisoningSelenium DeficiencySoil ContaminationEcotoxicologyPhytotoxicityEnvironmental EngineeringNew ZealandVeterinary ScienceEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicine
Abstract Extract Until recently, interest in the biology of selenium was focused on its properties as a naturally-occurring poison in plants grazed by stock in certain problem areas, notably in the western states of North America. The geological distribution of soils bearing seleniferous vegetation, the toxicities of various forms of selenium, including those of its inorganic salts, and the treatment and prevention of selenium poisoning have been dealt with in detail by Rosenfeld and Beath (1964) Allaway, W. H., Moore, D. P., Oldfield, J. E. and Muth, O. H. 1966. Movement of physiological levels of selenium from soils through plants to animals. J. Nutr., 88: 411–418. [Google Scholar], and those aspects will not be considered further in this review.
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