Publication | Closed Access
SELENIUM STATUS OF WHITE-TAILED DEER IN SOUTHERN FLORIDA
28
Citations
14
References
1995
Year
Animal PhysiologyNutritionSelenium DeficiencyAnimal ScienceAnimal NutritionPhysiologySelenium AnalysisVeterinary ScienceVeterinary ResearchSelenium StatusEducationAnimal HealthToxicologyWildlife ManagementEnvironmental ToxicologyPublic HealthWildlife BiologySelenium Dietary Intake
Samples of serum, liver, kidney, and heart were collected for selenium analysis from 174 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in southern Florida (USA), 1984 to 1988, to determine the selenium status of these animals. Deer were obtained from eight sites and classified by five age-class groups. For serum and the three tissues analyzed, selenium concentrations varied significantly (P < 0.001) among sites. Differences between years (P < 0.0004) were found for heart and kidney, age-class (P < 0.004) for kidney and season (P < 0.02) for liver. Low selenium concentrations were evident, in that 75% of all serum samples analyzed contained less than the critical concentration (< 0.06 ppm) by livestock standards, with 50% of serum samples less than 0.03 ppm, evidence of a severe deficiency. Likewise, tissue selenium concentrations (dry basis) were below critical livestock concentrations in 13% of the liver samples (< 0.25 ppm), 36% in kidney (< 3.0 ppm) and 19% in heart (< 0.15 ppm). Based on serum and tissue data, selenium dietary intake was low and may have been deficient for white-tailed deer in southern Florida.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1