Amphibian and Wetland Health Contaminants and Toxicology, Oil Sands Region
The health of individual amphibians, amphibian populations, and their wetland habitats are monitored in the oil sands region and at reference locations. Contaminants assessments are done at all sites. Amphibians developing near oil sands activities may be exposed to concentrations of oil sands-related contaminants, through air emissions as well as water contamination. The focus of field investigations is to evaluate the health of wild amphibian populations at varying distances from oil sands operations. Wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus) populations are being studied in Alberta, Saskatchewan and the Northwest Territories in order to examine the relationship of proximity to oil sands activities and to prevalence of infectious diseases, malformation rates, endocrine and stress responses, genotoxicity, and concentrations of heavy metals, naphthenic acids and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
Metadata
Date Created
2012-10-02
Date Published
2014-10-24
Temporal Coverage
2012-01-01 - Present
Access in last 30 days
44
All time access
186
Source(s) and Citation
Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada. (2014-10-24). Amphibian and Wetland Health Contaminants and Toxicology, Oil Sands Region. Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada. https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change.html
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Data resources
Amphibian and Wetland Health Contaminants and Toxicology Data (English)
Type:
Dataset
Format:
CSV
Languages:
English
Amphibian and Wetland Health Contaminants and Toxicology Data (French)
Type:
Dataset
Format:
CSV
Languages:
French
Related keywords
oil sands, monitoring, biodiversity, contaminants, amphibians, observation/measurement, oil sands, game (wildlife), nature and biodiversity - contaminants, protect species well-being, assess status of species, prairie - alberta (ab), science and technology branch, wildlife and landscape science, 1.3.2. ecosystem assessment and approaches, unclassified
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