Table 4 from Concentration of Potentially Toxic Elements in Farmed Fallow Deer Antlers Depending on Diet and Age | Semantic Scholar (2024)

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@article{Tajchman2023ConcentrationOP, title={Concentration of Potentially Toxic Elements in Farmed Fallow Deer Antlers Depending on Diet and Age}, author={Katarzyna Tajchman and Aleksandra Ukalska‐Jaruga and Fracisco Ceacero and Paweł Janiszewski and Monika Pecio}, journal={Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI}, year={2023}, volume={13}, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:265191978}}
  • K. Tajchman, Aleksandra Ukalska‐Jaruga, M. Pecio
  • Published in Animals 1 November 2023
  • Environmental Science, Agricultural and Food Sciences

Simple Summary The rapidly growing antlers of farmed fallow deer (Dama dama) reflect the composition of their diet, and furthermore, the risk of toxic substances. The concentration of eight potentially toxic elements, PTE (Cd, Pb, As, Ba, Ni, Sr, La, Ce), was examined in the proximal, middle, and distal positions of the antlers and in the winter food and pasture food that the animals consumed during the increase in individual antler fragments depending on the age. The research was conducted on…

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49 References

Concentration of Macroelements and Trace Elements in Farmed Fallow Deer Antlers Depending on Age
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The obtained results confirm that the antlers’ chemical composition changes with age, also changing the Ca:P ratio.

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Extensive breeding of farmed cervids, similarly to other livestock, affects the vegetation of grasslands in different seasons. For this reason, the impact of the rotational grazing of fallow deer on

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The study indicates that bone and teeth of the European roe deer can be used as a valid indicator of environmental pollution and expects that elevated exposure of field roe Deer to environmental pollution can have negative consequences for wild populations of this species, as well as for the consumers of venison.

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In males 2 years old, within age, the heavier the male and the better the body condition at the start of antler growth, the greater the investment in antlers, and antler weight relative to skeleton weight is a good method to assess antler investment.

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The value of roe deer as an accumulative bioindicator of environmental pollution with heavy metals is clearly confirmed and the possibility that animals are being exposed to contaminants that would not have expected from other data is demonstrated.

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Feeding programs to obtain good antler growth involve recognising the periods when juvenile stags are susceptible to under-nutrition, and providing sufficient nutrients to re-establish adequate body condition in adult stags between the end of the rut and antler casting.

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    Table 4 from Concentration of Potentially Toxic Elements in Farmed Fallow Deer Antlers Depending on Diet and Age | Semantic Scholar (9)

    Table 4. Relationship between the concentration of potentially toxic elements on age, body mass and antler mass of farmed fallow deer.

    Published in Animals 2023

    Concentration of Potentially Toxic Elements in Farmed Fallow Deer Antlers Depending on Diet and Age

    K. TajchmanAleksandra Ukalska‐JarugaF. CeaceroP. JaniszewskiM. Pecio

    Figure 6 of 8

    Table 4 from Concentration of Potentially Toxic Elements in Farmed Fallow Deer Antlers Depending on Diet and Age | Semantic Scholar (2024)
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