APES vs Sentinel Species - a podcast by Jessie Howington

from 2020-05-29T18:14:57

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Voice acting by Emily and Trevor Tupper. Writing, directing, and producing by Emily Tupper.


Yant, W. P. (1930). The response of Japanese waltzing mice and canaries to carbon monoxide and to atmospheres deficient in oxygen (Vol. 3040). United States Bureau of Mines.


Burrell, G. A., Seibert, F. M., & Robertson, I. W. (1914). Relative effects of carbon monoxide on small animals (Vol. 62). US Government Printing Office.


Van der Schalie, W. H., Gardner Jr, H. S., Bantle, J. A., De Rosa, C. T., Finch, R. A., Reif, J. S., ... & Stokes, W. S. (1999). Animals as sentinels of human health hazards of environmental chemicals. Environmental health perspectives, 107(4), 309-315.


Van der Steen, J. J., de Kraker, J., & Grotenhuis, T. (2015). Assessment of the potential of honeybees (Apis mellifera L.) in biomonitoring of air pollution by cadmium, lead and vanadium. Journal of Environmental Protection, 6(02), 96.


Milan, M., Coppe, A., Reinhardt, R., Cancela, L. M., Leite, R. B., Saavedra, C., ... & Bargelloni, L. (2011). Transcriptome sequencing and microarray development for the Manila clam, Ruditapes philippinarum: genomic tools for environmental monitoring. BMC genomics, 12(1), 234.


Bossart, G. D. (2011). Marine mammals as sentinel species for oceans and human health. Veterinary pathology, 48(3), 676-690.




Notes, planning, script, and quotes used can be found here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1co-IGshiTgcFVHZydftgjqVzfZYmzc6S5eNJxLZyMTg/edit?usp=sharing 

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