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Poison from illegal pot farms said a risk
by Staff Writers
Davis, Calif. (UPI) Jul 16, 2012


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Rat poison used by people illegally growing marijuana in remote areas of California may be killing the fisher, a rare weasel-like carnivore, researchers say.

Researchers from the University of California, Davis, along with the Wildlife Conservation Society and other partner institutions, said they've found commercial rodenticide in dead fishers in Humboldt County near Redwood National Park and in the southern Sierra Nevada in and around Yosemite National Park.

Illegal marijuana farms in remote areas where fishers live are considered a likely source as some marijuana growers apply the poisons to keep a wide range of animals away from their crops.

Fishers are likely exposed to the poison when eating animals that have already ingested it, the conservation society said in a release Monday.

Fishers in California, Oregon and Washington have been declared a candidate for listing under the federal Endangered Species Act.

Other species, including martens, spotted owls and Sierra Nevada red foxes may also be at risk from poisons, researchers said.

"If fishers are at risk, these other species are most likely at risk because they share the same prey and the same habitat," UC Davis researcher Mourad Gabriel said in a university release.

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People are being exposed to higher levels of the substitute for BPA in cash register thermal paper receipts and many of the other products that engendered concerns about the health effects of bisphenol A, according to a new study. Believed to be the first analysis of occurrence of bisphenol S (BPS) in thermal and recycled paper and paper currency, the report appears in ACS' journal Environmental ... read more


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