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Electromagnetic radiation and wildlife

Research references are listed, as nearly as possible, by the dates on which the research was first published or brought into the public domain.
Clicking on the title of the research will take you either to a precis of the findings (with further links to the relevant source material) or directly to that source material.

Because many original research papers remain restricted by publishers it is not always possible to link visitors to the original research so the links that we give will normally be to the 'second level' reports from reliable and respected sources such as MedicalNewsToday, WebMD, MedPage Today and Medscape.

If you wish to pursue your own researches beyond these pages, one of our regular contributors, John Scott, has some suggestions for sites which will provide you with reliable and informative material.

 

Exposure to cell phone radiations produces biochemical changes in worker honey bees.
06/11

Electromagnetic waves originating from mobile phones induce the worker bee piping signal that, in natural conditions, either announces the swarming process of the bee colony or is a signal of a disturbed bee colony. 03/10

Does wi-fi damage trees?
11/10

Birds, bees and mankind
(05/09)

Electromagnetic pollution from phone masts and the effect on wildlife
(05/09)

A study is being carried out exposing eggs and tadpoles of the common frog to several mobile phone antennas
12/08

Varroa Mite or Electromagnetic Fields? New Research into the Death of Bees from the German Kompetenzinitiative
03/08

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Concerns Over Potential Radiation Impacts of Cellular Communication Towers on Migratory Birds and
Other Wildlife
- Congressional Staff Briefing (power point)
05/07

Mobile antenna makes calves blind
11/07

Research on possible effects of electromagnetic radiation from mobile phone base stations on birds in the wild
2007

Transmission tower emissions cripple farm operation in Germany
04/97

Articles on wildlife

 

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