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456843 
Journal Article 
Element levels in snakes in South Carolina: Differences between a control site and exposed site on the savannah river site 
Burger, J; Murray, S; Gaines, KF; Novak, JM; Punshon, T; Dixon, C; Gochfeld, M 
2006 
Yes 
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
ISSN: 0167-6369
EISSN: 1573-2959 
112 
1-3 
35-52 
English 
Levels of 18 elements, including lead, mercury, selenium, and uranium, were examined in three species of snakes from an exposed and reference site on the Department of Energy's Savannah River Site in South Carolina. We tested the hypotheses that there were no differences as a function of species, and there were no difference between the exposed and control site for blood and muscle (tail) samples for banded water snake (Nerodia fasciata), brown water snake (N. taxispilota) and cottonmouth (Akistrodon piscivorous). The banded water snakes collected were significantly smaller than the other two species. For blood, there were significant species differences only for barium, copper, selenium, uranium and zinc, while for muscle tissue there were significant interspecific differences in aluminum, arsenic, barium, cobalt, cesium, copper, iron, lead, mercury, manganese, strontium, vanadium and zinc, suggesting that muscle tissue in the tail is a better indicator of potential interspecific differences. It is also easier logistically to collect tail tissue than blood. Where one species had significantly higher levels than the other species in muscle tissue levels, cottonmouth had higher levels of five elements (aluminum, cobalt, lead, mercury, vanadium), brown water snake had two (lead, strontium), and banded water snake had only barium. There were few significant differences between the control and reference site for levels of blood, but several for muscle tissue. All three species had significantly higher levels of arsenic and manganese at Tim's Branch than the reference site, and nickel and uranium were significantly higher for banded watersnake and cottonmouth, the larger species. Individuals with high exposure of one element were exposed to high levels of other elements. 
bioindicators; cottonmouth; elements; heavy metals; water snakes; environmental contaminants; fish; radiocesium; raccoons; reptiles; mercury; metals 
IRIS
• Arsenic (Inorganic)
     1. Literature
          PubMed
          Toxline, TSCATS, & DART
          Web of Science
• Inorganic Arsenic (7440-38-2) [Final 2025]
     1. Initial Lit Search
          PubMed
          WOS
          ToxNet
     4. Considered through Oct 2015
     6. Cluster Filter through Oct 2015
• Methylmercury
     Literature Search: Jan 1998 - March 2017
          Food Studies
          Web of Science
     ADME Search: Jan 1990 - Nov 2018
          Results with mercury
               PubMed
• Uranium
     WOS
     Merged reference set
     Secondary Refinement
          Retained for manual screening
     Additional Resource
          Ecosystem effects
     Uranium Literature Search Update 3/2017
          Toxnet
NAAQS
• ISA-Lead (2013 Final Project Page)
     Considered
     Cited
          1st Draft
          2nd Draft
          3rd Draft
          Final
     Eco/Welfare
          Aquatic Effects