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The use of 1080 poison (sodium fluoroacetate) is a contentious issue.
The effectiveness of sodium fluoroacetate as a rodenticide was reported in 1942.
Sodium fluoroacetate is used in the United States to kill coyotes.
Sodium fluoroacetate occurs in all parts of the plant and is responsible for the toxic effects shown.
Sodium fluoroacetate is imported in a raw form from the United States.
Few animals or people have been treated successfully after significant sodium fluoroacetate ingestions.
One is sodium fluoroacetate, a fine white powder derived from pesticide."
The sodium salt, sodium fluoroacetate is used as a pesticide.
Sodium fluoroacetate is used as a pesticide, especially for mammalian pest species.
Different tammar populations have varying levels of resistance to sodium fluoroacetate.
Worldwide, New Zealand is the largest user of sodium fluoroacetate.
Two commonly used poisons for rabbit control are sodium fluoroacetate ("1080") and pindone.
One common means of trying to stop the foxes is to use meat baits laced with sodium fluoroacetate.
Synthetic sodium fluoroacetate has been used as an insecticide but is especially effective against mammalian pests.
In this synthesis, he reacted sodium fluoroacetate with phosphorus pentachloride to obtain the desired compound.
The Department of Conservation has plans to drop sodium fluoroacetate (1080) laced poison bait to control the rabbit numbers.
Sub-lethal doses of sodium fluoroacetate may cause damage to tissues with high energy needs - in particular, the brain, gonads, heart, lungs and fetus.
It is used as a solvent for organic synthesis and as an intermediate in the production of pesticides (such as sodium fluoroacetate).
Sodium fluoroacetate, commonly known as 1080, is used in new Zealand to control animal pests, specifically the possum which threatens biodiversity and carries tuberculosus.
Between the 1920s and 1950s scientists synthetically developed a poison called sodium fluoroacetate (commonly called 1080 poison), for use in biological warfare.
Sodium fluoroacetate is the organofluorine chemical compound with the formula FCHCONa.
In theory, glyceryl monoacetate supplies acetate ions to allow continuation of cellular respiration which the sodium fluoroacetate had disrupted.
The use of 1080, a pesticide using sodium fluoroacetate, is a contentious issue in New Zealand, with the majority of the debate occurring between conservationists and hunters.
In Australia, sodium fluoroacetate was first used in rabbit control programmes in the early 1950s, where it is regarded as having "a long history of proven effectiveness and safety".
This suggests that tammars originated in South Australia and developed a resistance to sodium fluoroacetate when they reached Western Australia, where the poison is found in plants.