Radio-tracking systems emit pulsed waves that could affect the health and alter the orientation of animals by wildlife biologist Alfonso Balmori (2024), published in the Journal for Nature Conservation, reviewed with the latest scientific evidence and called for a better understanding of non-thermal effects of RF tracking systems to improve conservation management practice. Read it here
Effects of 700 and 3500 MHz 5G radiofrequency exposure on developing zebrafish embryos published in Science of the Total Environment by Monica Torres-Ruiz et al., (2024) found the exposure led to "specific organ morphological effects, and behavioral effects in activity, anxiety-like behavior, and habituation that lasted in larvae exposed during the early embryonic period." Read more here
Genetic profiling of rat gliomas and cardiac schwannomas from life-time radiofrequency radiation exposure study using a targeted next-generation sequencing gene panel published in PLOS ONE by scientists of the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and Italian Ramazzini Institute found that the gliomas and cardiac schwannomas in rats resulting from lifetime exposure to low dose far field RF radiation (the Ramazzini study mimicking cell tower/base station exposures) are morphologically similar to low grade human gliomas and that about 25% of the mutations seen in these tumors have corresponding alterations in homologs of human cancer genes. Read more here
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