Walker, L.A.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1471-7075; Chaplow, J.S.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8058-8697; Lawlor, A.J.; Pereira, M.G.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3740-0019; Potter, E.D.; Sainsbury, A.W.; Shore, R.F..
2012
Lead (Pb) concentrations in predatory bird livers 2010 and 2011: a Predatory Bird Monitoring Scheme (PBMS) report.
Lancaster, NERC/Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, 12pp.
(CEH Project no. C04288)
Abstract
The Predatory Bird Monitoring Scheme (PBMS; http://pbms.ceh.ac.uk/) is the umbrella project that encompasses the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology’s National Capability contaminant monitoring and surveillance work on avian predators. By monitoring sentinel vertebrate species, the PBMS aims to detect and quantify current and emerging chemical threats to the environment and in particular to vertebrate wildlife.
Lead (Pb) is a highly toxic metal that acts as a non-specific poison affecting all body systems and has no known biological requirement. Sources of Pb in the environment include lead mining, the refining and smelting of lead and other metals, the manufacture and use of alkyl lead fuel additives, and the use of lead ammunition.
The present study is the first two years of a PBMS monitoring programme to quantify the scale of exposure to [and associated risk from] Pb in predatory birds. The aim is to quantify the extent of exposure to lead [as assessed from liver residues] in two predatory bird species, the red kite (Mivus milvus) and the sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus). The red kite is a scavenger and, as such, is particularly at risk from consumption of Pb ammunition in unretrieved game. Sparrowhawks prey predominantly upon live passerine birds that are unlikely to be shot in the UK; likely sources of exposure are diffuse Pb contamination although some individuals may also be exposed to Pb particles ingested by their prey. We also examined the liver Pb isotope ratios in to explore whether they can be used to ascribe likely sources of any Pb detected in the birds.
Red kites had significantly higher Pb concentration than those measured in sparrowhawks but the majority of sparrowhawks and all the red kites had liver Pb concentrations below those thought to cause clinical and sub-clinical adverse effects in Falconiforme species. There was overlap in the liver Pb isotope ratios of red kites and sparrowhawks yet there was evidence of separation between the two species. There was also evidence of overlap with the isotope signature for coal and for Pb shot but the isotope signatures in the bird livers were distinct from
that of petrol Pb. The Pb isotope pattern observed in the red kites and sparrowhawks in the current study may reflect the fact that liver Pb concentrations were low in the small sample of birds that were analysed and may have been a result of exposure to low-level, diffuse contamination.birds.
Red kites had significantly higher Pb concentration than those measured in sparrowhawks but
the majority of sparrowhawks and all the red kites had liver Pb concentrations below those
thought to cause clinical and sub-clinical adverse effects in Falconiforme species. There was
overlap in the liver Pb isotope ratios of red kites and sparrowhawks yet there was evidence of
separation between the two species. There was also evidence of overlap with the isotope
signature for coal and for Pb shot but the isotope signatures in the bird livers were distinct from
that of petrol Pb. The Pb isotope pattern observed in the red kites and sparrowhawks in the
current study may reflect the fact that liver Pb concentrations were low in the small sample of
birds that were analysed and may have been a result of exposure to low-level, diffuse
contamination.
Information
Programmes:
CEH Programmes 2012 > Biogeochemistry
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