Henny Charles J, Kaiser James L, Grove Robert A, Bentley V Raymond, Elliott John E
USGS, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
Environ Monit Assess. 2003 Jun;84(3):275-315. doi: 10.1023/a:1023396815092.
A migratory population of 78 pairs of Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) nesting along the Willamette River in western Oregon was studied in 1993. The study was designed to determine contaminant concentrations in eggs, contaminant concentrations in fish species predominant in the Ospreys diet, and Biomagnification Factors (BMFs) of contaminants from fish species eaten to Osprey eggs. Ten Osprey eggs and 25 composite samples of fish (3 species) were used to evaluate organochlorine (OC) pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs), and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs). Mercury was also analyzed in fish. Geometric mean residues in Osprey eggs were judged low, e.g., DDE 2.3 microg g(-1) wet weight (ww), sigma PCBs 0.69 microg g(-1), 2,3,7,8-TCDD 2.3 ng kg(-1), and generally well below known threshold values for adverse effects on productivity, and the population was increasing. Osprey egg residue data presented by River Mile (RM) are discussed, e.g., higher PCDDs were generally found immediately downstream of paper mills and eggs from the Willamette River had significantly elevated PCBs and PCDDs compared to reference eggs collected nearby in the Cascade Mountains. Prey remains at nest sites indicated that the Largescale Sucker (Catostomus macrocheilus) and Northern Pikeminnow (Ptychocheilus oregonensis) accounted for an estimated 90.1% of the biomass in the Osprey diet, and composite samples of these two species were collected from different sampling sites throughout the study area for contaminant analyses. With the large percentage of the fish biomass in the Osprey diet sampled for contaminants (and fish eaten by Ospreys similar in size to those chemically analyzed), and fish contaminant concentrations weighted by biomass intake, a mean BMF was estimated from fish to Osprey eggs for the large series of contaminants. BMFs ranged from no biomagnification (0.42) for 2,3,7,8-TCDF to 174 for OCDD. Our findings for the migratory Osprey were compared to BMFs for the resident Herring Gull (Larus argentatus), and differences are discussed. We believe a BMF approach provides some basic understanding of relationships between contaminant burdens in prey species of fish-eating birds and contaminants incorporated into their eggs, and may prove useful in understanding sources of contaminants in migratory species although additional studies are needed.
1993年,对在俄勒冈州西部沿威拉米特河筑巢的78对鹗(鹗属)迁徙种群进行了研究。该研究旨在确定鸟蛋中的污染物浓度、鹗食谱中主要鱼类的污染物浓度,以及从所食鱼类到鹗蛋的污染物生物放大因子(BMF)。使用10枚鹗蛋和25个鱼类(3种)混合样本评估有机氯(OC)农药、多氯联苯(PCBs)、多氯二苯并对二恶英(PCDDs)和多氯二苯并呋喃(PCDFs)。还对鱼类中的汞进行了分析。鹗蛋中的几何平均残留量被判定为较低,例如,滴滴伊为2.3微克/克湿重(ww),多氯联苯总和为0.69微克/克,2,3,7,8-四氯二苯并对二恶英为2.3纳克/千克,总体上远低于已知的对繁殖力产生不利影响的阈值,且该种群数量正在增加。讨论了按河流英里数(RM)呈现的鹗蛋残留数据,例如,通常在造纸厂下游立即发现较高的多氯二苯并对二恶英,与在喀斯喀特山脉附近采集的对照蛋相比,威拉米特河的蛋中多氯联苯和多氯二苯并对二恶英显著升高。巢穴处的猎物残骸表明,大口吸盘鱼(大口盘唇鱼)和北梭鲈(俄勒冈突吻鱼)估计占鹗食谱中生物量的90.1%,在整个研究区域的不同采样点采集了这两个物种的混合样本进行污染物分析。由于鹗食谱中很大比例的鱼类生物量被采样用于污染物分析(且鹗所食鱼类的大小与化学分析的鱼类相似),并根据生物量摄入量对鱼类污染物浓度进行加权,因此针对大量污染物估算了从鱼类到鹗蛋的平均生物放大因子。生物放大因子范围从2,3,7,8-四氯二苯并呋喃的无生物放大(0.42)到八氯二苯并对二恶英的174。将我们对迁徙鹗的研究结果与常驻银鸥(银鸥属)的生物放大因子进行了比较,并讨论了差异。我们认为生物放大因子方法为了解食鱼鸟类猎物物种中的污染物负荷与它们蛋中所含污染物之间的关系提供了一些基本认识,并且尽管还需要更多研究,但可能有助于理解迁徙物种中的污染物来源。