Behmke Shannon, Mazik Patricia, Katzner Todd
School of Natural Resources, West Virginia University, PO Box 6125, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USA.
U.S. Geological Survey, WV Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USA.
Environ Monit Assess. 2017 Apr;189(4):139. doi: 10.1007/s10661-017-5855-0. Epub 2017 Mar 1.
Avian scavengers are regularly exposed to anthropogenic lead. Although many studies evaluate lead concentrations of either blood or tissues of lead-poisoned birds, there is comparatively less research on lead burdens of free-flying, apparently healthy individuals and populations. Here, we address this lack of information by assessing lead levels of multiple tissues (femur, liver, kidney, breast muscle, thigh muscle) in free-flying black vultures (n = 98) and turkey vultures (n = 10) collected outside the hunting season. We found only one individual had a soft tissue lead concentration indicative of acute exposure (6.17 mg/kg wet weight in the liver), while the other 107 vultures showed consistent low-level lead exposure throughout the soft tissues. All vultures, however, had femur lead concentrations indicative of chronic lead exposure (black vultures [Formula: see text]31.80 ± 20.42 mg/kg (±SD); turkey vultures 23.21 ± 18.77 mg/kg). Lead levels were similar in all tissues in both vulture species (in each case, p > 0.05) and were generally highest in the femur, intermediate in the kidney and liver, and lowest in the breast and thigh muscle. Despite the consistency of these patterns, there were few strong correlations between lead levels in different tissues within each species, and those correlations that did exist were not consistent between species. Because these vultures were free flying and apparently healthy, the organism-wide lead distributions and between-species trends we report here provide important insight into the sublethal lead burdens that black vultures and turkey vultures commonly carry. Furthermore, these data offer a framework to better interpret and contextualize lead exposure data collected from these and other species.
食腐鸟类经常接触人为来源的铅。尽管许多研究评估了铅中毒鸟类的血液或组织中的铅浓度,但对于自由飞行、看似健康的个体和种群的铅负荷的研究相对较少。在这里,我们通过评估在狩猎季节之外收集的自由飞行的黑兀鹫(n = 98)和火鸡兀鹫(n = 10)的多种组织(股骨、肝脏、肾脏、胸肌、大腿肌肉)中的铅水平来填补这一信息空白。我们发现只有一只个体的软组织铅浓度表明有急性暴露(肝脏中湿重为6.17毫克/千克),而其他107只兀鹫在整个软组织中都显示出持续的低水平铅暴露。然而,所有兀鹫的股骨铅浓度都表明有慢性铅暴露(黑兀鹫[公式:见正文]31.80±20.42毫克/千克(±标准差);火鸡兀鹫23.21±18.77毫克/千克)。两种兀鹫的所有组织中的铅水平相似(在每种情况下,p>0.05),并且通常在股骨中最高,在肾脏和肝脏中居中,在胸肌和大腿肌肉中最低。尽管这些模式具有一致性,但每个物种不同组织中的铅水平之间几乎没有强相关性,而且确实存在的那些相关性在不同物种之间也不一致。由于这些兀鹫是自由飞行且看似健康的,我们在此报告的全生物体铅分布和物种间趋势为黑兀鹫和火鸡兀鹫通常携带的亚致死铅负荷提供了重要见解。此外,这些数据提供了一个框架,以便更好地解释和背景化从这些及其他物种收集的铅暴露数据。