Department of Agriculture, Nutrition, and Veterinary Sciences, University of Nevada, Reno, USA.
Department of Agriculture, Nutrition, and Veterinary Sciences, University of Nevada, Reno, USA.
Environ Pollut. 2017 Nov;230:530-539. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.07.008. Epub 2017 Jul 10.
The Deepwater Horizon oil spill was the largest in U.S. history, contaminating thousands of miles of coastal habitat and affecting the lives of many avian species. The Gulf of Mexico is a critical bird migration route area and migrants that were oiled but did not suffer mortality as a direct result of the spill faced unpredictable fates. This study utilized homing pigeons as a surrogate species for migratory birds to investigate the effects a single low level external oiling event has on the flight performance and behavior of birds flying repeated 161 km flights. Data from GPS data loggers showed that lightly oiled pigeons changed their flight paths, increased their flight durations by 2.6 fold, increased their flight distances by 28 km and subsequently decreased their route efficiencies. Oiled birds also exhibited reduced rate of weight gain between flights. Our data suggest that contaminated birds surviving the oil spill may have experienced flight impairment and reduced refueling abilities, likely reducing overall migration speed. Our findings contribute new information on how oil spills affect avian species, as the effects of oil on the flight behavior of long distance free-flying birds have not been previously described.
深水地平线石油泄漏事件是美国历史上最大的一次石油泄漏事件,污染了数千英里的沿海栖息地,影响了许多鸟类的生活。墨西哥湾是鸟类迁徙的重要路线区域,那些被石油污染但没有直接因泄漏而死亡的候鸟面临着不可预测的命运。本研究利用家鸽作为候鸟的替代物种,调查单次低水平外部石油污染事件对重复飞行 161 公里的鸟类的飞行性能和行为的影响。来自 GPS 数据记录仪的数据表明,轻度污染的鸽子改变了它们的飞行路线,飞行时间增加了 2.6 倍,飞行距离增加了 28 公里,飞行效率相应降低。受污染的鸟类在两次飞行之间的体重增加率也有所下降。我们的数据表明,在石油泄漏中幸存下来的受污染鸟类可能经历了飞行障碍和减少的加油能力,这可能降低了整体迁徙速度。我们的研究结果提供了有关石油泄漏如何影响鸟类物种的新信息,因为此前尚未描述石油对远距离自由飞行鸟类的飞行行为的影响。