Burger J, Kennamer R A, Brisbin I L, Gochfeld M
Nelson Biological Laboratories, Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI), Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854-8082, USA.
Environ Res. 1997 Nov;75(2):173-86. doi: 10.1006/enrs.1997.3789.
Most game birds are found in lower trophic levels, but since such birds are harvested and consumed by humans, there is a particular need to assess their contaminant levels. In this paper, we report concentrations of mercury, lead, cadmium, selenium, manganese, and chromium in the breast feathers, liver, and muscle of mourning doves (Zenaida macroura) collected at a partially drawn-down, contaminated reactor-cooling reservoir (Par Pond) on the Department of Energy's Savannah River Site in South Carolina and at nearby agricultural fields managed as dove hunting areas. We test the hypothesis that the levels in doves are not harmful to either dove populations or humans. We also tested the simultaneous effects of collection location, year (1992, 1993), and dove age-class (hatch-year vs after hatch-year) on heavy metal and selenium levels. For all three tissues, mercury levels were nondetectable at all locations. Lead was highest in tissues from agricultural fields with prior histories of dove hunting activities. Doves at those fields were likely ingesting lead shot to a greater degree than at the recently drawn-down reservoir which was closed to public access and hunting. For other metals, Par Pond doves had equally high or higher tissue levels. For all metals, levels in doves from South Carolina were generally within the lower range of those reported in the literature, suggesting that these metals were likely to pose no health problems to these doves. Except for lead and selenium, metal levels in dove muscle that we observed were well below reference metal doses established for human intake. Lead and selenium, at the levels described here, would only be a problem if a child (not an adult) ate 120 g of dove meat every day of the year. Thus, we conclude that meat from these doves, if consumed by hunters, would not pose a risk.
大多数猎禽处于较低的营养级,但由于此类鸟类会被人类捕获并食用,因此特别需要评估它们的污染物水平。在本文中,我们报告了在南卡罗来纳州能源部萨凡纳河工厂一个部分干涸的受污染反应堆冷却蓄水池(帕尔池塘)以及附近作为猎鸽区管理的农田中采集的哀鸽(泽纳ida macroura)胸羽、肝脏和肌肉中汞、铅、镉、硒、锰和铬的浓度。我们检验了以下假设:哀鸽体内的这些物质水平对鸽群或人类均无害。我们还测试了采集地点、年份(1992年、1993年)以及鸽龄组(当年孵化的幼鸽与次年孵化的幼鸽)对重金属和硒水平的同时影响。对于所有三种组织,所有地点的汞含量均未检出。在有过猎鸽活动历史的农田中采集的组织中铅含量最高。与最近干涸且禁止公众进入和狩猎的蓄水池相比,这些农田中的鸽子摄入铅弹的程度可能更高。对于其他金属,帕尔池塘鸽子的组织水平同样较高或更高。对于所有金属,南卡罗来纳州鸽子体内的含量通常处于文献报道的较低范围内,这表明这些金属可能不会对这些鸽子造成健康问题。除了铅和硒,我们观察到的鸽肉中的金属含量远低于为人类摄入量设定的参考金属剂量。在此所述水平下,只有当儿童(而非成年人)一年中每天食用120克鸽肉时,铅和硒才会成为问题。因此,我们得出结论,猎人食用这些鸽子的肉不会构成风险。