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Book ChapterDOI

Birds as monitors of pollutants

Robert W. Furness
- pp 86-143
TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that birds may reflect pollutant hazards to humans better than do most invertebrates, since they are high in food chains and have more complex physiology.
Abstract
Several authors of books on the monitoring of pollution have advocated the use of animals as monitors in terrestrial and aquatic environments (e.g. Phillips, 1980; Schubert, 1985). Such studies tend to emphasize the use of sedentary invertebrate animals as biomonitors. By comparison, birds suffer from several apparent drawbacks. They are mobile, so pollutants will be picked up from a wide, often ill-defined, area; they are long-lived, so pollutant burdens may be integrated in some complex way over time; and they have more complex physiology, and so may regulate pollutant levels better then invertebrates. Furthermore, birds tend to be more difficult to sample, and killing birds may be unacceptable for conservation or ethical reasons. However, some of these characteristics may at times be positively advantegeous. Integrating pollutant levels over greater areas or timescales or over food webs, may be useful, provided that species are chosen carefully. Less sampling may be necessary if birds can reflect pollutant levels in the whole ecosystem or over a broad area. In addition, since they are high in food chains, birds may reflect pollutant hazards to humans better than do most invertebrates. It is also significant that birds are extremely popular animals with the general public, so pollutant hazards to them are likely to receive greater attention than threats to invertebrates.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Organochlorine Residues in Hunted Wild Mallards in the Ebro Delta, Spain

TL;DR: Although it has an almost worldwide distribution, few studies have been published in the last 20 years using wild mallard as sentinel species of organochlorine pollutants either in Europe or in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential Effects of Mercury on Threatened California Black Rails

TL;DR: A substantial portion of SFB black rail populations may be at risk of reproductive effects due to MeHg contamination, as 32–78% of feathers and <10% of blood samples exceeded no observed adverse effect levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bird Skins in Museum Collections: Are they Suitable as Indicators of Environmental Metal Load after Conservation Procedures?

TL;DR: The value of bird skins as indicators of environmental metal load is affected by this treatment and it is recommended that the conservation techniques used at museums should be reconsidered if skins are intended for specimen banking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temporal trends of mercury, organochlorines and PCBs in northern gannet (Morus bassanus) eggs from Bonaventure Island, Gulf of St. Lawrence, 1969-2009.

TL;DR: Trophic level or foraging area had a negligible influence on temporal trends of contaminants in northern gannet eggs, and PCBs, most organochlorines and mercury showed decreasing trends.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Population Ecology of Raptors

TL;DR: Relationship between the sexes dispersion breeding density winter density problems concerning nest-sites breeding strategies breeding rates behaviour in the breeding season fidelity to breeding areas movements mortality human persecution DDT and other organo-chlorines other pollutants and pesticides conservation management breeding from captive birds scientific names of raptors.
Book

Population Ecology of Raptors

Ian Newton
TL;DR: The relationship between the sexes dispersion breeding density winter density problems concerning nest-sites breeding strategies breeding rates behaviour in the breeding season fidelity to breeding areas movements mortality human persecution DDT and other organo-chlorines other pollutants and pesticides conservation management breeding from captive birds scientific names of raptors.
Book

Cadmium in the environment

Lars Friberg
TL;DR: In this paper, a review on cadmium in the environment has been performed under a contract between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Environmental Hygiene of the Karolinska Institute, Sweden.
Journal ArticleDOI

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