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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

Seabirds as monitors of the marine environment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used stable isotopes of N and C from the same feathers used for mercury measurement, a technique that also permits the monitoring of trophic status over time or between regions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine Birds as Sentinels of Environmental Pollution

TL;DR: Marine birds are useful as bioindicators of environmental pollution in estuarine and marine environments because they are often at the top of the food chain, ubiquitous, and many are abundant and common, making collecting possible as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seabirds as Monitors of Mercury in the Marine Environment

TL;DR: Experimental evidence that levels of mercury in seabirds show a dose-response relationship, so that increased contamination of the environment causes a corresponding increase in the level in birds gives a good basis for the use of seabird as monitors of mercury.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why are birds' eggs speckled?

TL;DR: It was found that pigment spots specifically demarcated thinner areas of shell, with darker spots marking yet thinner shell than paler spots, so accounting for the eggshell's characteristic spot patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can excrement and feathers of nestling songbirds be used as biomonitors for heavy metal pollution

TL;DR: It is concluded that excrement of great and blue tit nestlings can be used as a biomonitor for heavy metals (lead, cadmium, arsenic, and copper), whereas feathers appear only to be suitable for lead pollution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Avian Models for Toxicity Testing

TL;DR: The use of birds as test models in experimental and environmental toxicology as related to health effects is reviewed, and an overview of descriptive tests routinely used in wildlife toxicology is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of mercury and selenium in egg components and egg-white proteins

TL;DR: The data illustrate preferential binding of Hg by ovalbumin and of Se by globulin as compared with other major proteins of egg white when compared with a diet containing no added Se.
Journal ArticleDOI

Information needs and priorities for assessing the sensitivity of marine birds to oil spills

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the availability of data for a variety of parameters of seabird biology that are required in modelling efforts, and assign provisional priorities to our information needs.
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