scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Mercury in Feathers of Little Egret Egretta garzetta and Night Heron Nycticorax nycticorax Chicks and in Their Prey in the Axios Delta, Greece

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Night heron chick feathers, freshwater fish and dragonfly larvae could be used to monitor mercury contamination in this region, but use of bird feathers alone could give misleading results if changes in diet occurred.
Abstract
Mercury concentrations were measured in feathers of little egret and night heron chicks and in their prey in the Axios Delta, Greece. Significantly higher concentrations occurred in night heron than in little egret in 1993. In the night heron the mercury content of feathers was negatively correlated to the size of chicks, possibly due to inhibition of growth. Mercury concentrations were higher than reported for heron feathers in seriously polluted sites in North America and Japan, but the toxic hazard is unclear. Diets differed considerably between the two species due to use of different foraging habitats and this seems responsible for different mercury contents of feathers. Mercury concentrations in the pumpkinseed sunfish Lepomis gibbosus, goldfish Carrassius auratus, and in dragonfly Odonata larvae were the highest among the prey categories. Frogs and water beetles Dytiscidae had moderate concentrations whereas saltwater fish and terrestrial prey had very low mercury concentrations. The implication is that the deltaic marshes are the habitat most polluted with mercury. Night heron chick feathers, freshwater fish and dragonfly larvae could be used to monitor mercury contamination in this region, but use of bird feathers alone could give misleading results if changes in diet occurred.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

Predator-Prey Interactions of Dytiscids

TL;DR: Given the prominent role of dytiscids in freshwater food webs, future research should be aimed at improving basic knowledge of dyTiscid feeding ecology, using dytISCids to test predator-prey and trophic theory, and examining how environmental change affects the role of Dytiscid as predators of vector and nuisance species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heavy-metal levels in feathers of cattle egret and their surrounding environment: a case of the Punjab Province, Pakistan.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the potential of feathers of cattle egret to be used as a biomonitor for the local heavy-metal contamination in Punjab Province and for Alarming levels of Cr, Pb, and Cd in feathers that were above threshold levels that may affect cattle egrets flighting capacity and reproduction, thus leading to their population decline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mercury in feathers of Squacco Heron (Ardeola ralloides) chicks in relation to age, hatching order, growth, and sampling dates.

TL;DR: Feather collection from Squacco Heron nestlings late in the breeding season seems to be an appropriate method for biomonitoring mercury pollution in the Axios Delta.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mercury and drought along the lower Carson river, Nevada: III. Effects on blood and organ biochemistry and histopathology of snowy egrets and Black-crowned night-herons on Lahontan reservoir, 2002-2006

TL;DR: Hg-associated effects related to the immune system included alterations in specific white blood cells and lymphoid depletion in the bursa that were correlated with blood and tissue Hg that may have exacerbated Hg-related effects as reported previously for overall productivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary uptake, biodistribution, and depuration of microplastics in the freshwater diving beetle Cybister japonicus: Effects on predacious behavior.

TL;DR: This is the first report of the trophic transfer of MPs from fish to dytiscid species, which helps clarify the effects and mechanisms of MPs in freshwater systems.
References
More filters
Book

Freshwater fishes of Canada

W. B. Scott
Journal ArticleDOI

The biogeochemical cycling of elemental mercury: Anthropogenic influences☆

TL;DR: A review of the available information on global Hg cycling shows that the atmosphere and surface ocean are in rapid equilibrium; the evasion of Hg0 from the oceans is balanced by the total oceanic deposition of hg(II) from the atmosphere as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The chronic toxicity of aluminium, cadmium, mercury, and lead in birds: a review.

TL;DR: It is concluded that significant physiological and biochemical responses to such exposure conditions occur at dietary metal concentrations insufficient to cause signs of overt toxicity, particularly important are reproductive effects which include decreased egg production, decreased hatchability, and increased hatchling mortality.
BookDOI

Birds as monitors of environmental change

TL;DR: In this paper, birds are used as indicators of change in water quality and change in marine prey stocks in the tropics of the world, and as monitors of radionuclide contamination.