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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

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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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mercury concentrations in wetlands associated with coal-fired power plants.

TL;DR: The results of the current study suggest that coal-fired power plants are not significantly affecting mercury concentrations in surrounding wetlands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feathers of white stork Ciconia ciconia chicks in North‐Eastern Greece, as indicators of geographical variation in mercury contamination

TL;DR: Variations in mercury contamination of ecosystems were assessed among areas of northeast Greece by sampling and analysing feathers of White Stork chicks, and variation in mercury concentrations among localities seemed to relate to pollution of aquatic rather than terrestrial foods of storks.
Dissertation

Birds as Bioindicators of Pollution in Aquatic and Terrestrial Environments

TL;DR: In this paper, the use of birds as bioindicators of metal pollution in two different scenarios of contamination was studied: one that takes place in an aquatic environment, the Ebro river basin, and a second that occurs in a terrestrial environment, Bolivian Andes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mercury distribution and accumulation in typical wetland ecosystems of Sanjiang Plain, Northeast China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors determined the total mercury in soil, water, plant, insects, fishes and bird feathers in typical wetland ecosystems in the Sanjiang Plain, Northeast China, and found that total mercury concentrations in soils of Deyeuxia angustifolia wetland and Carex lascarpa wetland are 0.046 mg/ kg and 0.063 mg/kg, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mercury in tadpoles collected from remote alpine sites in the southern Sierra Nevada mountains, California, USA

TL;DR: Amphibians in alpine wetlands of the Sierra Nevada mountains comprise key components of an aquatic–terrestrial food chain, and mercury contamination is a concern because concentrations in fish from this region exceed thresholds of risk to piscivorous wildlife.
References
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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.