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Lead poisoning in wild populations of Marsh Harriers Circus aeruginosus in the Camargue and Charente‐Maritime, France
Author(s) -
PAIN D. J.,
AMIARDTRIQUET C.,
BAVOUX C.,
BURNELEAU G.,
EON L.,
NICOLAUGUILLAUMET P.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
ibis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.933
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1474-919X
pISSN - 0019-1019
DOI - 10.1111/j.1474-919x.1993.tb02109.x
Subject(s) - marsh , hunting season , waterfowl , predation , juvenile , accipitridae , seasonal breeder , netting , biology , zoology , shot (pellet) , ecology , fishery , wetland , habitat , chemistry , demography , population , political science , law , organic chemistry , sociology
Lead poisoning of waterfowl, through the ingestion of spent gunshot, has been recognized as a mortality factor for over a century. However, in Europe relatively little attention has been paid to raptors that may ingest shot embedded in the flesh of prey. The present study examines the incidence of lead poisoning in wild Marsh Harriers Circus aeruginosus trapped at two sites in France, the Camargue and Charente‐Maritime. Eight captive Marsh Harriers (controls) had blood lead (PbB) concentrations of 5.3–10.8 μg per dl. Of 94 wild birds trapped during the winters of 1990/1991 and 1991/1992 either in baited clap traps or in mist nets at night roosts, 29 (31%) had elevated (>30 μg/dl) PbB concentrations and 13 (14%) had concentrations indicative of clinical poisoning (> 60 μg/dl). Similar percentages of birds caught using the two trapping methods had elevated (>30 μg/dl) PbB concentrations. However, clap netting appeared to select for more heavily contaminated birds and for juvenile birds, although the two are not necessarily correlated. In the Camargue, significantly more females than males trapped in clap nets had elevated PbB concentrations. The incidence of shot in regurgitated Marsh Harrier pellets increased significantly between October and December, indicating increased exposure to lead as the hunting season progressed. There appeared to be a parallel increase in PbB concentrations throughout the hunting season, although this could not be clearly demonstrated as sex ratios were different during different sampling periods. Elevated PbB concentrations of harriers in the Camargue are likely to result primarily from the ingestion of shot in the flesh of crippled or unretrieved waterfowl and in Charente‐Maritime, from eating crippled or dead mammals. Other raptors at risk from lead poisoning and solutions to this problem are discussed.

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