Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina

Poisoning of waterfowl due to ingestion of lead pellets is a worldwide problem in areas that are subject to hunting. No studies have assessed exposure of waterbirds to this heavy metal in Argentina, in spite of intense hunting activity, and the fact that only lead ammunition is commercially available. The objective of this study was to evaluate duck exposure to lead by examining gizzard and bone samples collected from 30 wild ducks, 16 Rosy-billed Pochard (Netta peposaca), and 14 Fulvous Whistling-Duck (Dendrocygna bicolor), provided by hunters in northern Santa Fe Province, Argentina, in July 2007. Radiographs, followed by dissection of the gizzards, showed that 31% of the Rosy-billed Pochards and 29% of the Fulvous Whistling-Ducks had ingested lead pellets (between one and four per animal). Lead in bone was found at concentrations associated with detrimental health effects. In spite of the small number of samples in this project, these results indicate high levels of lead exposure (both recent and chronic) in these species. This is the first report of a problem in Argentina that could represent a threat to the health and conservation of native aquatic species, their predators, and the wetlands they inhabit.

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Main Authors: Ferreyra, Hebe autor/a, Romano, Marcelo M. autor/a, Uhart, Marcela autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Patos, Netta peposaca, Dendrocygna bicolor, Intoxicación plúmbica, Contaminación, Caza, Humedales, Cultivos de arroz,
Online Access:http://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.7589/0090-3558-45.3.823
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:39583
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:395832021-11-05T12:28:01ZRecent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina Ferreyra, Hebe autor/a Romano, Marcelo M. autor/a Uhart, Marcela autor/a textengPoisoning of waterfowl due to ingestion of lead pellets is a worldwide problem in areas that are subject to hunting. No studies have assessed exposure of waterbirds to this heavy metal in Argentina, in spite of intense hunting activity, and the fact that only lead ammunition is commercially available. The objective of this study was to evaluate duck exposure to lead by examining gizzard and bone samples collected from 30 wild ducks, 16 Rosy-billed Pochard (Netta peposaca), and 14 Fulvous Whistling-Duck (Dendrocygna bicolor), provided by hunters in northern Santa Fe Province, Argentina, in July 2007. Radiographs, followed by dissection of the gizzards, showed that 31% of the Rosy-billed Pochards and 29% of the Fulvous Whistling-Ducks had ingested lead pellets (between one and four per animal). Lead in bone was found at concentrations associated with detrimental health effects. In spite of the small number of samples in this project, these results indicate high levels of lead exposure (both recent and chronic) in these species. This is the first report of a problem in Argentina that could represent a threat to the health and conservation of native aquatic species, their predators, and the wetlands they inhabit.Poisoning of waterfowl due to ingestion of lead pellets is a worldwide problem in areas that are subject to hunting. No studies have assessed exposure of waterbirds to this heavy metal in Argentina, in spite of intense hunting activity, and the fact that only lead ammunition is commercially available. The objective of this study was to evaluate duck exposure to lead by examining gizzard and bone samples collected from 30 wild ducks, 16 Rosy-billed Pochard (Netta peposaca), and 14 Fulvous Whistling-Duck (Dendrocygna bicolor), provided by hunters in northern Santa Fe Province, Argentina, in July 2007. Radiographs, followed by dissection of the gizzards, showed that 31% of the Rosy-billed Pochards and 29% of the Fulvous Whistling-Ducks had ingested lead pellets (between one and four per animal). Lead in bone was found at concentrations associated with detrimental health effects. In spite of the small number of samples in this project, these results indicate high levels of lead exposure (both recent and chronic) in these species. This is the first report of a problem in Argentina that could represent a threat to the health and conservation of native aquatic species, their predators, and the wetlands they inhabit.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorPatosNetta peposacaDendrocygna bicolorIntoxicación plúmbicaContaminaciónCazaHumedalesCultivos de arrozDisponible en líneaJournal of Wildlife Diseaseshttp://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.7589/0090-3558-45.3.823Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Patos
Netta peposaca
Dendrocygna bicolor
Intoxicación plúmbica
Contaminación
Caza
Humedales
Cultivos de arroz
Patos
Netta peposaca
Dendrocygna bicolor
Intoxicación plúmbica
Contaminación
Caza
Humedales
Cultivos de arroz
spellingShingle Patos
Netta peposaca
Dendrocygna bicolor
Intoxicación plúmbica
Contaminación
Caza
Humedales
Cultivos de arroz
Patos
Netta peposaca
Dendrocygna bicolor
Intoxicación plúmbica
Contaminación
Caza
Humedales
Cultivos de arroz
Ferreyra, Hebe autor/a
Romano, Marcelo M. autor/a
Uhart, Marcela autor/a
Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina
description Poisoning of waterfowl due to ingestion of lead pellets is a worldwide problem in areas that are subject to hunting. No studies have assessed exposure of waterbirds to this heavy metal in Argentina, in spite of intense hunting activity, and the fact that only lead ammunition is commercially available. The objective of this study was to evaluate duck exposure to lead by examining gizzard and bone samples collected from 30 wild ducks, 16 Rosy-billed Pochard (Netta peposaca), and 14 Fulvous Whistling-Duck (Dendrocygna bicolor), provided by hunters in northern Santa Fe Province, Argentina, in July 2007. Radiographs, followed by dissection of the gizzards, showed that 31% of the Rosy-billed Pochards and 29% of the Fulvous Whistling-Ducks had ingested lead pellets (between one and four per animal). Lead in bone was found at concentrations associated with detrimental health effects. In spite of the small number of samples in this project, these results indicate high levels of lead exposure (both recent and chronic) in these species. This is the first report of a problem in Argentina that could represent a threat to the health and conservation of native aquatic species, their predators, and the wetlands they inhabit.
format Texto
topic_facet Patos
Netta peposaca
Dendrocygna bicolor
Intoxicación plúmbica
Contaminación
Caza
Humedales
Cultivos de arroz
author Ferreyra, Hebe autor/a
Romano, Marcelo M. autor/a
Uhart, Marcela autor/a
author_facet Ferreyra, Hebe autor/a
Romano, Marcelo M. autor/a
Uhart, Marcela autor/a
author_sort Ferreyra, Hebe autor/a
title Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina
title_short Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina
title_full Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina
title_fullStr Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in Santa Fe province, Argentina
title_sort recent and chronic exposure of wild ducks to lead in human-modified wetlands in santa fe province, argentina
url http://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.7589/0090-3558-45.3.823
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AT romanomarcelomautora recentandchronicexposureofwildduckstoleadinhumanmodifiedwetlandsinsantafeprovinceargentina
AT uhartmarcelaautora recentandchronicexposureofwildduckstoleadinhumanmodifiedwetlandsinsantafeprovinceargentina
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