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Anticoagulant rodenticides in red kites (Milvus milvus) in Britain in 2017 and 2018

Authors :
Walker, L.A.
Jaffe, J.E.
Barnett, E.A
Chaplow, J.S.
Charman, S.
Giela, A.
Hunt, A.G.
Jones, A.
Pereira, M.G.
Potter, E.D.
Sainsbury, A.W.
Sleep, D.
Senior, C.
Sharp, E.A.
Vyas, D.S
Shore, R.F.
Walker, L.A.
Jaffe, J.E.
Barnett, E.A
Chaplow, J.S.
Charman, S.
Giela, A.
Hunt, A.G.
Jones, A.
Pereira, M.G.
Potter, E.D.
Sainsbury, A.W.
Sleep, D.
Senior, C.
Sharp, E.A.
Vyas, D.S
Shore, R.F.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Second generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) can be toxic to all mammals and birds. Various studies have shown that, in Britain, there is widespread exposure to SGARs in a diverse range of predatory mammals and birds, including red kites (Milvus milvus) which scavenge dead rats, a target species for rodent control. The Wildlife Incident Monitoring Scheme (WIIS) and the Predatory Bird Monitoring Scheme (PBMS) have shown that some mortalities result from this secondary exposure. In the present study, we analysed liver SGAR residues in 77 red kites that had been found dead in Britain in either 2017 or 2018. The carcasses were submitted to and necropsied by the Disease Risk Analysis and Health Surveillance (DRAHS) programme, the PBMS, the WIIS for England & Wales, the WIIS for Scotland and the Raptor Health Scotland study; the livers from the kites were subsequently analysed for SGAR residues. All the organisations are partners in the WILDCOMS network that promotes collaboration among surveillance schemes that monitor disease and contaminants in vertebrate wildlife. All of the 66 kites from England & Wales and 10 of the 11 red kites from Scotland had detectable liver residues of at least one SGAR. When considering the sample of kites as a whole, brodifacoum, difenacoum and bromadiolone were each detected in 73, 71 and 60 kites, respectively. Difethialone was found in 11 individuals while flocoumafen was detected in only one bird. Sum liver SGAR concentrations ranged between non-detected and 1218 ng/g wet wt. (arithmetic mean: 246 ng/g, median 154 ng/g). Post-mortem examinations indicated that 13 (16.8%) of red kites examined had internal haemorrhaging that was not associated with detectable trauma and had detectable liver SGAR concentrations. These birds had sum SGAR liver concentrations that ranged from 135 ng/g wet weight to 1218 ng/g wet weight. SGARs were considered a contributory cause of death in these cases. The stewardship scheme for anticoagulant rodent

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1151369486
Document Type :
Electronic Resource