| Literature DB >> 30879267 |
Deborah J Pain1,2, Rafael Mateo3, Rhys E Green4.
Abstract
Poisoning of wild birds following ingestion of lead from ammunition has long been recognised and considerable recent research has focused on terrestrial birds, including raptors and scavengers. This paper builds upon previous reviews and finds that both the number of taxa affected and geographical spread of cases has increased. Some lead may also be absorbed from embedded ammunition fragments in injured birds which risk sub-lethal and welfare effects. Some papers suggest inter-specific differences in sensitivity to lead, although it is difficult to disentangle these from other factors that influence effect severity. Sub-lethal effects have been found at lower blood lead concentrations than previously reported, suggesting that previous effect-level 'thresholds' should be abandoned or revised. Lead poisoning is estimated to kill a million wildfowl a year in Europe and cause sub-lethal poisoning in another ≥ 3 million. Modelling and correlative studies have supported the potential for population-level effects of lead poisoning in wildfowl, terrestrial birds, raptors and scavengers.Entities:
Keywords: Birds; Bullets; Gunshot; Lead; Poisoning; Review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30879267 PMCID: PMC6675766 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01159-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Suggested interpretation of tissue lead concentrations in Anseriformes, Falconiformes and Accipitriformes
| Blood (µg/dl) | Liver (mg/kg ww) | Kidney (mg/kg ww) | Bone (mg/kg dw)c | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sub-clinical poisoning | 20 < 50 | 2 < 6 | 2 < 6a | 10–20 |
| 2 < 4b | ||||
| Clinical poisoning | 50–100 | 6–10 | 6–15a | > 20 |
| 4−6b | ||||
| Severe clinical poisoning | > 100 | > 10 | > 15a | |
| > 6b |
Adapted from Franson and Pain (2011) Table 16.1
aAnseriformes
bFalconiformes and Accipitriformes (previously grouped under Falconiformes in Franson and Pain (2011))
cLead concentrations in bone reflect lifetime accumulation and concentrations may be similar in cases of short-term acute exposure and long-term chronic exposure
Fig. 1Densities of lead shot in wetlands due to waterfowl hunting and sport shooting. Modified from Descalzo and Mateo (2018), updated from Mateo (2009). Shot densities are from individual or multiple sites in each country and from depths ranging from 5 to 30 cm. Data from Table 2 of Descalzo and Mateo (2018), updated from Mateo (2009)
Recent studies on exposure to and poisoning from lead from ammunition in predatory and scavenging birds
| Species | Location | Evidenced | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Andean condora,b | Argentina | Wild condors from rehabilitation centres ( * sampled from live birds | Wiemeyer et al. ( |
| Chile | Two birds reported with high PbB (one bird—89 µg/dl) and liver and kidney levels (one bird—136 and 247 ppm respectively) after ingesting lead bullets | ||
Bearded vulture
| Swiss Alps | Two of five birds found dead had bone lead concentrations consistent with lead poisoning (59 and 100 mg/kg) | Ganz et al. ( |
White-backed vulturesa
| South Africa and Namibia | PbB compared in wild and captive birds. 12% of wild birds appeared to be exposed to an additional source of lead than purely environmental—presumed to be ammunition | Naidoo et al. ( |
| Botswana | PbB was analysed from 566 wild captured birds. 30.2% had elevated PbB (10 to 45 μg/dl) and 2.3% had PbB ≥ 45 μg/dl. PbB levels were higher in samples taken during than outside the hunting season and from within hunting rather than outside hunting areas | Garbett et al. ( | |
| Griffon vulture | Israel | A sick bird found with a 9 mm lead bullet in the proventriculus and a PbB of 805 µg/dl subsequently died of lead poisoning | Horowitz. et al. ( |
| French Pyrenees | In a surveillance programme for avian scavenger populations 3 of 119 birds reported as dying of lead poisoning. Isotopic signature consistent with ammunition source | Berny et al. ( | |
| Aragón, NE Spain | 691 blood samples were collected over 5 years and analysed for PbB and Pb isotopes with statistical modelling used to investigate sources and spatio-temporal distribution of PbB. While isotope signatures overlapped considerably, naturally occurring sources of lead were considered to result in a high proportion of birds having moderately elevated PbB (45% of birds had > 20 µg/dl), with point sources (e.g. lead-based ammunition) associated with high PbB, as illustrated by different isotope ratios between birds with PbB < 20 µg/dl and > 47 µg/dl | Mateo-Tomás et al. ( | |
| Iberian peninsula | Three birds were found sick treated in a wildlife rehabilitation centre but died with PbB 969–1384 µg/dl, liver Pb 309–1077 µg/g dw, kidneys Pb 36-100 µg/g dw. Nine un-eroded lead pellets recovered from the stomach of one bird | Carneiro et al. ( | |
| Cape vulturea | South Africa and Namibia | PbB compared in wild and captive birds. 31% of wild birds appeared to be exposed to an additional source of lead than purely environmental—presumed to be ammunition. One bird with a PbB of 100 µg/dl died soon after capture | Naidoo et al. ( |
| Golden eagle | Swiss alps | Tissues of 41 dead, injured or moribund eagles were examined. Pb distributions in blood and soft tissues were right skewed. In 22% of birds only one of the three flight feather segments had a high Pb concentration. Results suggest episodic and repeated lead intake likely resulting from ammunition in offal or carcasses | Jenni et al. ( |
| Swiss alps | Three birds were found with acute lead poisoning (56 and 108 µg/dl PbB and 77 ppm d.w. liver Pb). In a comparative study (31 eagles and 19 Eagle Owls | Madry et al. ( | |
| Swiss Alps | Liver and/or bone Pb concentrations were analysed in 67 dead golden eagles; 31 were previously published (Madry et al. | Ganz et al. ( | |
| North America | 10% of 178 golden eagles captured during fall migration were clinically lead poisoned (PbB > 0.6 mg/l [60 µg/dl]) and 4% were lethally exposed (PbB > 1.2 mg/l [120 µg/dl]). PbB was higher in golden eagles captured on carrion than those captured using live bait | Langner et al. ( | |
| Northern Sweden | PbB in wild birds was significantly correlated with the progress of the moose hunting season. One bird starved with PbB of 57.3 µg/dl increasing from 26.7 µg/dl after trapping and one bird collided with a powerline with a PbB of 38.9 µg/dl. Deaths may be associated with lead poisoning directly or indirectly | Ecke et al. | |
| USA | 4.7% of 1427 deaths between 1975 and 2013 from lead poisoning | Russell and Franson ( | |
Bonelli’s eaglea
| Granada, south-eastern Spain | Lead shot in 2.81% of 1 363 regurgitated pellets in spring and 1.32% of 172 pellets in autumn (from a total of 14 territories) coinciding with hunting seasons of prey. Shot were found in pellets in 8 of the 10 territories for which 20 or more pellets were collected. The frequency of occurrence of shot was positively related to feather lead concentrations. | Gil-Sánchez et al. ( |
| Red kite | England | Lead poisoning was diagnosed in 6 of 110 red kites found dead between 1989 and 2007 | Molenaar et al. ( |
| French Pyrenees | Lead poisoning was reported as cause of death of 4 of 34 birds found dead in a surveillance programme for avian scavenger populations. Lead isotope ratios were consistent with an ammunition source | Berny et al. ( | |
| White-tailed eagle | Hokkaido, Japan | 12 of 50 dead birds collected after a ban on the use of lead bullets for hunting sika deer ( | Ishii et al. ( |
| Poland | 7 of 22 birds found dead or moribund had liver lead levels > 30 ppm dw, two of which were 180.3 and 188.6 ppm dw. This was apparently associated with feeding on wintering waterfowl and carrion | Kitowski et al. ( | |
| Finland | Lead poisoning was the most important cause of human-related mortality in 123 carcasses of white-tailed eagles (collected 2000–2014) accounting for 31% of all cases | Isomursu et al. ( | |
| Ireland | A white-tailed eagle at Lough Derg died of lead poisoning believed to be associated with the bird feeding on wildfowl that had been shot with lead shot | O’Donoghue ( | |
| Bald eagle | USA—Upper Mississippi River Valley | PbB was higher immediately following the hunting season and lower when the previous months’ snowfall was greater than 11 cm, when game animal carcasses may be concealed | Lindblom et al. ( |
| 16.3% of 2980 bald eagle deaths between 1975 and 2013 were from lead poisoning. The proportion of lead-poisoned eagles increased in all 4 migratory bird flyways of the United States after the autumn 1991 ban on the use of lead shot for waterfowl hunting, probably as Bald Eagles consume lead ammunition fragments (from bullets) in offal and carcasses left behind during big game hunting seasons | Russell and Franson ( | ||
| USA—Iowa | 31% of 209 eagles brought to rehabilitation centres (2004-2014) had PbB > 60 µg/dl. 30 of 59 birds for which livers were analysed post-mortem had liver Pb > 6.0 ppm ww, suggestive of clinical poisoning | Yaw et al. ( | |
USA—Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin Canada—Ontario | 38% of 58 birds found had liver Pb > 6 ppm ww. Birds were from areas where 36% of discarded offal piles from hunter-killed deer were found to contain lead fragments. | Warner et al. ( | |
| 23% (10/43) of birds found dead and dying between 1991 and 2008 died of lead poisoning | Martin et al. ( | ||
| Steller’s sea eagle | Hokkaido, Japan | 18 of 43 dead birds collected after a ban on the use of lead bullets for hunting sika deer had elevated liver lead concentrations (> 2 ppm w.w.) associated with poisoning. Isotopic analysis was consistent with lead ammunition. One bird that died in 2013 had a lead bullet in the stomach and a liver lead of 36.3 ppm ww | Ishii et al. ( |
| Common buzzard | Portugal | Authors reported an apparent association between PbB and the hunting season | Carneiro et al. ( |
| Poland | Foraging on carrion and game carcasses was associated with elevated (> 6 ppm dw) liver Pb concentrations in some buzzards; 3 of 31 birds taken to rehabilitation centres that later died had liver Pb > 6 ppm dw with one bird exceeding 15 ppm dw | Kitowski et al. ( | |
| Southern ground hornbilla | Authors reported acute lead poisoning in a bird. Lead particles in the gizzard were probably from the carcass of a porcupine ( | Koeppel and Kemp ( | |
| Peregrine falcon | Italy | Dead adult female (cause of death unknown) had many lead shot in the digestive tract, mixed with the remains of a feral pigeon ( | Andreotti et al. ( |
| Common raven | Eastern Quebec, Canada | PbB in birds captured during two moose hunting seasons increased as the hunting seasons progressed, with over half of birds having PbB > 10 µg/dl during the hunting season and the Pb isotope signature in contaminated ravens tended towards the lead ammunition signature | Legagneux et al. ( |
| California (northern) | Birds captured during the hunting season ( | West et al. ( | |
Rook
Magpie | Eastern Poland | Liver lead concentrations were measured in birds taken to rehabilitation centres that subsequently died; an individual rook (6.33 ppm dw, | Kitowski et al. ( |
| Studies of lead contamination with no source identified | |||
| Griffon vulture | Iberian peninsula | 22% (44 of 54) wild caught birds had PbB > 20 µg/dl and one of these had PbB > 100 µg/dl. The origin was not determined but the authors speculated that lead from rubbish dumps or ammunition in carcasses were possibilities | Carneiro et al. ( |
| American black vulturea | Virginia, USA | Wild black ( | Behmke et al. ( |
aWe have no knowledge of previous reports in the published literature of lead poisoning in the wild in this species; for Andean condor, elevated feather lead with isotopic signals compatible with ammunition sources had been reported previously from Patagonia in Argentina (Lambertucci et al. 2011)
bIngestion of or poisoning by lead from ammunition has been reported in captive birds—see review of Pain et al. (2009)
cExcluding species already listed above in the table
dConcentrations are given in the units presented in the references: ppm = µg/g = mg/kg
Fig. 2Prevalence of Pb shot ingestion in waterfowl species from North America (n = 171 697) and Europe (n = 75 761). Modified from Mateo (2009). American wigeon (Anas americana), Eurasian wigeon (Anas penelope), gadwall (Anas strepera), green-winged teal (Anas carolinensis), common teal (Anas crecca), mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), northern pintail (Anas acuta), northern shoveler (Anas clypeata), common pochard (Aythya ferina), redhead (Aythya americana)
Fig. 3Correlation between the prevalence of lead shot ingestion and the trend of the wintering population in Europe of 15 species of waterfowl. Modified from Mateo (2009)