Literature DB >> 31412456

The perfect threat: Pesticides and vultures.

Pablo I Plaza1, Emma Martínez-López2, Sergio A Lambertucci3.   

Abstract

Probably the most important threat currently affecting vultures worldwide is exposure to pesticides, both accidentally and through deliberate abuse. This is of special concern since around 70% of vulture species are threatened by human activities. However, information about this threat is sparse and geographically biased. We compiled existing knowledge about pesticide exposure in vulture species globally, providing unifying criteria to mitigate this problem with a joint global effort. Most information available about accidental exposure to pesticides in vultures is related to organochlorine pesticides. Non-lethal exposure to these compounds occurs on every continent that vultures inhabit. While concentrations of organochlorine pesticides reported in different samples appear to be too low to produce health impacts, some studies show vultures with levels compatible with health impacts. In addition, there are some reports of vultures contaminated accidentally by anticoagulant rodenticides and external antiparasitic drugs used in veterinary practices. Deliberate abuse of pesticides to poison wildlife also occurs on every continent where vultures live, affecting most (78%) vulture species. However, little information is available for some regions of America, Asia and Europe. The exact number of vultures killed due to deliberate poisoning with pesticides is not well known, but the available figures are alarming (e.g. up to 500 individuals in a single event). The most widely used pesticides affecting vulture populations, and associated with deliberate poisoning, are carbamates and organophosphorus compounds. Of particular concern is the fact that massive poisoning events with these compounds occur, in some cases, within protected areas. This suggests that if this situation is not reversed, some vulture populations could disappear. A combination of measures such as banning pesticides, controlling their distribution-acquisition and environmental education could produce better results that banning pesticides alone. If poisoning with pesticides is not stopped, this threatened avian group could inadvertently go extinct very soon.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Carbamates; Human-wildlife conflicts; Organophosphorus; Poisoning; Protected areas

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31412456     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.06.160

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  8 in total

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2.  Animal Harms and Food Production: Informing Ethical Choices.

Authors:  Jordan O Hampton; Timothy H Hyndman; Benjamin L Allen; Bob Fischer
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-23       Impact factor: 2.752

3.  Prevalence and drivers of poison use by South African commercial farmers and perceptions of alternative livestock protection measures.

Authors:  Christiaan Willem Brink; Robert Leslie Thomson; Arjun Amar; Marco Girardello; Andrea Santangeli
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5.  Pervasive exposure of wild small mammals to legacy and currently used pesticide mixtures in arable landscapes.

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Review 6.  Pesticides: formulants, distribution pathways and effects on human health - a review.

Authors:  Valeriya P Kalyabina; Elena N Esimbekova; Kseniya V Kopylova; Valentina A Kratasyuk
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7.  Framing of visual content shown on popular social media may affect viewers' attitudes to threatened species.

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8.  Chronic Dietary Exposure of Roosters to a Glyphosate-Based Herbicide Increases Seminal Plasma Glyphosate and AMPA Concentrations, Alters Sperm Parameters, and Induces Metabolic Disorders in the Progeny.

Authors:  Loïse Serra; Anthony Estienne; Guillaume Bourdon; Christelle Ramé; Claire Chevaleyre; Philippe Didier; Marine Chahnamian; Souleiman El Balkhi; Pascal Froment; Joëlle Dupont
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  8 in total

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