| Literature DB >> 35175813 |
Vincent A Slabe1,2, James T Anderson3, Brian A Millsap4, Jeffrey L Cooper5, Alan R Harmata6, Marco Restani7, Ross H Crandall8, Barbara Bodenstein9, Peter H Bloom10, Travis Booms11, John Buchweitz12, Renee Culver13, Kim Dickerson14, Robert Domenech15, Ernesto Dominguez-Villegas16, Daniel Driscoll17, Brian W Smith18, Michael J Lockhart19, David McRuer16,20, Tricia A Miller21, Patricia A Ortiz22, Krysta Rogers23, Matt Schwarz24, Natalie Turley25, Brian Woodbridge26, Myra E Finkelstein27, Christian A Triana27, Christopher R DeSorbo28, Todd E Katzner22.
Abstract
Lead poisoning occurs worldwide in populations of predatory birds, but exposure rates and population impacts are known only from regional studies. We evaluated the lead exposure of 1210 bald and golden eagles from 38 US states across North America, including 620 live eagles. We detected unexpectedly high frequencies of lead poisoning of eagles, both chronic (46 to 47% of bald and golden eagles, as measured in bone) and acute (27 to 33% of bald eagles and 7 to 35% of golden eagles, as measured in liver, blood, and feathers). Frequency of lead poisoning was influenced by age and, for bald eagles, by region and season. Continent-wide demographic modeling suggests that poisoning at this level suppresses population growth rates for bald eagles by 3.8% (95% confidence interval: 2.5%, 5.4%) and for golden eagles by 0.8% (0.7%, 0.9%). Lead poisoning is an underappreciated but important constraint on continent-wide populations of these iconic protected species.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35175813 DOI: 10.1126/science.abj3068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728