Feathers of Bulbulcus ibis (L.) as a non-destructive biomonitoring tool for assessment of lead pollution: A case study from various severely contaminated wetland habitats

Present study aims to determine the lead (Pb) concentrations in the feather samples of cattle egret (Bulbulcus ibis) found in different contaminated wetland habitats present in the state Odisha, India. This study also focused on the heavy metal concentrations of top layer soil and on the level of me...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biointerface Research in Applied Chemistry 2020-04, Vol.10 (2), p.5085-5090
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Present study aims to determine the lead (Pb) concentrations in the feather samples of cattle egret (Bulbulcus ibis) found in different contaminated wetland habitats present in the state Odisha, India. This study also focused on the heavy metal concentrations of top layer soil and on the level of metal accumulation in prey samples (i.e. small fishes) preferred by cattle egrets for explaining the level of amplification of Pb in different polluted wetland habitats. Moreover, reasons behind the variations of Pb concentrations within the sampled wetland habitats are explained. Feathers, Prey samples and sediments from their foraging habitats were collected from eight different heronries. Determination of Pb concentrations in samples has undergone acid digestion followed by elemental analysis (i.e. Pb) in Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometer (AAS). The results indicated that Pb concentration was varied significantly in soil (15.13-56.26µg/g), Prey (0.21-55.76µg/g) and feathers (5.6-49.86µg/g) in different sites. The highest concentration was found at Hirakud in soil and prey. However, feather samples showed the highest concentrations of lead in Talcher may be due to the mining activities in and around the sampling location. Present study found the positive correlation (p
ISSN:2069-5837
2069-5837
DOI:10.33263/BRIAC102.085090