Heavy metal pollution in Japanese seabirds

[Abstract] It is reported that seabirds accumulate high levels of metals, prompting concerns regarding poisoning. The present study investigated the accumulation patterns of metals in tissues among four species of seabirds (Fratercula corniculata, Uria lomvia, Puffinus tenuirostris, and Fulmarus gla...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Research 2013-02, Vol.61 (suppl), p.S75-S76
Hauptverfasser: Ishii, Chihiro, Ikenaka, Yoshinori, Nakayama, Shouta M M, Suzuki, Yuya, Watanuki, Yutaka, Watanabe, Yuji, Fukuwaka, Masa-aki, Yohannes, Yared B, Kawai, Yusuke K, Ishizuka, Mayumi
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container_issue suppl
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container_title The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Research
container_volume 61
creator Ishii, Chihiro
Ikenaka, Yoshinori
Nakayama, Shouta M M
Suzuki, Yuya
Watanuki, Yutaka
Watanabe, Yuji
Fukuwaka, Masa-aki
Yohannes, Yared B
Kawai, Yusuke K
Ishizuka, Mayumi
description [Abstract] It is reported that seabirds accumulate high levels of metals, prompting concerns regarding poisoning. The present study investigated the accumulation patterns of metals in tissues among four species of seabirds (Fratercula corniculata, Uria lomvia, Puffinus tenuirostris, and Fulmarus glacialis). Furthermore, we focused on Slaty-backed Gulls, which accumulated high levels of cadmium and mercury, and compared the areal differences. Geographic variation of metal levels could also contribute to differences in metal accumulation levels in these bird species. Therefore, the concentrations of metals in seabirds are considered to reflect their habitat. There are differences in the accumulation pattern among the seabird species. The high accumulation of metals could affect seabirds even if they do not show any symptoms.
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source 北海道大学学術成果コレクション (HUSCAP: Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers); MEDLINE; Freely Accessible Japanese Titles; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Animals
Charadriiformes
Japan
Kidney - chemistry
Liver - chemistry
Metals, Heavy - chemistry
Water Pollutants, Chemical - chemistry
title Heavy metal pollution in Japanese seabirds
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