Contaminant Residues in Tissues of Adult and Prefledged Herring Gulls from the Great Lakes in Relation to Diet in the Early 1990s

In the early 1990s, herring gulls ( Larus argentatus) were collected in 15 breeding colonies throughout the Great Lakes basin and in two reference colonies on Lake Winnipeg and the Bay of Fundy. Organochlorine and metal concentrations, and stable isotope ratios ( 15N/ 14N and 13C/ 12C) were measured...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Great Lakes research 2002, Vol.28 (4), p.643-663
Hauptverfasser: Fox, Glen A., Grasman, Keith A., Hobson, Keith A., Williams, Kim, Jeffrey, Deborah, Hanbidge, Barbara
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In the early 1990s, herring gulls ( Larus argentatus) were collected in 15 breeding colonies throughout the Great Lakes basin and in two reference colonies on Lake Winnipeg and the Bay of Fundy. Organochlorine and metal concentrations, and stable isotope ratios ( 15N/ 14N and 13C/ 12C) were measured in their tissues, and we qualitatively assessed their diet. Breast muscle δ 15N suggested that adults fed on planctivorous or insectivorous fish at six colonies, on piscivorous fish at four, and at a lower trophic level at the remaining three. The concentrations of Co, Ni, Al, Cr, Sn, Fe, and Pb in kidneys of adults suggested anthropogenic enrichment in the Great Lakes basin. Concentrations of contaminants were highest most often in tissues of gulls from Lake Ontario and northern Lake Michigan colonies. Concentrations of Pb in adults from Hamilton Harbour and the Detroit River, and of Se in adults from the southern Lake Huron colony, were similar to published toxicity thresholds. Tissue levels of Cd have increased, while those of Pb have decreased markedly since 1983. DDE, dieldrin, mirex, and ΣPCB concentrations in livers collected from nine of these colonies revealed declines of 16 to 87% at most locations since the early 1980s. 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin equivalents were highest in adults from the offshore colonies in western Lake Erie and northern Lake Michigan, where gulls feed on piscivorous fish, and were driven by non-ortho PCBs. There was evidence of an unusually high bioavailablity of organochlorines, especially dieldrin, near the northern Lake Michigan colony during the period of chick growth, and of an ongoing loading of mercury to eastern Lake Ontario. Tissues of adult gulls from colonies on Lakes Ontario, Erie, and Michigan best reflect local conditions whereas those from Lake Superior and northern Lake Huron reflect contaminants accumulated from time spent on the lower lakes.
ISSN:0380-1330
DOI:10.1016/S0380-1330(02)70611-4