Asunto(s)
Alérgenos/inmunología , Antígenos de Plantas/inmunología , Fagopyrum/inmunología , Hipersensibilidad a los Alimentos/diagnóstico , Administración Oral , Culinaria , Eritema , Humanos , Inmunización , Inmunoglobulina E/metabolismo , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Prurito , Pruebas Cutáneas , Trastornos del GustoRESUMEN
For many years anticoagulant rodenticides have been used in vole control campaigns, in spite of the proven risk of secondary poisoning of non-target predators and scavengers. In this paper we analyse for the first time great bustard exposure and intoxication by anticoagulant rodenticides in Spain, based on residues found in the livers of 71 bustard carcasses collected during 1991-2010. Ten individuals contained chlorophacinone and one flocoumafen. Chlorophacinone level was significantly correlated with the pathogen and parasite burden of intoxicated birds. Moreover, through the last 12 years the annual number of great bustards that present chlorophacinone in liver collected in our study areas was correlated with vole peaks at a nearby area, suggesting that the ingestion of rodenticide was proportional to the amounts spread in the fields. We conclude that rodenticide consumption is a regular event among great bustards when baited cereal is spread on fields, and that this may cause chronic weakening of intoxicated individuals, possibly affecting their survival. Future rodent control actions should consider these negative side effects on non target granivorous steppe and farmland species, particularly when they are globally threatened.
Asunto(s)
Anticoagulantes/efectos adversos , Aves/metabolismo , Aves/parasitología , Especies en Peligro de Extinción , Carga de Parásitos/veterinaria , Control de Roedores/métodos , Rodenticidas/efectos adversos , 4-Hidroxicumarinas , Animales , Arvicolinae , Indanos , Hígado/metabolismo , Carga de Parásitos/estadística & datos numéricos , EspañaRESUMEN
Individual quality is often signaled by phenotypic flags, such as bright plumage patches in birds. Extended phenotype signals can similarly show quality, but in these cases the signals are external to the individual, often taking the form of objects scavenged from the environment. Through multiple manipulative experiments, we showed that objects used for nest decoration by a territorial raptor, the black kite (Milvus migrans), act as reliable threats to conspecifics, revealing the viability, territory quality, and conflict dominance of the signaler. Our results suggest that animal-built structures may serve as signaling devices much more frequently than currently recognized.
Asunto(s)
Comunicación Animal , Conducta Animal , Falconiformes , Comportamiento de Nidificación , Territorialidad , Agresión , Envejecimiento , Animales , Cruzamiento , Falconiformes/fisiología , Femenino , Masculino , Conducta Predatoria , Predominio SocialRESUMEN
Stabled livestock reared in housed conditions are often subjected to intensive treatments with veterinary drug, which residues may be present in livestock meat ingested by scavengers, but nothing is known about their presence in eggs of wild birds and their potential detrimental effects on breeding success. We searched for residues of veterinary drugs and other toxicants in infertile and embryonated unhatched eggs of griffon vultures (Gyps fulvus) and red kites (Milvus milvus), two threatened avian scavengers. Quinolones (ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin) were found in most unhatched eggs of both scavenger species clearly associated with severe alterations in the development of embryo cartilage and bones that could preclude embryo movements and subsequently normal development, pre-hatch position and successful hatching. The detrimental effects on developing eggs of veterinary drugs from livestock operations may help to explain reduced breeding success of avian scavengers.