Widespread exposure of powerful owls to second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides in Australia spans an urban to agricultural and forest landscape

Author(s):  
Raylene Cooke ◽  
Pam Whiteley ◽  
Yun Jin ◽  
Clare Death ◽  
Michael A. Weston ◽  
...  
Ecotoxicology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 560-574
Author(s):  
Staffan Roos ◽  
Steve T. Campbell ◽  
Gill Hartley ◽  
Richard F. Shore ◽  
Lee A. Walker ◽  
...  

AbstractRats and mice can damage food and agricultural products as well as transmit diseases, thereby requiring control of their numbers. Application of Second Generation Anticoagulant Rodenticides (SGARs) often reduces rodent numbers locally. However, predators eating rodents, including non-target species, that have consumed SGARs may be secondarily exposed and potentially lethally poisoned. Here we study whether SGARs may have contributed to the widespread population declines of a rodent-eating raptor, the Common Kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) in the UK. We show that 161 (66.8%) of the 241 Kestrels submitted for ecotoxicology tests between 1997 and 2012 had detectable levels of at least one SGAR in their livers. Adult Kestrels had significantly higher prevalence of SGARs than juveniles, suggesting accumulation of SGARs through time. The prevalence and concentrations of individual SGARs in Kestrels were significantly higher in England than in Scotland. SGAR prevalence in Kestrels were positively associated with some land cover types, primarilyarable cerealsandbroad-leaved woodland, and negatively associated with mainlymean elevation, probably reflecting variation in SGAR usage across land cover types. By using volunteer-collected data on national Kestrel abundance 1997–2012, we show that there is a negative correlation between the Kestrel population index in a specific year and the concentration of bromadialone as well as the total SGAR concentration in the same year. Although correlative, this is the first study to provide evidence for a potential population-limiting effect of SGARs on a raptor.


2008 ◽  
Vol 392 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee A. Walker ◽  
Anthony Turk ◽  
Sara M. Long ◽  
Claire L. Wienburg ◽  
Jennifer Best ◽  
...  

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