Seabirds suffer from pollutant exposure

Typography

Seabirds, aerial ocean predators, are known to amass harmful contaminants over their lifespan. Scientists believe this exposure to pollutants, such as blood mercury (Hg), cadmium (Cd), and persistent organic pollutants (POPs), negatively impacts survival rates as well as reproduction, therefore contributing to large-scale population declines. Although previously these assumptions were largely theoretical, recent research in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B involving blood samples from wandering albatrosses points to new conclusions. 

Seabirds, aerial ocean predators, are known to amass harmful contaminants over their lifespan. Scientists believe this exposure to pollutants, such as blood mercury (Hg), cadmium (Cd), and persistent organic pollutants (POPs), negatively impacts survival rates as well as reproduction, therefore contributing to large-scale population declines. Although previously these assumptions were largely theoretical, recent research in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B involving blood samples from wandering albatrosses points to new conclusions.

"Persistent organic pollutant and mercury have long-term effects on breeding performances in wandering albatross, which may lead to population decline," Aurelie Goutte, co-author and lecturer at Ecole Pratique des Hatues Etudes, told mongabay.com.

Sporting the world's longest wingspan, the wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans) is a fierce marine predator, residing at the top of the trophic web or food chain. But the massive seabird, found throughout the Southern Ocean and North Pacific, is also threatened with extinction. The new research sought to discover if adult survival rates and long-term breeding performances were impacted by organic and metallic contaminants found in the environment, such as Hg, Cd, and POPs.

Using a 'capture-mark-recapture' method from 2008 to 2012, researchers measured the levels of contaminants in the birds by taking blood samples from nesting albatrosses at lle de la Possession in the Crozet Archipelago of the Southern Indian Ocean, where 300 to 400 pairs of albatrosses nest each year.

"Albatrosses were captured by hand. A sample of venous blood was taken from the tarsus with a 1-milliliter heparinized syringe. Blood sampling was quick (less than 5 minutes)," Goutte wrote in an email.

The scientists found that although contaminants were not associated with increased adult mortality, organic and metallic pollutants led to a lower breeding probability as well as higher failures for hatchlings and fledglings.

"Our population models suggested that the actual Hg and POPs levels could decelerate the population growth rate (0.991), whereas the population growth rate would increase (1.027) with zero concentrations of blood Hg and POPs," the researchers write in their paper. 

Continue reading at ENN affiliate, MONGABAY.COM.

Albatross image via Shutterstock.