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Spatial and Temporal Trends in Organochlorine Contamination and Bill Deformities in Double-Crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax Auritus) from the Canadian Great Lakes
Authors:DP Ryckman  DV Weseloh  P Hamr  GA Fox  B Collins  PJ Ewins  RJ Norstrom
Institution:(1) 729 Eaglemount Cres, Mississauga, Ontario, L5C 1H2;(2) Canadian Wildlife Service, Ontario Region, Environment Canada, 4905 Dufferin St., Downsview, Ontario, M3H 5T4;(3) Appleby College, 540 Lakeshore Rd., Oakville, Ontario, L6K 3P1;(4) Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment Canada, National Wildlife Research Centre, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0H3;(5) World Wildlife Fund, 90 Eglington Ave. E., Toronto, Ontario, M4P 2Z7
Abstract:The levels of organochlorine contaminants (OCs) in the eggs of double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) from the Canadian Great Lakes, Lake Nipigon and Lake-of-the-Woods were monitored between 1970 and 1995. PCBs and p,pprime-DDE were present at the highest concentrations. Significant declines in OC concentrations on the Great Lakes were observed over this period for Lake Ontario, Lake Superior, Georgian Bay and North Channel but not Lake Erie where levels remained relatively stable. In the early 1970s, the greatest OC levels were generally observed in cormorant eggs from nesting sites in Georgian Bay and North Channel of Lake Huron. Between 1984 and 1995 mirex and PCB levels were consistently highest in samples from Lakes Ontario and Erie, respectively. Similar levels of PCDDs and PCDFs were observed from all regions of the Canadian Great Lakes in 1989. In general, OC levels in cormorant eggs between 1984-95 were ranked as follows: Lake Erie>Lake Ontario ge Lake Superior>Lake Huron. In 1995, eggshell thickness in Canadian Great Lakes cormorants, ranged from 0.423 to 0.440 mm and was on average only 2.3% thinner than pre-DDT era values. Between 1988 and 1996, 31 cormorant chicks with bill defects were observed at 16 different colonies (21% of all colonies surveyed) in Lakes Ontario and Superior, Georgian Bay and North Channel, and the main body of Lake Huron. No bill deformities were observed at reference sites in northwestern Ontario (Lake Nipigon and Lake-of-the-Woods). For the period 1988-96, the prevalence of bill defects in cormorant chicks (0.0 to 2.8/10,000 chicks) did not differ significantly (P > 0.05) among most regions in the Canadian Great Lakes. Georgian Bay was the only region to show a significant decrease in the prevalence of bill defects between the periods 1979-87 and 1988-95.
Keywords:Double-crested cormorant  Phalacrocorax auritus  Great Lakes  organochlorine contaminants  bill deformities  eggshell thickness
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