An improved method to study the impact of pesticide sprays on small song birds |
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Authors: | P Mineau K M Sundarem A Sundarem C Feng D G Busby P A Pearce |
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Affiliation: | Canadian Wildlife Service, National Wildlife Research Centre, Ottawa. |
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Abstract: | Four test groups of small songbirds (Zebra Finch, Poephila guttata) were sprayed in a chamber with varying concentrations of fenitrothion. Exposure levels were assessed by monitoring air concentrations, deposits of the active ingredient (AI) on glass plates and droplets/cm2 on Kromekote cards. All indices of exposure were linearly correlated and the mean AI deposit on glass plates for the four groups tested with equivalent to 38, 51, 139 and 255 g/ha or 14%, 18%, 50% and 91% of the highest permissible emitted rate for broadscale forest spraying in Canada. Significant depression in body weights and brain acetylcholinesterase levels were noted only for the highest exposure group. Fenitrothion residues in blood were detectable only at the highest exposure level, and in liver at the two higher levels. Carcass and feather residues were much higher than those in blood and liver, and were detectable at all exposure levels but the residues did not increase linearly with exposure. For one of the spray groups, we were able to compute an equivalent acute oral dose based on matching acetylcholinesterase inhibition. |
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