Title: Kein Folientitel
1BIRD EGGS as indicator for local pollution and
trend analysis
Peter H. Becker Institut für Vogelforschung
Vogelwarte Helgoland Wilhelmshaven
2S PCB (µg/g Fettgewicht)
Becker Bruhn 2003
Species
3Dose-dependent response Seabirds indicate the
contamination of their prey and of the marine
environment
Seabirds at the top of the food
web BIOINDICATORS
4Mercury
PCB
concentration in Common Tern eggs (ngg-1 fresh
weight)
Annual load Elbe (kg year-1)
HCB
Becker et al. (1991)
5Herring, muscle
Guillemot, egg
Year
SDDT (mg/kg fat weight) in Guillemots (eggs) and
herring (muscle) from the Baltic Sea (Bignert et
al. 1995)
6Seabirds integrate the environmental situation
across sea areas
Common Tern Radius of foraging flights in the
breeding season 6.3 km
Peter H. Becker
7Courtship Feeding in the Common Tern
8Bird Eggs as Matrix for Monitoring
Chemicals ADVANTAGES
- originate from a defined area and year
- reflect the contamination of breeding females
- (healthy and reproductive part of the
population) - being restricted to the breeding season, the
seasonal variation - in chemicals levels is reduced
- not necessary to kill adults
- sampling takes little time
- easy to handle
- consistent composition compared with tissues
- high lipid content (accumulation of lipophilous
persistent compounds) - during the egg and early chick stage birds react
sensitively to - toxic chemicals
- relationships between contaminants, eggshell
quality and - hatching success can be studied
- controlled experiments in the laboratory are
possible
9Bird Eggs as Matrix for Monitoring
Chemicals DISADVANTAGES
- representative of only a part of the population
and the year - some heavy metals are not accumulated in the egg
(cadmium, lead)
10______________________________________ Environment
al Chemicals in Seabird Eggs analyzed in
TMAP_____________________________________________
______ Industrial Chemicals Mercury
catalyst, seed
disinfection banned in 1982 HCB
byproduct OC-production
fungicide, banned in 1980
PCB soft
maker, in transformers, condensers, (62 -
incl. coplanar - hydraulic oil
banned in 1989 congeners) Insecticides
DDT and metabolites (p,p-)
banned in 1972 HCH-Isomeres (?-, ?-,
?-HCH) technical HCH banned in
1974 Chlordane (Chlordane, Nonachlor) banned
in 1988 _________________________________________
___________________________
11Contaminants in Seabirds
10 eggs per site and species, 1 egg per clutch
TMAP for monitoring the Wadden Sea
12Geographic variation Intersite differences
TMAP Results
13Quecksilber
S PCB
Spatial Variation Common Tern 2002
HCB
Konzentration (ng/g FG)
S DDT
North Sea
S HCH
Area
Gebiet
14Spatial Variation Oystercatcher 2002
concentration (ng/g FW)
North Sea
Area
Gebiet
15Year 2005 Common Tern
Oystercatcher
from annual report 2005
Peter H. Becker
16Discriminant analysis of 62 PCB congeners
Becker et al. (1998)
Major components PCB congeners
138,153,160,180,170,128
17Temporal variation 1981 - 2003
TMAP Results
18Trend Mercury 1981 - 2003
1981 85 1990
95 2000
YEAR
19Trend PCBs 1981 - 2003
1981 85 1990
95 2000
YEAR
20Mercury
2001 03 05 2001 03
05
YEAR
from annual report 2005
Peter H. Becker
21 Oystercatcher
Common Tern
Trischen
HCB
SHCH
2001 03 05
2001 03 05
YEAR
from annual report 2005
222001 -2005 102 trends studied 60 significant
? 48 ( 80 ) negative trends
? 12 ( 20 ) positive trends
from annual report 2005
Peter H. Becker
23- Variation in PCB levels
- Temporal variation (year)
- Spatial variation (site)
- Interspecific variation
- (species)
Peter H. Becker
24Conclusions and Future
- Continue to measure contaminants
- in bird eggs in the Wadden Sea in order to
- - distinguish short-term fluctuations
- from long-term trends
- - to keep the hot spots under careful
observation
- Adapt the monitoring by
- - an additional sampling site at the Rhine
delta - - including new toxic substances
- Intensify policies
- - for reduction of application and inputs of
- hazardous xenobiotics
TMAP
25Conclusions and Future
Concentrations (ng/g) should not
exceed Mercury PCBs DDTs HCB
HCHs _____________________________________ CT
200 20 10 2
2 OC 100 20 10
2 2 or values measured at
southwestern Norway or Shetlands (ICES 2004)
TMAP
26Why sampling and chemical analysis on an annual
basis ?
- Logistical reasons continuity in - staff
-
- organization of sampling -
- availability of analytics - is important to run the monitoring
successfully. - Time trend analyses Lacking years cause lower
statistical - power
and hamper the function of - the
parameter as early warning system
Why the one lab approach ?
- Better compariability of results
- No intercalibration needed
Eggs DK
data
data
1 Lab Terramare
Eggs SH
Eggs NL
data
data
Eggs NS
27Contaminants in Seabirds No. of sites in future ?
10 eggs per site and species, 1 egg per clutch
TMAP for monitoring the Wadden Sea
28Conclusions and Future
- Make use of birds as sensitive indicators
- Monitoring reproductive success as
- early warning system
TMAP