Dust and bullets: Stable isotopes and GPS tracking disentangle lead sources for a large avian scavenger
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URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111237Metadatos
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Arrondo, EnekoFecha
2020-06-18Resumen
Lead intoxication is an important threat to human health and a large number of wildlife species. Animals
are exposed to several sources of lead highlighting hunting ammunition and lead that is bioavailable in
topsoil. Disentangling the role of each in lead exposure is an important conservation issue, particularly
for species potentially affected by lead poisoning, such as vultures. The identification of lead sources in
vultures and other species has been classically addressed by means of stable-isotope comparisons, but
the extremely varied isotope signatures found in ammunition hinders this identification when it overlaps
with topsoil signatures. In addition, assumptions related to the exposure of individual vultures to lead
sources have been made without knowledge of the actual feeding grounds exploited by the birds. Here,
we combine lead concentration analysis in blood, novel stable isotope approaches to assign the origin of
the lead and GPS tracking data to investigate the main foraging grounds of two Iberian griffon vulture
populations (N ¼ 58) whose foraging ranges differ in terms of topsoil lead concentration and intensity of
big game hunting activity. We found that the lead signature in vultures was closer to topsoil than to
ammunition, but this similarity decreased significantly in the area with higher big game hunting activity.
In addition, attending to the individual home ranges of the tracked birds, models accounting for the
intensity of hunting activity better explained the higher blood lead concentration in vultures than topsoil
exposure. In spite of that, our finding also show that lead exposure from topsoil is more important than
previously thought





