|

Media Resources :: Newsroom
Delaware River and Bay Contaminants
Strain Waterfowl Reproduction
16 February 2005
Making the Nature Conservancy's list of Last Great
Places doesn't guarantee a safe habitat. The osprey,
a fish-feeding bird, nests along the Delaware River
and Bay and continues to face contaminated living conditions.
Although stable, osprey reproduction is stressed, according
to an article published in the latest issue of Environmental
Toxicology and Chemistry.
Ospreys and other wildlife share the Delaware River
and Bay area with factories, manufacturers and water
traffic using the Bay's ports. The osprey population
suffered substantial losses beginning in the 1950s with
the widespread use of organochlorine pesticides. Contamination
continued into the late 1980s when a study reported
eggshell thinning and reproduction impairment mostly
caused by p,p'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (p,p'-DDE).
Using the same study sites, 1998 samples showed that
contamination dropped off to levels where eggshell thickness
was similar to the pre-DDT era.
In this study, researchers conducted the first large-scale
ecotoxicological evaluation of ospreys nesting along
the Delaware River, Bay and coast. Based on samples
taken in 2002, they concluded that contaminant concentrations
were predictive of hatching success. These contaminants
included DDT, dieldrin, chlordane, polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs) and dioxins to name a few.
Researchers also found that degradation of the River
and Bay declined in a north-to-south gradient. In the
research area's northern segment, including Trenton,
N. J., and Philadelphia, osprey eggs showed greater
concentrations of organochlorine pesticides and/or metabolites
as well as PCBs. Osprey reproduction in the north was
marginal to maintain the population, researchers said.
Farther down in the southern and central segments, reproduction
was comparable to levels from 1994 to 1998.
Overall osprey population has not returned to its pre-1950s
numbers, and the waterfowl is no longer considered a
common breeder in the Delaware Bay area. The article's
research team emphasizes further study of nesting activity,
breeding success, and contaminant exposure to evaluate
human impact on urban wildlife. The osprey, the researchers
said, serves as an excellent sentinel species and bioindicator
of improving conditions in the coastal ecosystem.
To read the entire study, click here: http://www.allenpress.com/pdf/entc_24_315_617_629.pdf
Environmental Toxicology
and Chemistry is a monthly journal of the Society
of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC). For
more information about the Society, visit www.setac.org.
For more information about Environmental
Toxicology and Chemistry, visit http://setac.allenpress.com.
[Effects of Contaminant Exposure
on Reproductive Success of Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus)
Nesting in Delaware River and Bay, USA, Environmental
Toxicology and Chemistry] 2005; Vol 24 (3):617-629
Contact:
April M. Phillips
T 850 469 1500 x 28
aprilp@setac.org
|