AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on the effects of methylmercury (MeHg) exposure during the embryonic stage of zebra finches on hatching success and post-hatching growth.
  • In ovo MeHg exposure led to significantly lower hatching success in the high-dose group (53% hatch rate) compared to controls (94% hatch rate), but did not affect the growth or survival of chicks post-hatching.
  • Long-term effects on mating behavior and reproduction were negligible, with no observed impacts on female mating behavior, reproductive effort, or offspring survivorship when the chicks reached maturity.

Article Abstract

Mercury bioaccumulates in terrestrial ecosystems as methylmercury (MeHg), yet little is known about its effects on terrestrial organisms, including songbirds. The authors used a model songbird species, the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata), to assess short-term embryotoxic effects of in ovo MeHg exposure on hatching success and posthatching growth and nestling survival, as well as longer-term effects on mating behavior and reproduction. Egg treatment groups included a low-MeHg dose of 0.2 μg Hg g(-1) egg (n = 36), a high-MeHg dose of 3.2 μg Hg g(-1) egg (n = 49), and a control (n = 34). Doses were dissolved in nanopure filtered water and injected into the albumen on the day eggs showed signs of viability (3 d incubation). In ovo exposure to MeHg significantly reduced hatching success (53% in the high-MeHg dose group vs 94% in vehicle controls). Among hatched chicks, however, no effects of MeHg on growth, hematological variables, or nestling survival were detected. While the in ovo injection method resulted in a dose-dependent pattern of MeHg concentrations in blood of surviving chicks at 15 d and 30 d posthatching, there was evidence of rapid excretion of MeHg with nestling age during that growth period. At reproductive maturity (90 d of age), no long-term effects of in ovo exposure to MeHg on female mating behavior, reproductive effort (egg or clutch size), or growth and survivorship of offspring were observed. Environ Toxicol Chem 2016;35:1534-1540. © 2015 SETAC.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/etc.3307DOI Listing

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