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Bird Feces as Indicators of Metal Pollution: Pitfalls and Solutions. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Our research focuses on improving the accuracy of measuring metal exposure in birds by analyzing their feces, specifically looking at variations in metal levels like arsenic, copper, and lead over time and among different nestlings.
  • - We collected fecal samples from pied flycatcher nestlings in a metal-polluted area in 2017 and 2018, and discovered significant short-term fluctuations in metal concentrations within individual birds, indicating their diet can change quickly.
  • - To enhance reliability in measuring metal levels, we recommend sampling at least four nestlings from each brood, as one sample does not represent the whole brood well, and suggest standardizing the collection of only the fecal part of droppings to minimize compositional

Article Abstract

Bird feces are commonly used as a proxy for measuring dietary metal exposure levels in wild populations. Our study aims to improve the reliability and repeatability of fecal metal measurements and gives some recommendations for sampling. First, we studied levels of variation in metallic element (arsenic, calcium, cadmium, cobalt, copper, nickel, lead) concentrations: temporal variation within an individual, among siblings in a brood and among-brood/spatial variation. Second, we explored the variation caused by dual composition (urate vs. feces) of bird droppings. Two sets of fresh fecal samples were collected from pied flycatcher () nestlings living in a metal polluted area in summers 2017 (dataset 1) and 2018 (dataset 2). We found a great deal of temporal intra-individual variation in metal levels, suggesting that dietary exposure varied markedly in a short time scale (within a day). A sample from only one nestling per brood did not well describe the brood mean value, and we recommend that at least four siblings should be sampled. Brood level samples give relatively good temporal repeatability for most metals. For all the metals, the levels in the fecal portion were more than double to those in the urate portion. Since the mass proportion of urate in the bird droppings varied a great deal among samples, standardizing sampling, e.g., by collecting only the fecal part, would markedly reduce the variation due to composition. Alternatively, urate portion could be used for biomonitoring of internally circulated bioavailable metal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7767019PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxics8040124DOI Listing

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