2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.116105
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Untangling causes of variation in mercury concentration between flight feathers

Abstract: Bird feathers are one of the most widely used animal tissue in mercury biomonitoring, owing to the ease of collection and storage. They are also the principal excretory pathway of mercury in birds. However, limitations in our understanding of the physiology of mercury deposition in feathers has placed doubt on the interpretation of feather mercury concentratoins. Throughout the literature, moult sequence and the depletion of the body mercury pool have been taken to explain patterns such as the decrease in feat… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In 2017, 2 cm of the tips of the secondary 8 flight feather from both wings were sampled. These specific feathers are postulated to moult or regrow while the birds are in the non-breeding area and after many other flight feathers have already moulted (Ramos et al, 2009), reflecting accumulated mercury birds are exposed to in the non-breeding area (Gatt et al, 2021a). Mercury concentration in homogenised feather samples was quantified by thermal decomposition atomic absorption spectrometry with gold amalgamation using an AMA-254 spectrophotometer (LECO, Czech Republic), as described by Costley et al (2000).…”
Section: Feather Collection and Mercury Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In 2017, 2 cm of the tips of the secondary 8 flight feather from both wings were sampled. These specific feathers are postulated to moult or regrow while the birds are in the non-breeding area and after many other flight feathers have already moulted (Ramos et al, 2009), reflecting accumulated mercury birds are exposed to in the non-breeding area (Gatt et al, 2021a). Mercury concentration in homogenised feather samples was quantified by thermal decomposition atomic absorption spectrometry with gold amalgamation using an AMA-254 spectrophotometer (LECO, Czech Republic), as described by Costley et al (2000).…”
Section: Feather Collection and Mercury Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Telomere length was measured in erythrocytes using high precision telomere restriction fragment analysis (Nussey et al, 2014), which provides information on average telomere length and the intra-individual telomere length distribution within the genome (Bauch et al, 2014;Pineda-Pampliega et al, 2019). Mercury concentration was measured in secondary 8 flight feathers, which is an integrated measure of contamination accumulated over the period of feather growth (Gatt et al, 2021a). Specifically, our aims were to test (1) whether mercury concentration is related to telomere length;…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We acknowledge that there have been mixed recommendations on using feathers, especially flight feathers, to draw conclusions about Hg exposure in birds (Bond and Diamond 2008;Peterson et al 2019;Low et al 2020). Hg levels in feathers generally correspond with the order of moult, with the first-moulted feathers containing the highest Hg levels (Furness et al 1986;Bottini et al 2021;Gatt et al 2021). Most passerines replace their tail feathers about halfway through their moult beginning with the innermost tail feathers (Pyle 1997).…”
Section: Range-wide Hg Predictorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, quantifying mercury in feathers provides temporal and spatial contexts (Hobson, 1999;Monteiro and Furness, 1995). It is known, however, that some mercury is accumulated previous to moult, and the first feathers to be moulted display higher concentrations than the ones moulted later (Gatt et al, 2020a). Avoiding feathers that are moulted earlier (such as the inner primaries) and taking a large number of feathers minimizes and dilutes this problem.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%