4.0 Article

Mercury in immature and adults Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) wintering on the Gulf of Gdansk area

Journal

OCEANOLOGICAL AND HYDROBIOLOGICAL STUDIES
Volume 42, Issue 3, Pages 260-267

Publisher

VERSITA
DOI: 10.2478/s13545-013-0082-y

Keywords

total mercury; Larus argentatus; muscles; internal organs; blood; Gulf of Gdansk

Funding

  1. Polish Ministry of Research and Education [N N304 161637]

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This study presents total mercury concentrations (Hg-T) in selected tissues and organs (blood, muscles, liver, kidneys, feathers and claws) of the herring gull (Larus argentatus) in order to assess the environmental pollution in the coastal zone of the southern Baltic. Dead, frozen birds were collected in the vicinity of Wladysawowo between December 2009 and March 2010, an exceptionally severe winter - a total of 13 specimens; 6 adults (> 4 years old) and 7 immature birds (a parts per thousand currency sign4 years old). Mercury concentrations in all analyzed samples exceeded the detection limit. The lowest average concentration, at a level of 0.4 mu g Hg g(-1) (d.w.) was observed in the muscles of adult and immature gulls while the highest, at a level of 3.3 mu g Hg g(-1) (d.w), was determined in the contour of immature gulls. A significant linear correlation was found between mercury concentration in the blood and the concentration in the kidneys and liver, with the coefficients of determination at R-2 = 0.87 and 0.86, respectively. This indicates that blood of birds, as a mercury carrier, may reflects the concentration of mercury in tissues and internal organs of birds and, in the case of kidneys and liver, may express long-term exposure to mercury in nourishment.

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