Abstract

Antibiotic residues that may be present in carcasses of medicated livestock could pass to and greatly reduce scavenger wildlife populations. We surveyed residues of the quinolones enrofloxacin and its metabolite ciprofloxacin and other antibiotics (amoxicillin and oxytetracycline) in nestling griffon Gyps fulvus, cinereous Aegypius monachus and Egyptian Neophron percnopterus vultures in central Spain. We found high concentrations of antibiotics in the plasma of many nestling cinereous (57%) and Egyptian (40%) vultures. Enrofloxacin and ciprofloxacin were also found in liver samples of all dead cinereous vultures. This is the first report of antibiotic residues in wildlife. We also provide evidence of a direct association between antibiotic residues, primarily quinolones, and severe disease due to bacterial and fungal pathogens. Our results indicate that, by damaging the liver and kidney and through the acquisition and proliferation of pathogens associated with the depletion of lymphoid organs, continuous exposure to antibiotics could increase mortality rates, at least in cinereous vultures. If antibiotics ingested with livestock carrion are clearly implicated in the decline of the vultures in central Spain then it should be considered a primary concern for conservation of their populations.

Highlights

  • Antibiotics are one of the biomedical revolutions of the 20th century

  • We investigated the possible transmission of antibiotic residues from livestock carcasses to nestlings of three vulture species in central Spain

  • Antibiotic bacterial resistance in wildlife has been highlighted as evidence of the impact of increasing human intrusions on wildlife habitats [6,14]

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Summary

Introduction

Antibiotics (formally antimicrobials) are one of the biomedical revolutions of the 20th century. Their misuse has led to an increase in diseases in humans and domestic animals worldwide [1]. Withdrawal periods and residue controls are conducted in slaughterhouses to prevent harmful drug residuals in food that humans consume [4]. These waiting periods do not apply to carcasses and other wastes disposed of in dumps exploited by scavengers. The use of antibiotics and other drugs in livestock may directly damage the health and survival of scavengers if ingested as toxic residues [5,6,7]. Antibiotic residues ingested by avian scavengers may select for antibiotic resistance, the emergence, dissemination and persistence of which represents a major health problem in human and veterinary medicine worldwide [1,4]

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