Abstract

In 1982, twenty-four pairs of captive American kestrels ( Falco sparverius) were forced to renest by removal of their first clutches 6 days after their completion. Immediately following, each of three groups of eitht pairs was randomly assigned to one of three daily dietary regimes for 10 days: (1) three 1-day old cockerels with background levels of F − (62·4 ± 51 ppm, mean ± SD) in their femurae, (2) two 10-day old cockerels with 4512 ± 810 pp of F −in their femurae, (3) two 10-day old cockerels with 7690 ± 417 ppm of F − in their femurae. Fluoride levels in femurae of treated kestrels were significantly (P < 0·0025) higher than those of control birds. Clutch sizes tended to be smaller as more fluoride was added to the diet, but not significantly so, due to an increase of the variance in the treatment group. Per cent fertility and per cent hatchability were not significantly affected by treatment. The fluoride content in eggshells in the fluoride-treated groups differed significantly from those of the control group (P < 0·001).

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