Abstract
Although there is increasing evidence that bird feathers can be used as a non-destructive biomonitoring tool for organic pollutants [such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and p,p′-dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane and metabolites (DDTs)], the importance of external contamination of these organic pollutants onto the feathers has not been considered. Here we examine to which extent external contamination of organic pollutants occurs onto the feathers of a predatory bird. We have analysed primary wing feathers of 16 common buzzards ( Buteo buteo) collected in Belgium. In order to study differences in external contamination within and among wing feathers, the vane and the shaft of each feather were separated and were analysed in parallel, pooled for the three inner and the three outer primary wing feathers. Most organic pollutants could be measured in these pooled samples of both the vane and the shaft. Concentrations of hexachlorobenzene (HCB), DDTs, PCBs and PBDEs were significantly higher in the vane compared to the shaft. The profiles of PCBs and PBDEs in the shaft closely resembled the profiles in liver and muscle tissue, in contrast with the profile of the vane. The PBDE congeners 47, 99 and 153 had a similar contribution in shafts of primary feathers of common buzzards. Although these results suggest that external contamination could be important on the vane, no differences in the profile of PBDEs or PCBs were found between the inner and outer (more exposed) primary feathers. Furthermore, correlation coefficients with internal tissues were not univocally distinct between the shaft and the vane. Therefore our results indicate that the higher concentrations found in the vane in comparison to the shaft do not originate from external contamination via the air, but that other factors such as structure and chemical properties of the feathers may be of importance. The lack of significant external contamination onto the feather surface is an additional asset for the use of feathers as a non-destructive biomonitor for organic pollutants.
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