Abstract

Methylmercury (MHg) kinetics, dose-response, excretion, and toxicity were experimentally evaluated and compared between small (one to two weeks old) and large (six to seven weeks old), free-living Cory's shearwater chicks. The half-time for the terminal elimination phase of MHg in blood (5.7 d) and the average percentage of ingested MHg deposited in the blood volume (12%) were independent of the age at exposure. Therefore, these data were employed to derive a relationship between steady-state blood concentrations and dietary intake of MHg in bird chicks. Plumage:blood ratios were independent of dose and could be used as partition coefficients. Dose-response relationships in plumage and blood were linear over the wide range of exposures employed. Blood dose-responses of MHg in small and large chicks were similar. Excretion percentages into the final plumage varied between 42 and 60% of intake. The body condition of experimental chicks did not indicate sublethal toxicity of the doses administered; hence, the exposure levels provide maximum avian no-observed-adverse-effect levels for external symptoms in wild seabird chicks.

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