Abstract

AbstractIn a dietary toxicity study, laying hens received a diet containing the rodenticide flocoumafen at concentrations of 1.5, 5, 10 and 50 mg kg−1 for five consecutive days. The LC50 at termination following a 28‐day observation period was 16.4 mg kg−1.Livers of birds which received doses of flocoumafen between 5 and 50 mg kg−1 had concentrations of flocoumafen (1.5 nmol g−1) that were independent of dose. The data indicate the presence in hen liver of a saturable high‐affinity flocoumafen binding site with similar characteristics and capacity to that of the quail and rat. Residues of flocoumafen in samples of breast and leg muscle were low in all exposure groups. Higher, dose‐related residues were found in samples of abdominal fat and skin‐associated fat and there was a clear demonstration of the transfer of dose‐related residues into eggs.In a separate study in which hens were dosed with [14C]flocoumafen for five consecutive days at a daily rate of 1 and 4 mg kg−1 body weight, the majority (68 %) of the daily radioactive dose was eliminated over the following 24 hours via excreta. Residues in liver at death or when killed accounted for < 1 % of the cumulative administered radioactivity. Residues in eggs were located primarily in the yolk with maximum concentrations 1.0 mg kg−1 or 0.18% of the low dose; 2.1 mg kg−1 or 0.06% of the high dose as [14C]flocoumafen equivalents were observed at 10 days after start of dosing. Some 40 % of the total activity in the yolk was unchanged flocoumafen.

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