Title of article :
Regional differences in collagen stable isotope and tissue trace element profiles in populations of long-tailed duck breeding in the Canadian Arctic
Author/Authors :
Birgit M. Braunea، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Keith A. Hobsonb، نويسنده , , Brian J. Malonec، نويسنده , , F، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
13
From page :
156
To page :
168
Abstract :
Adult long-tailed ducks (Clangula hyemalis) were collected from nine locations across their breeding grounds in northern Canada and measurements of stable isotopes of carbon (d13C), nitrogen (d15N) and sulfur (d34S) in bone collagen were used to investigate if relative use of freshwater habitats such as the Great Lakes (with expected depleted stable isotope profiles) compared with coastal marine environments (with expected enriched stable isotope foodweb profiles) could explain tissue trace element profiles. Contrary to expectation, all three stable isotopes did not covary in our sample, suggesting that mechanisms other than simple freshwater vs. marine isotopic gradients were involved among populations. All three stable isotopes varied significantly with collection location and both d15N and d13C values varied significantly between sexes suggesting that males exploit either a different food base or occur in different geographic areas than females for at least part of the year. The d34S data, in particular, suggested that many of the birds breeding in the western Canadian Arctic probably overwinter in the Great Lakes along with many of the birds breeding in Hudson Bay. Males at the majority of collection locations had higher concentrations of hepatic Hg (1.1–8 Ag/g dw), Cu (25–40 Ag/g dw), Se (7.3–27 Ag/g dw) and renal Cd (33–129 Ag/g dw) than females. Concentrations of Hg, Cu and Cd were well below toxicological threshold levels found in the literature. However, hepatic Se concentrations in 64% of the females exceeded 10 Ag/g dw and concentrations in 8% of the birds measured exceeded 33 Ag/g dw suggesting levels of potential concern.
Keywords :
stable isotopes , BONE COLLAGEN , trace elements , Waterfowl , Canadian Arctic
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Record number :
984305
Link To Document :
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