Concentrations and distribution of 210Pb in bird feathers and its potential for tracing age and flight times

Autor/a

Fraixedas, Sara

Riera, Alba

Barriocanal, Carles

Alorda-Montiel, Irene

Quesada, Javier

Rodellas, Valentí

Garcia-Orellana, Jordi

Fecha de publicación

2024-02-16



Resumen

Bird feathers have been widely used as environmental indicators, providing key information on environmental pollution. However, there is little available information on the adsorption of natural radioactivity in bird feathers and consequently, its impact on the field of movement ecology is not yet known. This study investigates the concentration and distribution of 210Pb in wing- and tail-feathers of different bird species with contrasting migratory strategies, and discusses its potential use as a tracer of age and flight times. Adsorption of 210Pb in bird feathers is directly related to the interaction of feathers with air, therefore it is hypothesised that the presence of this radionuclide is proportional to the length of flight times, and is asymmetrically distributed in flight feathers. Consequently, a significant difference is expected between 210Pb concentrations in feathers of long-distance migrants when compared to sedentary species. For this purpose, a total of 45 samples from eight individuals of three bird species with distinct migratory strategies were analysed: a highly aerial and long-distance migratory species (Common swift Apus apus), and two largely sedentary species widely distributed across Europe (Great tit Parus major and Tawny owl Strix aluco). Novel findings show that the content of 210Pb in bird feathers of adult migratory birds is much higher than in sedentary birds or juvenile individuals, demonstrating this naturally occurring radionuclide can provide information about the contact time between feathers and air. Additionally, 210Pb adsorption was not evenly distributed in bird feathers. The findings provide a new method to trace age and flight time of birds using 210Pb in feathers, complementing conventional techniques in bird migration studies.

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias CDU

59 - Zoología

Palabras clave

Ocells; Plomes; Migració d'ocells; Contaminació radioactiva

Páginas

8 p.

Es versión de

Journal of environmental radioactivity, 274 (2024), 107397

Documentos

Freixedas_2024.pdf

1.643Mb

 

Derechos

(C) 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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