XXX
th
IUGB CONGRESS (International Union of Game Biologists)
AND PERDIX XIII th th Barcelona, Spain 5 -9 September 2011
LEAD SHOT BAN COMPLIANCE IN SPANISH WETLANDS: EFFECTS ON PB POISONING PREVALENCE r. MaTEo1, a. lóPEz-aNTIa1, M.a. TaGGarT1,2, M. MarTíNEz-haro1 aND r. GuITarT3 1.
Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos, IREC (CSIC, UCLM, JCCM), Ronda de Toledo s/n, 13071 Ciudad Real, Spain. rafael.mateo@uclm.es
2.
Environmental Research Institute, University of the Highlands and Islands, Castle Street, Thurso, Caithness, Scotland, KW14 7JD, UK.
3.
Unit of Toxicology, Faculty of Veterinary Science, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain. The prevalence of lead (Pb) shot ingestion in waterfowl hunted in Spanish wetlands around the Mediterranean coast during the 1990s was as high as 30-39 % in mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), 69 % in common pochard (Aythya ferina) and 74 % in northern pintail (Anas acuta). Lead shot use was banned in protected wetlands in Spain in 2001, however, this was not fully implemented in the Ebro delta until 2003. Here, we show results for three hunting seasons (2007-2010) where shot wintering waterfowl (n = 454) from this wetland were monitored. The type of embedded shot present in hunted birds was studied by Xray and dissection. The prevalence of Pb shot ingestion was studied by gizzard examination. Ban compliance was relatively low in 2007-08, i.e., 26.9% of birds had embedded Pb shot, 10.6% had Pb and steel shot, 48.8 % had steel shot, and 13.8 % had no shot. After these results were produced, the ban was reinforced and compliance subsequently
increased (to 1.7%, 8.2%, 74.1% and 16.0%, respectively). The prevalence of Pb shot ingestion in mallards in 2007-08 (28.6%) was comparable to the pre-ban prevalence (30.2%), but, it was significantly higher than in subsequent seasons (in 2008-09: 5.1%; in 2009-10: 13.8%). In the last year of the study, a significant proportion of birds still had embedded Pb shot and/or ingested Pb shot in their gizzards. This may be because the ban was not implemented in unprotected rice fields, where the majority of ducks often feed. By extending the ban to all waterfowl hunting (not only that undertaken in protected wetlands) the risk of Pb poisoning in waterfowl can be greatly reduced.