1. Spatial variations in winter Hg contamination affect egg volume in an Arctic seabird, the great skua (Stercorarius skua)
- Author
-
Céline Albert, Hallvard Strøm, Hálfdán Helgi Helgason, Vegard Sandøy Bråthen, Fannar Theyr Gudmundsson, Paco Bustamante, and Jérôme Fort
- Subjects
Birds ,Charadriiformes ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Humans ,Animals ,Female ,Environmental Pollutants ,Mercury ,General Medicine ,Feathers ,Toxicology ,Pollution ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Knowledge of the ecology and at-sea distribution of migratory species like seabirds has substantially increased over the last two decades. Furthermore, an increasing number of studies have recently focused on chemical contamination of birds over their annual cycle. However, the understanding of the combined effects of spatial movements and contamination on seabirds' life-history traits is still scarce. During winter, seabirds can use very different areas, at the large-scale. Such overwintering strategies and distribution may expose individuals to contrasting environmental stressors, including pollutants. Here, we studied the winter distribution and contamination with mercury (Hg), and their combined effects on reproduction, in a great skua (Stercorarius skua) population breeding in Bjørnøya, Svalbard. We confirmed that individuals of this specific population overwinter in three different areas of the North Atlantic, namely Africa, Europe and northwest Atlantic. The highest Hg concentrations in feathers were measured in great skuas wintering off Europe (Linear Mixed Models - mean value ± SD = 10.47 ± 3.59 μg g
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF