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  4. Profile of Selected Mineral Elements in Tibiotarsal Bone of the White-Tailed Sea Eagle in Its Natural Habitat
 
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Profile of Selected Mineral Elements in Tibiotarsal Bone of the White-Tailed Sea Eagle in Its Natural Habitat

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2022
Author
Ruszkowski, Jakub Jędrzej 
Hanć, Anetta
Komosa, Marcin
Dzierzęcka, Małgorzata
Mizera, Tadeusz 
Gogulski, Maciej 
Zaworska-Zakrzewska, Anita 
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
Journal
Animals
ISSN
2076-2615
DOI
10.3390/ani12202744
Web address
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/12/20/2744
Volume
12
Number
20
Pages from-to
art. 2744
Abstract (EN)
Mineral bone composition (dry matter, bones ash, P, Ca, Zn, Mn, Mg, and Cu) and Pb levels of tibiotarsi of seven White-Tailed Sea Eagles were assessed. Lead intoxication in different bird species including waterfowl and raptors is being studied worldwide. The bones were analyzed for Pb by mass spectrometry with excitation in inductively coupled plasma (ICP-MS Elan DRC II) and for bone composition by Atomic Emission Spectrometer (Agilent 4100 Microwave Plasma). Pb levels ranging from 3.54 µg/g to 74.6 µg/g DM suggest that some of the investigated birds might have been intoxicated by Pb. Results of this analysis were divided into two groups of bones, with bone Pb levels higher and lower than Pb toxicity levels, and mineral bone compositions of both groups were compared. The present study shows the differentiation of bone mineral composition among seven examined White-Tailed Sea Eagles, considered a specific species in raptors. Pb intoxication may not have a major influence on mineral bone composition in raptors. It also suggests that assessing bone composition of raptor bones may help finding the possible cause of their deaths.
Keywords (EN)
  • bone composition

  • conservation

  • heavy metal toxicity

  • minerals

  • Pb toxicity

  • Haliaeetus albicilla

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
October 13, 2022
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