Peregrine falcons may face new environmental threat
American Chemical Society
Less than five years after being removed from the endangered species
list, peregrine falcons could be facing a new threat. A Swedish study
found that eggs of peregrine falcons in that country contain high levels
of a popular flame retardant, deca-BDE, which scientists have long thought
could not get into wildlife. Falcons in North America are likely to face
the same threat, the researchers say.
The birds' eggs contained some of the highest levels of BDEs (brominated
diphenyl ethers) ever found in any kind of wildlife, and this was the
first time that the deca formulation of BDE has been found in a living
organism. The findings add to mounting concern among some scientists that
deca-BDE the world's most widely used brominated flame-retardant
is not as harmless as previously believed.
The report, which examined three peregrine falcon populations in Sweden
two in the wild and one in captivity appears in the current
edition (Jan. 1) of Environmental Science & Technology, a peer-reviewed
journal of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific
society.
Aerial predators that can power-dive on their prey at speeds up to 200
mph, peregrine falcons approached the brink of extinction after World
War II. Their decline was blamed mostly on organochlorine pesticides like
DDT, which were linked to thin-shelled eggs that broke during incubation.
While BDEs do not produce the eggshell thinning associated with DDT,
there has been some evidence of neurobehavioral problems from exposure
to the chemicals in laboratory animals, a potential concern for a bird
that relies on surprising its prey and diving on it. Two BDE forms
the penta and octa versions will be banned in member states of
the European Union beginning later this year, and the main U.S. manufacturer
of the products recently announced its plans to phase out production of
penta- and octa-BDEs as part of a voluntary agreement with the U.S. EPA.
"We found high concentrations of all the different BDEs in both
wild populations," says Cynthia de Wit, Ph.D., an associate professor
at Stockholm University's Institute of Applied Environmental Research
and lead author of the study. "The total concentrations of all
the BDEs in the wild falcons are some of the highest seen in any wildlife
globally."
Finding the deca form of BDE in the falcons was a surprise to the researchers
since that formulation has long been considered too big a molecule to
cross cell membranes and be taken up by wildlife or humans. "This
is the first time anyone has found deca in wildlife," de Wit
says.
"The fact that we have found [deca] in falcon eggs means that
it is in their food, is taken up from the gut and is transferred to the
eggs," de Wit says. "Thus, deca seems to cross cell membranes
without too much trouble."
The new findings add to growing concern that the deca molecule might
not be as harmless as previously believed, de Wit says.
Researchers from the University of Maryland, also reporting in the current
issue of Environmental Science & Technology, recently found evidence
that fish exposed to deca can metabolize it into the lighter and more
harmful penta and octa forms.
The European Union recently conducted an environmental risk assessment
on deca. In early December 2003 it concluded that deca poses an acceptably
low risk and will not be banned.
Many scientists, however, advocate a more cautious approach. "We
discovered the DDT problem because bird populations crashed,"
de Wit says. "They still haven't completely recovered from DDT,
so new effects could be masked. Or the BDE concentrations haven't gotten
high enough yet to cause a recognizable effect."
"The least that should be done is to reduce exposure, especially
for humans," de Wit says. "Deca does not seem to be a
very stable molecule and I am concerned that the release of huge amounts
of deca over many years will lead to a buildup in the environment that
will then slowly degrade to BDEs that are much more bioavailable."
There is a high probability that peregrine falcons in North America could
face a similar risk from deca exposure, de Wit notes. "According
to statistics from 1999, 24,300 tons of deca were used in the Americas,
compared to only 7,500 tons in Europe," de Wit says.
The Swedish Society for Nature Conservation provided funding for this
research.
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