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Swallows and pigeons help us monitor pollution

By | November 22, 2012, 9:05 PM PST

Birds that feed on insects that hatch in the lake or near streams can help track environmental clean-up efforts. Unfortunately, their abilities as ‘biomonitors’ for pollution stem from that fact that any contamination in the sediment will inevitably make its way into the bodies, their eggs, and their young. Nature News reports.

Toxic chemicals called polychlorinated biphenols were showing up in the eggs and chicks of the tree swallow (Tachycineta bicolor, pictured) near a former capacitor-manufacturing plant in Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge in Illinois. Significant quantities were still found seven years after remediation efforts started, which prompted further sediment removal.

Swallows represent hyper localized contamination since they forage over small distances, usually less than half a mile from their nests. And researchers can attract them to areas of interest by putting out nesting boxes on poles – providing replicable experiments.

For monitoring air quality, researchers turn to homing pigeons (Columba livia domestica). Since many of these birds are kept in lofts in cities, they breathe ambient air and are exposed to the same environmental contaminants as us. And unlike with wild birds, their life histories are well known.

In Beijing and Manilla, researchers have found black lungs and enlarged testes in pigeons — compared with less polluted cities elsewhere in China and in the U.S., where their organs were much healthier. Also, the lungs and livers from the birds from Beijing contained up to four times more polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (by-products of fossil-fuel burning).

Some of these findings were presented at the annual meeting of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry in Long Beach, California, last week.

[Via Nature News]

Image: tree swallow via Wikimedia

A birdy post for Thanksgiving.

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Janet Fang

About Janet Fang

Janet Fang is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang
Contributing Editor, Healthcare

Janet Fang has written for Nature, Discover and the Point Reyes Light. She is currently a lab technician at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. She holds degrees from the University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang

Janet does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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