Cadmium in the diet and body tissues of dunlins Calidris alpina, from the Bristol channel, UK

Environ Pollut. 1994;86(2):225-31. doi: 10.1016/0269-7491(94)90194-5.

Abstract

Cadmium levels were determined in sediments, sediment-dwelling invertebrates and in one of their predators, the dunlin, at five sites in the Bristol Channel. The highest sediment cadmium levels were found in the Taff Estuary and at Avonmouth. The highest invertebrate levels were found at Avonmouth and Swansea. In dunlins, the highest cadmium levels were found in the kidneys, followed by the liver, sternum and pectoral muscle. Adult males had higher levels than adult females. Although first year birds of both sexes had low levels, these increased throughout the course of the winter. There was no simple correlation between the amount of cadmium in the sediments, and that in invertebrates or birds, although the levels in both sediments and invertebrates reached a peak in mid-winter. The most contaminated birds were, however, found closest to a known point source of cadmium.