A global review of the temporal and spatial patterns of DDT and dieldrin monitoring in raptors

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Feb 1;858(Pt 1):159734. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159734. Epub 2022 Oct 27.

Abstract

Concentrations of organochlorine pesticides have been extensively monitored in birds, particularly from higher trophic guilds such as raptors. While monitoring of raptors has been ongoing for decades, patterns from monitoring activities have never been summarised on a global scale. In this study, we undertake a review to better describe the monitoring of two widespread organochlorine pesticides monitored globally in raptors, DDT and dieldrin. We provide a historical retrospective on the monitoring effort of a global environmental issue. Sampling was heavily biased geographically to the global north, with more than 90 % of studies conducted in this socio-geographic region, most from Europe and North America. Although monitoring occurred from at least 114 species, most samples came from relatively few species, with three species (Eurasian Sparrowhawk Accipiter nisus, Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus, and Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus) comprising 50 % of samples. The types of raptors sampled have changed over time, with avian and mammal specialists dominating samples until the 1970s, but more diverse dietary guilds monitored in later decades, and greater proportions of samples coming from generalist species. The three most sampled tissues (egg, liver, and plasma) comprised 84 % of all samples. Eggs were the earliest tissue examined and the only tissue sampled in all decades. The geographical bias in monitoring effort and relatively narrow species focus, suggests that patterns in these pesticides are unlikely to be fully representative of all global environments occupied by raptors. While DDT has been banned throughout most of the global north, it remains in use in the global south, yet monitoring effort in the south, does not match that of the north. While monitoring remains prevalent in the global north, contemporary monitoring is limited in the global south with less than 10 % of raptors sampled in Asia, Africa, and South America, over the last 3 decades.

Keywords: Avian predator; DDT; Dieldrin; Global north; Global south; Organochlorine pesticides.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • DDT / analysis
  • Dieldrin / analysis
  • Eagles*
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Falconiformes*
  • Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated* / analysis
  • Mammals
  • Pesticides*
  • Raptors*
  • Retrospective Studies

Substances

  • Dieldrin
  • DDT
  • Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated
  • Pesticides