Association of Low Reproductive Rates and High Contaminant Levels in Bald Eagles on Green Bay, Lake Michigan

2001 
Abstract Bald eagles ( Haliaeetus leucocephalus ) nesting on the shores of Green Bay, Lake Michigan, had reproductive rates significantly lower than those of neighboring eagles nesting in inland Wisconsin (0.55 vs. 1.1 young per occupied territory). This study investigated effects of two factors which have depressed eagle reproductive rates at other locations: exposure to organochlorine contaminants and low food availability. Levels of dichloro-diphenyl-dichloroethylene (DDE) and total polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in addled eggs and eaglet blood samples from Lake Michigan and inland Wisconsin reference sites were measured. An index to food availability, the food delivery rates by parent eagles to nestlings, and other behavioral indices that have been associated with food availability, were measured and compared to inland reference data. Mean contaminant concentrations in addled eggs from Green Bay were 8.3 μg/g wet weight DDE and 31.3 μg/g wet weight total PCBs (1987 to 1996, n = 9). Mean concentrations in nestling blood plasma were 53 μg/kg wet weight DDE and 207 μg/kg wet weight total PCBs (1987 to 1995, n = 8). Indices of food availability were generally normal in comparison to inland reference data. Mean food delivery rate to the nestlings was 2.55 items per nestling per day (n = 7 nests). None of the behavioral measures differed significantly from inland reference values, suggesting that prey was adequate. It was concluded that organochlorine contaminants caused all or most of the depression in reproductive rates of Green Bay bald eagles.
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