Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) exposure assessment of Carolina wren ( Thryothorus ludovicianus ) and barn swallow ( Hirundo rustica ) eggs and nestlings col
Donald E Tillitt, Danielle M Cleveland, Allison Schein, Kathy R Echols, Annie Chalifour, Jess Kidd, Robert Carter, Brian Spears, Donald D MacDonaldAbstract
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) persist for decades when released into the environment and bioaccumulate in aquatic and terrestrial environments, resulting in harmful concentrations of PCBs in fishes, birds, and humans. Approximately 310,000 metric tons of PCBs were produced at a facility in Anniston, Alabama from 1929–1971. Hundreds of metric tons of PCB-contaminated waste were suspected to have been released into local environments. This study was the first systematic exposure assessment of the degree and extent of PCBs and potential co-contaminants—polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins, polychlorinated dibenzofurans, Pb, and Hg—in avian tissues downstream of the Anniston facility. We collected 122 egg and 36 nestling tissue samples from across four exposure areas downstream of the facility and a reference site. A total of seven bird species were collected, but samples were predominantly Carolina wren (resident, Thryothorus ludovicianus) and barn swallow (migratory, Hirundo rustica). Concentrations of Pb and Hg in bird tissues collected from the exposure areas were less than toxicity reference values, suggesting Pb or Hg exposures alone were unlikely to affect birds. Total PCB concentrations in avian eggs and nestlings collected from exposure areas were among the greatest ever recorded in birds collected in North America. The PCB congener profiles in this study, paired with results from previous soil and sediment sampling, suggest that PCB-contaminated sediment and soil were the likely source of elevated PCBs in the avian tissues. The PCB concentrations observed in birds downstream of the Anniston facility were at magnitudes that likely affect populations of both resident and migratory birds that utilize the area for foraging and reproduction.