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Volume 5 Pages 1 - 83 (March 1990)

Citation: Lafontaine, L., Joncour, G. & Menanteau, P. (1990) Otters and bio-accumulating pollutants: first data for western France. IUCN Otter Spec. Group Bull. 5: 51 - 60

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Otters and bio-accumulating pollutants: first data for western France

Lionel Lafontaine1, Guy Joncour2 and Patrick Menanteau3

1LutrAtlantica, B.P. 1, 29670 Locquenolé, France, Phone: +33 871 527 061, EMail :lionel.lafontaine@orange.fr, http://www.reseau-loutres.org
2Veterinary Surgeon, F-22160 Callac
3Direction des Services Veterinaires, P.B. 3018, F-44087 Nantes Cedex 03

Abstract: Otters are still common in eastern France but extinct in the west. Following the deaths of three otters in Brittany, the authors analysed the specimens for pollutants, and compared the results to those found in Mink in the same area. This is the first such assay done on aquatic mammals in France. This preliminary study has allowed the authors to demonstrate contamination of wetlands by several pollutants: the presence of PCBs, mercury and in a tiniest measure Dieldrin and lead, is worrying, or at least preoccupying, for two water basins in western France. It confirms also that investigations must not be limited to insignificant measures as concerns water, sediments, moss or cyprinids, but must focus equally and especially on aquatic predators: salmonids, pike and carnivorous mammals. Also the particular importance of these basins for human populations and economic activities dependent on water quality (oyster faming, for example) would merit an alertness on the part of local authorities.

Otters, being at the top of the food chain and feeding largely on fish. are likely to be especially vulnerable to the  effects of bio-accumulating pollutants. In Europe levels of these compounds (organochlorines, heavy metals) have been reported from samples of Otters in Scandinavia (Olssen & Sandegren, 1983), the British Isles (Chanin & Jefferies, 1978; Mason et al, 1986) and the Netherlands (Broekhuizen & De Ruiter-Dijkman, 1988).

Such analyses on aquatic predators have never been done in France with the exception of Alzieu & Duguy (1979) on marine mammals (range 84.6 - 319.5 mg kg-1 fat of PCBs from four grey seals).

Recently three otters (Lutra lutra) were killed by traffic on the same road in Brittany (NW France 52°91N; 5°58W).  We therefore grasped this opportunity to measure the contamination of those specimens. We had two objectives: to widen our pathological and toxicological knowledge, of which little is known in France, of a rare wild species which is now the subject of an active campaign of protection and awareness; to learn of habitat pollution by pooling several faunal specimens, to accumulate the first evidence of contamination from one of the basins where otters are still common in France (Figure 1).

Map of France showing otters are common along the south east coast and extinct in the north and west
Figure 1: Distribution of Otters in France. Origins of specimens analysed here: 1: Otters 2: Minks
Click for larger version
Figure 2: Ranges and mean values of PCB concentrations (mg kg-1) muscke fat) found in otters from several countries of Scandinavia (Olsson & Sandegren, 1988), Great Britain (Mason et al, 1986), the Netherlands (Broekhuizen & De Ruiter-Dijkman, 1988) and NW France (Current Study), in comparison with the PCB level in muscle fat of mink exhibiting reproductive failure.  Click for larger version

CURRENT STUDY

Between March 1987 and February 1988, three otters were found dead at a roadside near the Gulf of Morbihan in southern Brittany, following collisions with cars.  Concurrently, with the approach of the national "Network SOS-Otters" lobbying local authorities to build otterways in this particularly murderous area for the species, we have undertaken this analysis. To widen the study, we have analysed freshwater fish and water. Finally, we analysed bodies of three American mink from the northern Breton coast, thus extending the geographic span of this contribution.

ECOTOXICOLOGICAL ANALYSIS

Within the organism, fatty tissues are a preferential target for the fat-soluble organochlorines. The main fat. usually used, comes from the kidneys but is limited within the otter to a thin strip. This is why we had to take out the conjunctive fat of the pericaudal area. The lipid-rich encephalon was also removed. After consulting foreign studies, we also removed muscle samples from the deep gluteal area, as well as the liver and the kidneys. The levels of organochlorines and heavy metals in otter and mink tissues are shown in Table 1. For each specimen, they tally to the first three tissues where the highest concentration has been observed. Similarly, of ten organochlorines prospected, shown here are only three compounds which display the highest levels : PCB (-DP6 or Aroclor 1260). dieldrin and lindane. The seven others were absent or present as traces. One must specify that DDT, DDD and DDE can be hidden on the chromatogram by PCBs and this could explain an apparent absence.

Table 1: Levels of pollutants found in three otters and three minks from Brittany, NW France.
Bar Graphs of Pollutant Assay Results
Organochlorines
mg kg-1 fat
Liver Liver
Pericaudal Fat Pericaudal Fat
Muscle Muscle (except Otters/Lindane = encephalon)
Heavy Metals
mg kg-1 dry weight
Liver Liver
Kidney Kidney
Otter 1 subadult male 9 kg Mink 1 adult male 1.2 kg
Otter 2 adult female 7.2 kg Mink 2 adult male 0.9 kg
Otter 3 adult male 7.5 kg Mink 3 subadult female 0.7 kg

These results show that PCB concentrations are nowhere negligible, and even significant in the muscle of the third otter (56ppm) and in the livers of the first and third mink (52ppm and 48ppm). We know that at this threshold breeding can be affected. We are, nevertheless, far from the levels observed in England, the Netherlands or Sweden. Dieldrin and lindane concentrations were low though the first otter had a Dieldrin level of 3ppm in liver. Mercury concentrations were on the whole negligible in otters but significant in mink. The lead concentrations are low but constant for the whole of the sample. Cadmium concentrations were negligible.

DISCUSSION

This series of analyses, never published in France for aquatic predators such as otters or mink, amounts to only a preliminary study taking into account the small size of this sample;. However, it allows us to examine some tendencies regarding the contamination from toxic residues in some areas of French wetlands.

The fish diet of the otter is well known and these prey are responsible for most of its contamination. Keck (Veterinary National School of I.yon) shows PCB levels in roach in most rivers and French waterways today at several ppm. A French departmental order of February 1988 gives 2ppm PCBs in fresh weight as the upper limit for fish healthiness in freshwater for human consumption. This level must next be reduced to the tolerance threshold of 0.5 ppm set by the Central Laboratory of Food Hygiene of Paris.

Some surveys carried out in 1988 by the local Sanitary Commission in the pool frequented by these otters, and which supplies the town of Vannes with drinking water, came out with negative results: this water would seem to be drinkable.  PCBs are determined at 1.5 ng l-1 in the water, the other organochlorines vary from several thousandths to several hundredths of one ppm. But our analysis of some fish from this pool clearly illustrate the bio-accumulation process: thus, for example, compared with the level of Dieldrin in the water, we find a mean concentration 20,000 times stronger in eels and 150,000 times stronger with the 1st otter analysed.

CONCLUSION

This preliminary study has allowed us to demonstrate contamination of wetlands by several pollutants: the presence of PCBs,  mercury and in a tiniest measure Dieldrin and lead, is worrying, or at least preoccupying, for two water basins in western France.  It confirms also that investigations must not be limited to insignificant measures as concerns water, sediments, moss or cyprinids, but must focus equally and especially on aquatic predators: salmonids, pike and carnivorous mammals.  Also the particular importance of these basins for human populations and economic activities dependent on water quality (oyster faming, for example) would merit an alertness on the part of local authorities.

The levels of pollutants found in this small sample of otters cannot exclude a possible effect on the reproductive potential of the species from western France. The chronological decline of French otters has clearly occurred from east to west and it will be useful to know, as Or. Olsson has suggested for the whole of Europe, if PCBs could explain also this decline in France. The current setting of a national otter programme supported by the French government will allow investigations on 15 other otter specimens.  It will therefore be possible to observe possible differences in levels of pollutants found in otters from several French regions, especially from non-residential areas and industrial ones.  The map of PCB contamination found in human blood (Figure 3) suggests already such significant differences from SE to NW France

Map of France showing higher PCB concentrations in human blood in the west than the east
Figure 3: Distribution of Otters in France.
Origins of specimens analysed here:
1: Otters
2: Minks
Click for larger version
Click for larger version

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS - We are extremely grateful to Drs D. Jefferies (Nature Conservancy Council, UK), M. Olssen (museum of Natural History, Sweden) and C. Mason (University of Essex, UK) for their valuable comments.  This work was carried out with the financial support of a local fellowship (A.P.P.I.I. F-22160 Callac) and the Morbihan Departmental Hunting Federation.

REFERENCES

Alzieu, C. & Duguy, R. (1979) Teneurs et composes organochlores chez les Cetaces et les Pinnipedes frequentant les cotes de France. Oceanologica Acta 2 (1): 107 - 120
Broekhuizen, S. & De Ruiter-Dijkman, E (1988) Otters met PCB's: De Zeehondjes Van Het Zoete Water? Lutra 31: 68 - 78
Chanin, P.R.F. & Jefferies, D.J. (1978) The Decline of the Otter in Britain: an Analysis of Hunting Records and Discussion of Causes.  Biol. J. of the Linnaean Society 10: 305 - 328
Mason, C.F. et al (1986) Organochlorine Residues in British Otters.  Bull. Env. Contam. Toxicol. 36: 656 - 661
Olssen, M. & Sandegren, F. (1983) Is PCB partly responsible for the Decline of the Otter in Europe.  Paper submitted to Third International Otter Symposium.  Strasbourg, 1983 (unpublished)

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