Toxicity of diclofenac to <i>Gyps</i> vultures

Gerry E. Swan(Onderstepoort Veterinary Academic Hospital), Richard Cuthbert(Royal Society for the Protection of Birds), Miguel Ángel Quevedo(Hospital Jerez Puerta del Sur), Rhys E. Green(Royal Society for the Protection of Birds), Deborah J. Pain(Royal Society for the Protection of Birds), Paul Bartels(National Zoological Gardens of South Africa), Andrew A. Cunningham(Zoological Society of London), Neil Duncan(Onderstepoort Veterinary Academic Hospital), Andrew A. Meharg(University of Aberdeen), J. Lindsay Oaks(Washington State University), Jemima Parry-Jones(Huawei Technologies (China)), Susanne Shultz(Royal Society for the Protection of Birds), Mark A. Taggart(University of Aberdeen), Gerhard H. Verdoorn(Mintek), Kerri Wolter(Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy Observatory)
Biology Letters
January 10, 2006
Cited by 294Open Access
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Abstract

Three endemic vulture species Gyps bengalensis, Gyps indicus and Gyps tenuirostris are critically endangered following dramatic declines in South Asia resulting from exposure to diclofenac, a veterinary drug present in the livestock carcasses that they scavenge. Diclofenac is widely used globally and could present a risk to Gyps species from other regions. In this study, we test the toxicity of diclofenac to a Eurasian (Gyps fulvus) and an African (Gyps africanus) species, neither of which is threatened. A dose of 0.8 mg kg(-1) of diclofenac was highly toxic to both species, indicating that they are at least as sensitive to diclofenac as G. bengalensis, for which we estimate an LD50 of 0.1-0.2 mg kg(-1). We suggest that diclofenac is likely to be toxic to all eight Gyps species, and that G. africanus, which is phylogenetically close to G. bengalensis, would be a suitable surrogate for the safety testing of alternative drugs to diclofenac.


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