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Featured researches published by Deborah J. Pain.


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2002

The Common Agricultural Policy, EU enlargement and the conservation of Europe's farmland birds

Paul F. Donald; Giovanna Pisano; Matthew Rayment; Deborah J. Pain

The populations of many species of farmland bird declined greatly across Europe during the last quarter of the twentieth century, indicating severe damage to the continents biodiversity. Recent analyses show that these declines are correlated with agricultural intensity across Europe, and that declines in the European Union (EU) have been greater than in non-Member States. In this review paper, the reasons for the uneven distribution of agricultural intensity and bird population trends across Europe are discussed and the political and economic mechanisms behind agricultural intensification reviewed. In the EU, the driving force behind agricultural intensification has been the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), which simultaneously supports greater productivity and inhibits extensification. In eastern Europe, there has been a general reduction in state support for agriculture since the collapse of communism and farmland bird populations have declined far less than in western Europe as a result. However, many countries are hoping to join the EU in the near future, one of several reasons which make reform of the CAP inevitable. The introduction of the CAP in its present form to these countries is likely to damage the important farmland bird populations currently found there. The potential exists to restructure EU support for agriculture to decouple payments from productivity and reward farmers for making environmental improvements to their land. This would facilitate EU enlargement, reduce the costs of producing and storing agricultural surpluses, reduce the external costs of agriculture, allow the EU to comply with international trade agreements and protect and enhance farmland bird populations. A number of possible delivery mechanisms are discussed.


Biological Conservation | 2003

Catastrophic collapse of Indian white-backed Gyps bengalensis and long-billed Gyps indicus vulture populations

Vibhu Prakash; Deborah J. Pain; Andrew A. Cunningham; Paul F. Donald; N. Prakash; A. Verma; R. Gargi; S. Sivakumar; Asad R. Rahmani

In 2000, we conducted a survey to quantify the declines in the populations of Gyps bengalensis and G. indicus across India since 1990–1993. Directly comparable data for the two periods were obtained from over 6000 km of road transect surveys carried out in protected areas, the regions around protected areas and linking highways across the country. An additional 5000 kmwere covered in 2000 in previously unsurveyed areas. Further data were collected fromquestionnaires circulated to ornithologists, wildlife experts and forestry officials. Massive declines in the populations of both species were apparent fromall parts of the country, and exceeded 92% overall. The extent of declines did not differ between protected areas and elsewhere. Apparently sick birds, with drooping necks, were observed in all regions, and dead adult and juvenile vultures were frequently observed. Food availability did not decline greatly over this period. The patterns of declines and the presence of sick and dead birds indicate epidemic disease as a possible


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B-Biological Sciences. 2004;271:S458-S460. | 2004

Diclofenac poisoning is widespread in declining vulture populations across the Indian subcontinent.

Susanne Shultz; Hem Sagar Baral; Sheonaidh Charman; Andrew A. Cunningham; Devojit Das; G. R. Ghalsasi; Mallikarjun S. Goudar; Rhys E. Green; Ainsley Jones; Prashant Nighot; Deborah J. Pain; Vibhu Prakash

Recent declines in the populations of three species of vultures in the Indian subcontinent are among the most rapid ever recorded in any bird species. Evidence from a previous study of one of these species, Gyps bengalensis, in the Punjab province of Pakistan, strongly implicates mortality caused by ingestion of residues of the veterinary non–steroidal anti–inflammatory drug diclofenac as the major cause of the decline. We show that a high proportion of Gyps bengalensis and G. indicus found dead or dying in a much larger area of India and Nepal also have residues of diclofenac and visceral gout, a post–mortem finding that is strongly associated with diclofenac contamination in both species. Hence, veterinary use of diclofenac is likely to have been the major cause of the rapid vulture population declines across the subcontinent.


Biology Letters | 2006

Toxicity of diclofenac to Gyps vultures

Gerry E. Swan; Richard J. Cuthbert; Miguel Quevedo; Rhys E. Green; Deborah J. Pain; Paul Bartels; Andrew A. Cunningham; Neil Duncan; Andrew A. Meharg; J. Lindsay Oaks; Jemima Parry-Jones; Susanne Shultz; Mark A. Taggart; Gerhard Verdoorn; Kerri Wolter

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.


PLOS Biology | 2006

Removing the threat of diclofenac to critically endangered Asian vultures

Gerry E. Swan; Vinasan Naidoo; Richard J. Cuthbert; Rhys E. Green; Deborah J. Pain; D. Swarup; Vibhu Prakash; Mark A. Taggart; Lizette C. Bekker; Devojit Das; Jörg Diekmann; Maria Diekmann; Elmarié Killian; Andrew A. Meharg; Ramesh Chandra Patra; Mohini Saini; Kerri Wolter

Veterinary use of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAID) drug diclofenac in South Asia has resulted in the collapse of populations of three vulture species of the genusGyps to the most severe category of global extinction risk. Vultures are exposed to diclofenac when scavenging on livestock treated with the drug shortly before death. Diclofenac causes kidney damage, increased serum uric acid concentrations, visceral gout, and death. Concern about this issue led the Indian Government to announce its intention to ban the veterinary use of diclofenac by September 2005. Implementation of a ban is still in progress late in 2005, and to facilitate this we sought potential alternative NSAIDs by obtaining information from captive bird collections worldwide. We found that the NSAID meloxicam had been administered to 35 captiveGyps vultures with no apparent ill effects. We then undertook a phased programme of safety testing of meloxicam on the African white-backed vultureGyps africanus, which we had previously established to be as susceptible to diclofenac poisoning as the endangered AsianGyps vultures. We estimated the likely maximum level of exposure (MLE) of wild vultures and dosed birds by gavage (oral administration) with increasing quantities of the drug until the likely MLE was exceeded in a sample of 40G. africanus. Subsequently, sixG. africanus were fed tissues from cattle which had been treated with a higher than standard veterinary course of meloxicam prior to death. In the final phase, ten Asian vultures of two of the endangered species(Gyps bengalensis,Gyps indicus) were dosed with meloxicam by gavage; five of them at more than the likely MLE dosage. All meloxicam-treated birds survived all treatments, and none suffered any obvious clinical effects. Serum uric acid concentrations remained within the normal limits throughout, and were significantly lower than those from birds treated with diclofenac in other studies. We conclude that meloxicam is of low toxicity toGyps vultures and that its use in place of diclofenac would reduce vulture mortality substantially in the Indian subcontinent. Meloxicam is already available for veterinary use in India.


Science of The Total Environment | 1998

The Doñana ecological disaster: contamination of a world heritage estuarine marsh ecosystem with acidified pyrite mine waste

Deborah J. Pain; A Sánchez; Andrew A. Meharg

One of the most important bird breeding and over wintering sites in the west of Europe, the Coto Doñana, was severely impacted by the release of 5 million cubic meters of acid waste from the processing of pyrite ore. The waste entered ecologically sensitive areas of the park (including breeding areas for internationally endangered bird species) causing sustained pH decreases from pH 8.5 to 4.5 and resulting in massive metal contamination of the impacted ecosystem. The contaminating sludge waste contained arsenic at 0.6%, lead at 1.2% and zinc at 0.8% on a dry weight basis. The acid conditions facilitated the solubilization of these metals, leading to water concentrations lethal for aquatic wildlife. The accident caused considerable fish and invertebrate kills and has severe consequences for the protected bird species dependent on the impacted habitats and adjacent areas.


Oecologia | 2004

Using stable isotopes to investigate migratory connectivity of the globally threatened aquatic warbler Acrocephalus paludicola

Deborah J. Pain; Rhys E. Green; Benedikt Gieβing; Alexander Kozulin; Anatoly Poluda; Ulf Ottosson; Martin Flade; Geoff M. Hilton

Understanding the links between breeding and wintering areas of migratory species has important ecological and conservation implications. Recently, stable isotope technology has been used to further our understanding. Stable isotope ratios vary geographically with a range of biogeochemical factors and isotope profiles in organisms reflect those in their food and environment. For inert tissues like feathers, isotope profiles reflect the environment in which they were formed. Following large-scale habitat destruction, the globally threatened aquatic warbler Acrocephalus paludicola has a fragmented breeding population across central Europe, largely in Belarus, Poland and Ukraine. The species’ sub-Saharan African wintering grounds have not yet been discovered, and this significantly hampers conservation efforts. Aquatic warblers grow their flight feathers on their wintering grounds, and we analysed stable isotope ratios (δ15N, δ13C, δD) in rectrices of adults from six main breeding sites (subpopulations) across Europe to determine whether different breeding subpopulations formed a single mixed population on the wintering grounds. δ15N varies considerably with dietary trophic level and environmental factors, and δD with the δD in rainfall; neither varied between aquatic warbler subpopulations. Uniform feather δ15N signatures suggest no major variation in dietary trophic level during feather formation. High variance and inter-annual differences in mean δD values hinder interpretation of these data. Significant differences in mean δ13C ratios existed between subpopulations. We discuss possible interpretations of this result, and consider differences in moulting latitude of different subpopulations to be the most parsimonious. δ13C in plants and animals decreases with latitude, along a steep gradient in sub-Saharan Africa. Birds from the most north-westerly breeding subpopulation (Karsibor, Poland) had significantly lower variance in δ13C and δ15N than birds from all other sites, suggesting either that birds from Karsibor are less geographically dispersed during moult, or moult in an area with less isotopic heterogeneity. Mean δ13C signatures from winter-grown feathers of different subpopulations were positively correlated with the latitude and longitude of breeding sites, suggesting a strong relationship between European breeding and African winter moulting latitudes. The use of stable isotopes provides novel insights into migratory connectivity and migration patterns in this little-known threatened species.


Environmental Pollution | 1995

Lead concentrations in birds of prey in Britain

Deborah J. Pain; J. Sears; Ian Newton

This paper reports on lead (Pb) concentrations in the livers of 424 individuals of 16 raptor species found dead and sent for analysis to the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Monkswood, from the early 1980s to the early 1990s. Elevated Pb concentrations in liver (>20 ppm dry wt), within the range associated with Pb poisoning mortality in raptors, were recorded in one peregrine (4% of species sample) and one buzzard (2% of species sample). These birds are likely to have ingested lead gunshot in the flesh of their prey. Another one each of these species had liver Pb concentrations of 15-20 ppm dry wt, reflecting unusually high absorption of Pb. No individuals of any other species had >15 ppm dry wt liver Pb, although some had 6-15 ppm. The source of Pb in these birds was unknown, but it could have resulted from high Pb concentrations in prey items, including some containing lead shot. Median liver Pb concentrations were generally very low (ranging from <0.07 to 1.61 ppm dry wt for species with sample sizes exceeding 10). In sparrowhawks, for which a large sample was available, liver Pb concentrations in all but one individual were low (<2.6 ppm dry wt). Pb concentrations in juveniles were significantly lower than in adults, and were lowest in recently fledged birds.


Biology Letters | 2007

NSAIDs and scavenging birds: potential impacts beyond Asia's critically endangered vultures

Richard J. Cuthbert; Jemima Parry-Jones; Rhys E. Green; Deborah J. Pain

Veterinary treatment of livestock with diclofenac, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), has caused catastrophic declines of Gyps vultures in Asia. This has highlighted a lack of knowledge on the potential impacts of NSAIDs on scavenging birds. Surveys of veterinarians and zoos document the outcomes of the treatment of over 870 scavenging birds from 79 species. As well as diclofenac, carprofen and flunixin were associated with mortality, with deaths observed in 13 and 30% of cases, respectively. Mortality was also found following treatment with ibuprofen and phenylbutazone. NSAID toxicity was reported for raptors, storks, cranes and owls, suggesting that the potential conservation impact of NSAIDs may extend beyond Gyps vultures and could be significant for New World vultures. In contrast, there were no reported mortalities for the NSAID meloxicam, which was administered to over 700 birds from 60 species. The relative safety of meloxicam supports other studies indicating the suitability of this NSAID to replace diclofenac in Asia.


Environmental Pollution | 1990

Lead shot ingestion by waterbirds in the Camargue, France: An investigation of levels and interspecific differences

Deborah J. Pain

Between January 1988 and February 1989, gizzards were collected from 1155 birds from the groups; Anatidae, Charadriidae, Scolopacidae and Rallidae, shot in the Camargue, and examined for the presence of ingested lead shot. Shot was found in nine out of ten Anatidae species, three of 15 Scolopacidae species and all of three Rallidae species. Twenty-seven per cent of Anatidae sampled had ingested shot, 13.8% had one shot present and 6.3% had more than five. Shot ingestion levels ranged from 3-60% of birds examined according to species. The incidence of shot ingestion did not appear to vary seasonally. In Anatidae, a strong interspecific relationship was found between the grit size ingested and susceptibility to ingest shot (r = 0.94). In Scolopacidae, shot ingestion may have been related to grit size ingested, feeding method and bill length. The levels of shot ingestion presented are for most species higher than have been reported elsewhere in the world. This may result from the absence of grit and presence of high shot densities in Camargue marshes.

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Andrew A. Meharg

Queen's University Belfast

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Andrew A. Cunningham

Zoological Society of London

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Richard J. Cuthbert

Wildlife Conservation Society

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Vibhu Prakash

Bombay Natural History Society

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Asad R. Rahmani

Bombay Natural History Society

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Devojit Das

Bombay Natural History Society

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Susanne Shultz

University of Manchester

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