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Dive into the research topics where Jhon J. López-Perea is active.

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Featured researches published by Jhon J. López-Perea.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Interspecific and geographical differences in anticoagulant rodenticide residues of predatory wildlife from the Mediterranean region of Spain

Jhon J. López-Perea; Pablo R. Camarero; Rafael A. Molina-López; Luis Parpal; Elena Obón; Jessica Solá; Rafael Mateo

We studied the prevalence of anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) in the liver of 344 individuals representing 11 species of predatory wildlife that were found dead in the Mediterranean region of Spain (Catalonia and Majorca Island). Six different ARs (brodifacoum, bromadiolone, difenacoum, flocoumafen, difethialone, warfarin) were found in the liver of 216 (62.8%) animals and >1 AR co-occurred in 119 individuals (34.6%). The occurrence of ARs was positively correlated with the human population density. Catalonia and Majorca showed similar prevalence of AR detection (64.4 and 60.4%, respectively), but a higher prevalence was found in the resident population of Eurasian scops owl (Otus scops) from Majorca (57.7%) compared to the migratory population from Catalonia (14.3%). Birds of prey had lower levels of bromadiolone than hedgehogs, whereas no difference was found for other ARs. The risk of SGAR poisoning in wild predators in NE Spain is believed to be elevated, because 23.3% of the individuals exhibited hepatic concentration of ARs exceeding 200 ng/g.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Effects of invasive fish and quality of water and sediment on macrophytes biomass, and their consequences for the waterbird community of a Mediterranean floodplain

Celia Laguna; Jhon J. López-Perea; Javier Viñuela; Máximo Florín; Jordi Feliu; Álvaro Chicote; Santos Cirujano; Rafael Mateo

Floodplains are among the most threatened ecosystems world-wide because of multiple stressors, i.e., invasive species, pollution and aquifer overexploitation; the Tablas de Daimiel National Park (Spain) is a clear example of these kinds of impact. This work aims to test whether invasive fish and/or the water and sediment quality are significant drivers of the decline of stonewort (Chara spp.) meadows in the Tablas de Daimiel, investigating how this could explain changes observed in the waterbird community. Bird surveys performed monthly between June 2010 and April 2014 have shown that herbivorous species like the red-crested pochard (Netta rufina) reached historical records between September 2010 and June 2011, but have decreased since then. Piscivorous waterbirds like the great cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo) and herons increased in population after 2011, however. These changes may be due to the decline of Chara spp. meadows, connected to overexploitation by herbivores, or to changes in water and sediment quality. To test this hypothesis, we studied the growth of Chara spp. biomass in ten sites of the Tablas de Daimiel, where experimental exclosures were set up to exclude herbivory by birds, and bioturbation and herbivory by fish. Our results have shown that the absence of Chara spp. in the Tablas de Daimiel is mostly explained by presence of invasive fish (i.e. common carp). Moreover, the physicochemical characteristics of the water (lower values of conductivity and higher values of inorganic carbon and organic nitrogen), as well as of the sediment (lower values of inorganic and organic phosphorus), favour the increase of Chara spp., in the absence of the fish effect. These results led the National Park managers to begin the control of invasive fish as an urgent measure to assure the ecological conservation of this Mediterranean wetland.


Pest Management Science | 2017

A negative association between bromadiolone exposure and nestling body condition in common kestrels: management implications for vole outbreaks

Jesús Martínez-Padilla; David López-Idiáquez; Jhon J. López-Perea; Rafael Mateo; Alfonso Paz; Javier Viñuela

BACKGROUND Vole outbreaks have been extensively described, along with their impacts on humans, particularly in agricultural areas. The use of rodenticides is a common legal practice to minimise crop damage induced by high vole density for biocidal use. However, rodenticides can have negative direct and indirect impacts on non-target species that feed on voles. We studied whether the use of a second-generation anticoagulant rodenticide (SGAR), bromadiolone, can be detected in the blood of fledglings of wild common kestrels Falco tinnunculus in two areas of central Spain, exploring its possible indirect effects. RESULTS We found that 16.9% of fledglings had a detectable concentration of bromadiolone in their blood, with an average concentration of 0.248 ± 0.023 ng mL-1 . Fledglings with bromadiolone in their blood, regardless of the concentration, had 6.7% lower body mass than those without detectable bromadiolone. CONCLUSION The use of bromadiolone was detectable in the blood of alive non-target species. Detected bromadiolone in blood may reduce the body condition of nestlings, potentially reducing their fitness. The source of bromadiolone found in nestlings needs to be determined in future studies to derive accurate management advice. However, we urge the discontinuation of official SGAR distribution to farmers and their use in agrarian lands to minimise damage of voles on crops, particularly where common kestrels breed, and encourage the use of alternative effective practices.


Archive | 2018

Secondary Exposure to Anticoagulant Rodenticides and Effects on Predators

Jhon J. López-Perea; Rafael Mateo

Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are currently the most common pesticides and biocides used to control rodents. The long-term persistence in animal tissues of the second-generation compounds (SGARs) causes their bioaccumulation in predatory species. In this chapter, we evaluate some of the key parameters that are likely to determine bioaccumulation and risk in wildlife from secondary exposure to ARs, review wildlife field monitoring studies from around the world to assess the scale of that exposure, and examine the current state of knowledge as to how secondary exposure relates to risk of mortality and other adverse effects in wildlife and in humans. Using a simple modelling approach and information from the published literature, we conclude that excretion rate is key in determining the extent of bioaccumulation and resultant risk in wildlife from secondary exposure to SGARs. We also find that secondary exposure in predators is widespread and widescale throughout the world, and may be greatest in predatory mammals that specialise on feeding on rodents. The extent of secondary [lethal and sub-lethal] poisoning that results is unclear. This is largely because unequivocal diagnosis of AR-mediated mortalities is not easy to determine from necropsy and there is no clear threshold residue that is diagnostic of effect, although recent development of probabilistic modelling of residue data may help in the future. We recommend that the direct consequences for predators from AR exposure, and the potential consequent impacts on the top-down regulation of rodent populations, deserve greater study.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Integrated environmental risk assessment of chemical pollution in a Mediterranean floodplain by combining chemical and biological methods

Claudia Rivetti; Jhon J. López-Perea; Celia Laguna; Benjamin Piña; Rafael Mateo; Ethel Eljarrat; Damià Barceló; Carlos Barata

The Tablas de Daimiel National Park (TDNP) is a unique floodplain ecosystem in central Spain, serving as permanent resting and breeding areas for many waterbird species. In the last decades, this biodiversity hotspot has been severely endangered by poorly treated wastewater discharges from upstream urban communities arriving through its two major contributors, the Cigüela and Guadiana rivers. In this work, we analysed the potential risk of this constant input of micropollutants (estrogens, dioxin-like compounds and other endocrine disruptors) for the resident wildlife. We sampled 12 locations in TDNP and in the nearby Navaseca Pond during 2013, and performed a series of in-vivo and in-vitro bioassays, including Daphnia magna post-exposure feeding inhibition and recombinant yeast-based assays for dioxin-like and estrogenic activities. These results were then compared with the chemical composition of the samples, analysed by GC-MS/MS and LC-MS/MS, and evaluated according to their toxic potential as toxic equivalents or TEQ. The Navaseca Pond, heavily impacted by wastewater from the town of Daimiel, showed the highest levels of toxic compounds, estrogenic activity, and Daphnia toxicity. Conversely, the less impacted TDNP sites showed low residue levels of contaminants, low estrogenicity and dioxin-like activity and negligible toxicity. The results indicates that the current good chemical status of TDNP is menaced by both the inflow of wastewater treatment plants effluents from Guadiana and Cigüela rivers into TDNP tributaries and, as it occurs in the Navaseca Pond, by direct sewage discharges.


Science of The Total Environment | 2019

Metals and metalloids in blood and feathers of common moorhens (Gallinula chloropus) from wetlands that receive treated wastewater

Jhon J. López-Perea; Celia Laguna; María Jiménez-Moreno; Rosa C. Rodríguez Martín-Doimeadios; Jordi Feliu; Rafael Mateo

We addressed the hypothesis that birds in eutrophic wetlands receiving wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents are exposed to high levels of metals and metalloids and this may drive an ecological trap in some species attracted to these highly productive ecosystems. Levels of metals and metalloids were determined in sediment and in blood and feathers of common moorhens (Gallinula chloropus) from two wetlands in Central Spain: Navaseca Pond, which receives directly the effluent of a WWTP; and Tablas de Daimiel National Park, which is a floodplain less affected by urban discharges. Sediment concentrations of Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd and Pb were higher in Navaseca Pond than in Tablas de Daimiel; only Se was higher in Tablas de Daimiel than in Navaseca. Blood levels of Hg and Se were higher in moorhens from Tablas de Daimiel than those from Navaseca. In the case of Hg these levels were below the threshold of adverse effect, but Se levels in 24% of moorhens from Tablas de Daimiel were above the threshold value associated with Se toxicity in birds (1000 ng/mL). In feathers, Hg, Se, Mn, Cu and As levels were higher in Tablas de Daimiel than in Navaseca. Body condition of moorhens was negatively associated with blood Se levels in the moorhens from Tablas de Daimiel. We can reject the hypothesis of a higher accumulation of metals and metalloids in birds associated with the WWTP effluent, but Se levels may need further research considering the nature of the floodplain of Tablas de Daimiel National Park.


Environmental Pollution | 2018

Urbanization and cattle density are determinants in the exposure to anticoagulant rodenticides of non-target wildlife

Jhon J. López-Perea; Pablo R. Camarero; Inés S. Sánchez-Barbudo; Rafael Mateo

The persistence and toxicity of second generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) in animal tissues make these compounds dangerous by biomagnification in predatory species. Here we studied the levels of SGARs in non-target species of wildlife and the environmental factors that influence such exposure. Liver samples of terrestrial vertebrates (n = 244) found dead between 2007 and 2016 in the region of Aragón (NE Spain) were analysed. The presence of SGARs was statistically analysed with binary or ordinal logistic models to study the effect of habitat characteristics including human population density, percentage of urban surface, livestock densities and surface of different types of crops. SGARs residues were detected in 83 (34%) of the animals and levels >200 ng/g were found in common raven (67%), red fox (50%), red kite (38%), Eurasian eagle-owl (25%), stone marten (23%), Eurasian buzzard (17%), northern marsh harrier (17%), and Eurasian badger (14%). The spatial analysis revealed that the presence of SGARs residues in wildlife was more associated with the use of these products as biocides in urban areas and cattle farms rather than as plant protection products in agricultural fields. This information permits to identify potential habitats where SGARs may pose a risk for predatory birds and mammals.


Archive | 2015

The use of bromadiolone to control vole outbreaks is passed on to non-target species: implications for conservation policies

David López-Idiáquez; Jesús Martínez-Padilla; Jhon J. López-Perea; Alfonso Paz; Rafael Mateo; Javier Viñuela


Archive | 2015

Effects of biotic/abiotic factors on submerged macrophytes and its consequence in waterfowl communities in a Mediterranean floodplain

Celia Laguna; Jhon J. López-Perea; Javier Viñuela; Máximo Florín; Jordi Feliu; Álvaro Chicote; Santos Cirujano; Rafael Mateo


Archive | 2014

Differences in residues of anticoagulant rodenticides among species and sub-populations of predators

Jhon J. López-Perea; Pablo R. Camarero; Santi Mañosa; Mónica Martínez-Haro; Rafael Mateo

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Rafael Mateo

Spanish National Research Council

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Celia Laguna

Spanish National Research Council

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Javier Viñuela

Spanish National Research Council

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Pablo R. Camarero

Spanish National Research Council

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Jordi Feliu

Spanish National Research Council

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David López-Idiáquez

Spanish National Research Council

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Jesús Martínez-Padilla

Spanish National Research Council

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Santos Cirujano

Spanish National Research Council

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Benjamin Piña

Spanish National Research Council

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