Thair G. Lamont
United States Fish and Wildlife Service
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Featured researches published by Thair G. Lamont.
Estuaries | 1980
Stanley N. Wiemeyer; Thair G. Lamont; L.N. Locke
Thirty-three ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) that were found dead or moribund in the Eastern United States between 1964 and 1973 were necropsied. The brains and carcasses of 26 of these birds were analyzed for organochlorines. The livers of 18 and the kidneys of 7 were analyzed for selected metals. Most adults were recovered in April and May and most immatures were recovered in August through October. The adult sex ratio was highly unbalanced in favor of females. Major causes of mortality were impact injuries, emaciation, shooting, and respiratory infections. Of special interest were two birds with malignant tumors and one with steatitis. Many birds had undergone marked weight losses resulting in mobilization and redistribution of organochlorine residues. Organochlorines were detected in the birds at the following percentages: DDE 100%, PCB 96%, DDD 92%, dieldrin 88%, chlordanes (including nonachlors) 82%, DDT 65%, and heptachlor expoxide 38%. Organochlorine levels tended to be higher in adults than in immatures. One adult from South Carolina had a potentially dangerous level of dieldrin in its brain, which might have contributed to its death. Immature ospreys from Maryland had extremely elevated levels of copper in their livers compared with immatures from other areas and all adults. One immature from Maryland had an elevated level of arsenic in its liver, which might have contributed to its death. One adult from Florida that had died of impact injuries had potentially dangerous levels of mercury in both liver and kidney and slightly elevated levels of cadmium in these tissues. Additional birds appeared to have been exposed to contamination of the environment by arsenic and mercury. The levels of chromium, zinc, and lead in livers appeared normal.
Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1976
Donald R. Clark; Thair G. Lamont
SummaryCarcasses and brains of 18 big brown bats from Gaithersburg, Maryland, were analyzed for residues of organochlorine insecticides and PCBs. Eleven bats were adult females, and six of these had seven nursing young associated with them.Young bats resembled their parents in microgram amounts of PCB and DDE present in carcasses. However, concentrations of chemicals (expressed as ppm) were significantly higher in young. Brains of three young contained detectable residues of PCB and DDE.Younger adult females contained higher levels of PCB and DDE than did older ones. However, among the oldest females, amounts appeared to begin rising again. This pattern resembles that in free-tailed bats from Bracken Cave, Texas, but differs from the continuous linear decline seen in a Laurel, Maryland population of big brown bats, in which initial levels among younger females were higher than those in the Gaithersburg population.DDE was transferred from female to young more readily than was PCB by nursing. Five of 51 neonate big brown bats from the Laurel population were thought to have been born dead because of residues of PCB that were transferred across the placenta. Present data show that even greater amounts of PCB may be transferred to young by lactation and nursing.
Chemistry and Ecology | 1984
K.L. Stromborg; L.C. McEwen; Thair G. Lamont
Abstract Grasshoppers (Orthoptera) were collected in pastures that had been sprayed with malathion and acephate to estimate the secondary exposure of insectivorous birds to those pesticides. Residues of malathion were below 3 ppm at 30 and 54 hours after spraying and no malaoxon was detected. In contrast, acephate was found at 8 and 9 ppm 4 hours after spray; 3–5 ppm of the toxic metabolite methamidophos were also detected at that time. By 53 hours postspray, acephate levels declined to 2 ppm and methamidophos to less than 1 ppm. These results suggest that although malathion may not be a hazard to insectivorous species, acephate may be hazardous through metabolic transformation to methamidophos.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 1982
W. James Fleming; Haydee de Chacin; Oliver H. Pattee; Thair G. Lamont
Adult cricket frogs (Acris crepitans) were held individually for 96 h in static systems containing initial concentrations of either 0, 0.1, 1.0, or 10 ppm parathion in 10 ml water. Mortality of cricket frogs was directly related to the parathion concentration in the water. Frogs from the 1.0- and 10-ppm groups accumulated 0.08 and 4.6 ppm parathion, respectively. One of four American kestrels (Falco sparverius) fed frogs from the 10-ppm group died from organophosphate poisoning less than 3 h after consuming five frogs. Mortality did not occur in kestrels fed frogs from the other treatment groups, which represented more environmentally realistic levels of exposure.
Avian Diseases | 1984
Louis N. Locke; Thair G. Lamont; Rube Harrington
From 1960 to 1974, 307 bald eagles found dead at various locations in the United States were submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services Patuxent Wildlife Research Center (PWRC), Laurel, Maryland, for necropsy and subsequent chemical analysis for organochlorine pesticide residues. This note reports the isolation of Streptococcus zooepidemicus from the intestine of one of these eagles and is the first record of isolation of this organism from the American bald eagle.
Pesticides monitoring journal | 1975
Eugene Cromartie; William L. Reichel; L.N. Locke; Andre A. Belisle; T.E. Kaiser; Thair G. Lamont; Bernard M. Mulhern; Richard M. Prouty; Swineford Dm
Pesticides monitoring journal | 1980
T.E. Kaiser; William L. Reichel; L.N. Locke; Eugene Cromartie; Krynitsky Aj; Thair G. Lamont; Bernard M. Mulhern; Richard M. Prouty; Stafford Cj; Swineford Dm
Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1979
Donald H. White; Kirke A. King; Christine A. Mitchell; Ellwood F. Hill; Thair G. Lamont
Journal of Wildlife Management | 1975
Stanley N. Wiemeyer; Paul R. Spitzer; William C. Krantz; Thair G. Lamont; Eugene Cromartie
Pesticides monitoring journal | 1972
Andre A. Belisle; William L. Reichel; Louis N. Locke; Thair G. Lamont; Bernard M. Mulhern; Richard M. Prouty; Robert B. DeWolf; Eugene Cromartie