Seasonal shift of diet in bank voles explains trophic fate of anthropogenic osmium?

Sci Total Environ. 2018 May 15:624:1634-1639. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.056. Epub 2017 Oct 25.

Abstract

Diet shifts are common in mammals and birds, but little is known about how such shifts along the food web affect contaminant exposure. Voles are staple food for many mammalian and avian predators. There is therefore a risk of transfer of contaminants accumulated in voles within the food chain. Osmium is one of the rarest earth elements with osmium tetroxide (OsO4) as the most toxic vapor-phase airborne contaminant. Anthropogenic OsO4 accumulates in fruticose lichens that are important winter food of bank voles (Myodes glareolus). Here, we test if a) anthropogenic osmium accumulates in bank voles in winter, and b) accumulation rates and concentrations are lower in autumn when the species is mainly herbivorous. Our study, performed in a boreal forest impacted by anthropogenic osmium, supported the hypotheses for all studied tissues (kidney, liver, lung, muscle and spleen) in 50 studied bank voles. In autumn, osmium concentrations in bank voles were even partly similar to those in the graminivorous field vole (Microtus agrestis; n=14). In autumn but not in late winter/early spring, osmium concentrations were generally negatively correlated with body weight and root length of the first mandible molar, i.e. proxies of bank vole age. Identified negative correlations between organ-to-body weight ratios and osmium concentrations in late winter/early spring indicate intoxication. Our results suggest unequal accumulation risk for predators feeding on different cohorts of bank voles.

Keywords: Accumulation; Intoxication; Lichens; Microtus agrestis; Myodes glareolus; Somatic index.

MeSH terms

  • Air Pollutants / analysis*
  • Animals
  • Arvicolinae / physiology*
  • Diet / veterinary*
  • Food Chain*
  • Nutritional Status
  • Osmium / analysis*
  • Seasons*
  • Sweden

Substances

  • Air Pollutants
  • Osmium