Wildlife poisoning: a novel scoring system and review of analytical methods for anticoagulant rodenticide determination

Ecotoxicology. 2021 Jul;30(5):767-782. doi: 10.1007/s10646-021-02411-8. Epub 2021 Apr 17.

Abstract

Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are commonly used to control rodent populations and frequently involved in wildlife and domestic animal poisoning. These poisoning cases (especially for ARs) are a challenge for forensic toxicologists, and adequate post-mortem examination and toxicological analyses become essential for a proper diagnosis. Publications describing different analytical methods for AR analysis in biological samples are growing, and a clear compilation of the overall picture is needed to standardize methodologies in future research. This review aims to compile and compare the analytical procedures applied for AR determination in the literature. Using this information, a scoring system was developed for those techniques using liver and blood as matrices, and the techniques were ranked considering different criteria (i.e. sample amount required, recoveries, limits of quantification (LOQs), number of ARs analysed, points of the calibration curve and multi-class methods). This review shows an overview of the main methods used for AR analysis in forensic toxicology and will help to elucidate future directions to improve multi-residue techniques to detect the ARs involved in wildlife lethal poisoning.

Keywords: Analytical methods; Anticoagulant rodenticides; Forensic; Poisoning; Scoring system; Wildlife.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Animals, Wild
  • Anticoagulants / toxicity
  • Liver
  • Rodenticides* / toxicity

Substances

  • Anticoagulants
  • Rodenticides