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Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape

Urbanisation and associated anthropogenic activity release large quantities of metallic elements and metalloids into the environment. Due to their toxicity, environmental persistence and bioaccumulative nature, these chemical pollutants threaten wildlife and human health. As urbanisation increases a...

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Main Author: Parker, Kim
Other Authors: Bishop, Jacqueline
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Parker, Kim
author2 Bishop, Jacqueline
author_browse Bishop, Jacqueline
Parker, Kim
author_facet Bishop, Jacqueline
Parker, Kim
author_sort Parker, Kim
collection Thesis
description Urbanisation and associated anthropogenic activity release large quantities of metallic elements and metalloids into the environment. Due to their toxicity, environmental persistence and bioaccumulative nature, these chemical pollutants threaten wildlife and human health. As urbanisation increases and top predators are forced to utilise more urban spaces, they will likely be exposed to more toxic heavy metals and metalloids. As secondary and tertiary consumers, terrestrial carnivores may be at increased risk of metal exposure through biomagnification effects. Relatively little is known about this emerging threat to terrestrial carnivores persisting in human-transformed landscapes, especially in the Global South. To better understand the extent of this issue, I quantified the level of metallic element and metalloid exposure in a sentinel top predator, the caracal (Caracal caracal), inhabiting the rapidly-urbanising, primarily coastal metropole of the Greater City of Cape Town, South Africa. Whole blood samples (n = 67) from GPS-collared (n = 25) and opportunistically sampled (n = 31) individuals were collected. Using Redundancy Analysis (RDA) and mixed-effect models, I explored the relative influence of caracal demography, landscape use, and diet on levels of individual exposure to 11 metallic elements and metalloids: Aluminium (Al), Arsenic (As), Cadmium (Cd), Chromium (Cr), Cobalt (Co), Copper (Cu), Mercury (Hg), Manganese (Mn), Lead (Pb), Selenium (Se), and Zinc (Zn). Mean metal concentrations (including Al, Cd, Co, Cu, Hg, Mn, Pb, Se and Zn) were generally found to be below toxic thresholds, however, As and Cr are present at potentially sublethal levels in certain individuals. The results suggest that increased use of human-transformed landscapes in home ranges (particularly urban areas, roads, and vineyards) was significantly associated with increased caracal exposure to Al (P < 0.05), Co (P = 0.05) and Pb (P = 0.07). Home ranges closer to the coast (RDA, P < 0.05) and feeding within aquatic food webs (marine and wetland-adapted prey) were associated with higher blood levels of Hg (P < 0.05), Se (P < 0.01) and As (P < 0.05). Further, increased predation on seabirds and aquatic birds likely facilitates the transfer of metals from aquatic to terrestrial food webs. Overall, these findings highlight the importance of urbanisation and anthropogenic activity as major environmental sources of metal exposure in terrestrial wildlife, including more natural areas through long-distance transport of pollutants. Further, they contribute towards a growing global evidence base suggesting cities act as ecological traps for wildlife, threatening their long-term health and persistence in these landscapes. Therefore, it is crucial that cities work to reduce the large quantities of chemical pollutants released into their surrounding environment. In Cape Town, this effort could be focused on the urban edge, waste management, water treatments, roads and agricultural areas. Future research into a possible ecological trap for urban-adapted carnivores should focus on assessing metal exposure at different trophic levels and investigating the potential physiological responses of exposure in species. I argue that the caracal is a valuable sentinel for assessing metal exposure and should be used in tandem with other small and mediumsized carnivores and aquatic bird species in local and national pollutant monitoring programmes to mitigate further exposure and promote carnivore conservation in human landscapes. A charismatic species, with a well-established local platform of research and science communication, the caracal is centrally positioned to help promote greater public awareness and engagement in issues concerning environmental pollutant contamination and monitoring.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38105 Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape Parker, Kim Bishop, Jacqueline Leighton, Gabriella Zoology and Entomology Urbanisation and associated anthropogenic activity release large quantities of metallic elements and metalloids into the environment. Due to their toxicity, environmental persistence and bioaccumulative nature, these chemical pollutants threaten wildlife and human health. As urbanisation increases and top predators are forced to utilise more urban spaces, they will likely be exposed to more toxic heavy metals and metalloids. As secondary and tertiary consumers, terrestrial carnivores may be at increased risk of metal exposure through biomagnification effects. Relatively little is known about this emerging threat to terrestrial carnivores persisting in human-transformed landscapes, especially in the Global South. To better understand the extent of this issue, I quantified the level of metallic element and metalloid exposure in a sentinel top predator, the caracal (Caracal caracal), inhabiting the rapidly-urbanising, primarily coastal metropole of the Greater City of Cape Town, South Africa. Whole blood samples (n = 67) from GPS-collared (n = 25) and opportunistically sampled (n = 31) individuals were collected. Using Redundancy Analysis (RDA) and mixed-effect models, I explored the relative influence of caracal demography, landscape use, and diet on levels of individual exposure to 11 metallic elements and metalloids: Aluminium (Al), Arsenic (As), Cadmium (Cd), Chromium (Cr), Cobalt (Co), Copper (Cu), Mercury (Hg), Manganese (Mn), Lead (Pb), Selenium (Se), and Zinc (Zn). Mean metal concentrations (including Al, Cd, Co, Cu, Hg, Mn, Pb, Se and Zn) were generally found to be below toxic thresholds, however, As and Cr are present at potentially sublethal levels in certain individuals. The results suggest that increased use of human-transformed landscapes in home ranges (particularly urban areas, roads, and vineyards) was significantly associated with increased caracal exposure to Al (P < 0.05), Co (P = 0.05) and Pb (P = 0.07). Home ranges closer to the coast (RDA, P < 0.05) and feeding within aquatic food webs (marine and wetland-adapted prey) were associated with higher blood levels of Hg (P < 0.05), Se (P < 0.01) and As (P < 0.05). Further, increased predation on seabirds and aquatic birds likely facilitates the transfer of metals from aquatic to terrestrial food webs. Overall, these findings highlight the importance of urbanisation and anthropogenic activity as major environmental sources of metal exposure in terrestrial wildlife, including more natural areas through long-distance transport of pollutants. Further, they contribute towards a growing global evidence base suggesting cities act as ecological traps for wildlife, threatening their long-term health and persistence in these landscapes. Therefore, it is crucial that cities work to reduce the large quantities of chemical pollutants released into their surrounding environment. In Cape Town, this effort could be focused on the urban edge, waste management, water treatments, roads and agricultural areas. Future research into a possible ecological trap for urban-adapted carnivores should focus on assessing metal exposure at different trophic levels and investigating the potential physiological responses of exposure in species. I argue that the caracal is a valuable sentinel for assessing metal exposure and should be used in tandem with other small and mediumsized carnivores and aquatic bird species in local and national pollutant monitoring programmes to mitigate further exposure and promote carnivore conservation in human landscapes. A charismatic species, with a well-established local platform of research and science communication, the caracal is centrally positioned to help promote greater public awareness and engagement in issues concerning environmental pollutant contamination and monitoring. 2023-07-14T09:32:19Z 2023-07-14T09:32:19Z 2023 2023-07-14T09:31:56Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38105 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Zoology and Entomology
Parker, Kim
Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape
title_full Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape
title_fullStr Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape
title_full_unstemmed Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape
title_short Caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human-transformed landscape
title_sort caracals as sentinels for metal exposure in a human transformed landscape
topic Zoology and Entomology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38105
work_keys_str_mv AT parkerkim caracalsassentinelsformetalexposureinahumantransformedlandscape