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1 July 1990 CAUSES OF MORTALITY OF ALBATROSS CHICKS AT MIDWAY ATOLL
Louis Sileo, Paul R. Sievert, Michael D. Samuel
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Abstract

As part of an investigation of the effect of plastic ingestion on seabirds in Hawaii, we necropsied the carcasses of 137 Laysan albatross (Diomedea immutabilis) chicks from Midway Atoll in the Pacific Ocean during the summer of 1987. Selected tissues were collected for microbiological, parasitological, toxicological or histopathological examinations. Dehydration was the most common cause of death. Lead poisoning, trauma, emaciation (starvation) and trombidiosis were other causes of death; nonfatal nocardiosis and avian pox also were present. There was no evidence that ingested plastic caused mechanical lesions or mortality in 1987, but most of the chicks had considerably less plastic in them than chicks from earlier years. Human activity (lead poisoning and vehicular trauma) caused mortality at Midway Atoll and represented additive mortality for pre-fledgling albatrosses.

Sileo, Sievert, and Samuel: CAUSES OF MORTALITY OF ALBATROSS CHICKS AT MIDWAY ATOLL
Louis Sileo, Paul R. Sievert, and Michael D. Samuel "CAUSES OF MORTALITY OF ALBATROSS CHICKS AT MIDWAY ATOLL," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 26(3), 329-338, (1 July 1990). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-26.3.329
Received: 30 March 1989; Published: 1 July 1990
KEYWORDS
albatross
Avian pox
Dehydration
Diomedea immutabilis
lead poisoning
mortality
nocardiosis
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