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Toxic Drugs Kill Vultures: A 20-Year Crisis Explained

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor

Vulture Populations‌ Face Renewed Threat from Veterinary Drugs,‍ Despite Bans

Madrid/Cambridge – A new warning from conservation biologists highlights the continued use of toxic​ veterinary anti-inflammatory drugs in Europe,⁢ threatening vulture populations decades after similar​ drugs caused a catastrophic ⁢collapse in Asia. Research ⁢published September 4th in the journal Science ​ reveals‌ that despite bans implemented ⁢nearly 20 ​years ago in Asia, these ​harmful drugs remain in ​use, posing a ⁣risk to ‌these vital scavengers.

The crisis began in ⁤the 1990s in India,⁢ where scientists observed a dramatic and unexplained decline‍ in⁢ vulture ⁣populations. Within a few years, over 95% of ⁢vultures vanished from the Indian subcontinent. The cause remained a mystery until ⁢2004,when⁤ researchers identified diclofenac,a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory ​drug (NSAID) commonly used to treat ​cattle,as the culprit.

The drug’s toxicity to vultures is indirect but devastating. Diclofenac is ‌administered to livestock to alleviate fever and ⁤pain. In South Asia,and also​ in parts‌ of ⁢Europe like Spain,livestock carcasses are ‍often left in the open,providing a food source for⁣ vultures. When vultures consume the remains of⁢ animals treated with ​diclofenac, they ⁢suffer kidney failure and visceral gout, leading to death.‌ While specific feeding stations exist in some European countries, the continued use of the drug presents⁤ an ongoing threat.

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