Rodents often get a bad rap 鈥 and for good reason. They leave droppings in our homes and attics that may spread disease. They chew through electrical wire. They nibble irrigation lines. They raid tomato gardens and fruit trees.
That鈥檚 why people use to poison them. The problem is that have a ripple effect in the environment. Not only do they kill mice and rats, they can also result in death or serious disease of wild rodents and other wildlife that feed on the rodents or come into direct contact with the poison.
A collaborative research team, including , recently found that populations in urban Southern California are subject to the combined effects of urbanization and exposure to these poisons. Bobcats with anticoagulant rodenticides in their system were more likely to suffer from 鈥 or feline scabies 鈥 a disease that causes animals to lose hair and protein through their skin, makes them anemic and leads to a slow, painful death.
Rat poison directly linked to organ function in wildlife
鈥淭his is the first time that these anticoagulant rodenticides have been directly linked to changed immune system and organ function in wildlife,鈥 Foley explains. 鈥淔rom this study, we need to look at other species exposed to [the poison] and ask if their immune system has changed and what can we do about that.鈥
and included researchers from UCLA, UC Santa Cruz, University of Cape Town, Duke University, University of Tasmania, the National Park Service and Colorado State University.
The dangers of anticoagulants to wildlife have been known since 2012 when Mourad Gabriel, a research faculty member with the within the , led a study that identified anticoagulant rodenticides as the cause of death in 鈥 weasel-like mammals living in rugged areas of the Sierra Nevada.
Rodenticide suspected coming from illegal marijuana farms
Anticoagulants inhibit the ability of an animal to recycle , which creates a series of clotting and coagulation problems that can lead to uncontrollable internal bleeding and death. Gabriel, who is also executive director of the nonprofit , speculated that the most likely source of the poisons was the found throughout the Sierra Nevada.
In that initial study, of 58 fisher carcasses brought to the for necropsy, 79 percent had been exposed to anticoagulant rodenticides.
Brodifacoum, a second-generation rodenticide, was found in 96 percent of the exposed fishers. Second-generation rodenticides are more toxic because they can be lethal after a single ingestion. It can take up to seven days before clinical signs appear, so the poisoned animal can be a significant risk to predators for several days before it dies.
Studies may be 鈥榯ip of the iceberg鈥 regarding poison鈥檚 impact
鈥淯nfortunately, these early investigations of rodenticide exposure in fishers that are associated with illegal marijuana cultivation on public lands might only be the tip of the iceberg with regard to overall impact of pesticides on wildlife at these sites,鈥 said lab system at the time. He helped provide the rodenticide analysis in support of the investigation while his colleague, , conducted the necropsies.
鈥淚 was really shocked by the number of fishers that had been exposed to significant levels of multiple second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides,鈥 she said.
Since then, additional studies published in 2013, 2015 and 2018 point to a serious problem of deadly environmental contamination associated with marijuana sites in California.
Researchers are especially concerned about species that already face declining populations including the wolverine, marten, great gray owl and Sierra Nevada red fox.
First published account of rodenticides in northern spotted owls
The mid-January publication by Gabriel and team was the first published account of anticoagulant rodenticide in northern spotted owls, which are listed as a threatened species under the federal and the .
With the legalization of marijuana in California after the passage of in 2016, researchers are concerned that the number and size of unpermitted cultivation sites with no management oversight will grow, which could expose wildlife to more rodenticide poisoning.
鈥淲hen you have thousands of unpermitted grows and only a handful of biologists that regulate that for multiple counties, we鈥檙e deeply concerned that there aren鈥檛 sufficient conservation protective measures in place,鈥 Gabriel said in the press release.
Marijuana cultivators creating sites for wildlife exposure
鈥淚f no one is investigating the level at which private marijuana cultivators are placing chemicals out there, the fragmented forest landscapes created by these sites can serve as source points of exposure for owls and other wildlife.鈥
Knowledge gained from this overall group of studies has helped scientists gain key information that could benefit the wildlife populations affected by rodenticide exposure, Foley says.
鈥淲e鈥檝e learned some critical aspects about how anticoagulants work inside the body and how we can improve rehabilitation and survival rates for those affected animals who can still be saved,鈥 she says.
鈥淲e鈥檝e also gathered more information in general about anticoagulants. This data-driven information gives all California stakeholders more ability in making rational decisions about where and how to use them.鈥
Trina Wood is the 嘿嘿视频 School of Veterinary Medicine鈥檚 communications 鈥淛ill of All Trades,鈥 a lover of animals who tells multimedia stories.