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Flamingos poisoned by illegal lead pellets in Greek lagoon
By Vassilis KYRIAKOULIS
Agios Mamas, Greece (AFP) March 6, 2021

Minks culled over virus in Demark polluting environment
Copenhagen (AFP) March 5, 2021 - Mink carcasses that were hastily buried after a mass culling sparked by fears about a mutated coronavirus strain are causing pollution, Denmark's Environmental Protection Agency said Friday.

The government agency, which published results of a preliminary environmental study, however stressed that there was currently no risk of drinking water becoming contaminated.

"Substances from buried minks have been found under the mink graves... The first steps are now being taken to collect and clean up the pollution," the agency said in a statement.

Water from underneath the graves would be pumped up and sanitised, the agency said.

Denmark was the world's largest exporter of mink fur, but culled all 15 million of its mink population last year after some were found to be carrying a mutated virus variant, and later banned mink breeding until 1 January 2022.

Fearing pollution due to the decomposition of the dead animals' bodies in the areas where they had been hastily buried, the government decided in December to unearth the four million carcasses as soon as the risk of contagion had subsided and incinerate them instead.

The two burial sites are located in the western part of the Nordic country of 5.8 million inhabitants.

In one, signs of pollution have been detected in three of the 32 boreholes drilled and in one out of 26 on the other site. The main pollutants were ammonia and excess amounts of nitrogren.

In November, Denmark said the "Cluster 5" mutation carried by mink had been wiped out, and they were the only animal confirmed to be able to contract it and pass it to humans.

The process, however, was mired in scandal from the start.

Once culling had begun, questions arose over whether the government had the right to kill the animals elsewhere than where the mutated strain had been detected.

The country's agriculture minister resigned as a result.

On a country road that the locals have dubbed 'Flamingo Street' Stavros Kalpakis walks alongside the tall reeds of Agios Mamas, a small northern Greek lagoon, peering through binoculars.

The grizzled environmentalist puts on his waterproof waders and boots and steps into knee-deep water. When he returns moments later, he is holding a dead pink flamingo -- one of dozens found in the area in recent weeks, killed by lead poisoning.

Around 50 of the majestic pink birds are known to have died so far in the small lagoon in Greece's northern Halkidiki peninsula some 580 kilometres (360 miles) north of Athens, Kalpakis, head of the Action for Wildlife organisation, tells AFP.

Of nearly a dozen flamingos retrieved by the group for medical attention, none could be saved.

"Flamingos eat small pebbles to help with digestion, and they are eating the shrapnel from bullets... it's giving them lead poisoning," says Ellie Bridgeman, a 20-year-old volunteer working with the group.

Tests confirmed that the cause of death was lead poisoning, which also threatens humans, said Sofia Prousali, one of the organisation's volunteer vets.

"We ran tests for avian flu and the West Nile virus and they all came back negative," Prousali said.

"All the birds that had these symptoms were found to have pellets in their stomachs," she said, adding that there were likely other dead birds hidden in the lush vegetation that have not been recovered.

Agios Mamas is one of Europe's Natura 2000 wildlife diversity regions, and is home to nearly 60 different bird species.

Even more importantly, flamingos were recorded breeding here last year, the first time this has ever happened in Greece.

- 'Human interference' -

"Prior efforts failed, mainly because of human interference with flamingo colonies," says Anna Panagiotou, head of the management authority for protected areas in the broader Thermaic Gulf.

"It would be truly disappointing if such a positive development was thwarted by the insistence of some of our fellow citizens in flouting environmental regulations," she adds.

The use of lead shot in wetlands has been illegal in Greece since 2013, and the EU in November said it would ban its use in all wetlands under its framework regulation for chemicals.

But Greek hunters still use pellets containing lead, wildlife groups say.

According to the European Commission, every year 4,000 to 5,000 tonnes of lead are released into wetlands around the bloc from lead gunshot.

For their part, the local Greek hunting association says the issue is being unfairly exploited in order to justify restrictions against them.

"We have strong indications that the case of the dead flamingos, regardless of its validity, is used for anti-hunting aims," the hunting association of Macedonia and Thrace said in a recent statement.

But Quentin, a 22-year-old French volunteer, says he has heard gunshots in the area.

"Even though hunting was forbidden under coronavirus restrictions, we would still hear shots from poachers. It's unbelievable."


Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up


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EU court raps Britain for air pollution
Luxembourg (AFP) March 4, 2021
The EU Court of Justice on Thursday admonished Britain for air pollution over urban areas including London that "persistently" breached European Union levels for nitrogen-dioxide associated with heavy vehicle traffic. The case covered the years 2010 to 2017 and stemmed from a European Commission complaint lodged in 2018, when Britain was still an EU member, thus giving the court jurisdiction. It found that nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels over 16 urban zones including Greater London and Greater Man ... read more

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