Introduction
Veterinary use of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) diclofenac has been shown to be the major cause of the collapse of populations of three Gyps vulture species endemic to South Asia. The White-rumped Vulture Gyps bengalensis, Indian Vulture G. indicus and Slender-billed Vulture G. tenuirostris, have declined by more than 98% in the Indian subcontinent since the early 1990s, and are now all listed as ‘Critically Endangered’ (IUCN 2004). Gyps vultures are exposed to diclofenac through consuming the contaminated carcasses of livestock that have been treated with the drug shortly before death and die from kidney failure, with clinical signs of extensive visceral gout and renal damage. These clinical signs and diclofenac residues have been found in carcasses of wild G. bengalensis and G. indicus, and in G. bengalensis either dosed with diclofenac orally or given tissues from diclofenac treated livestock. Research on White-backed Vultures G. africanus, Eurasian Griffons G. fulvus and Cape Vultures G. coprotheres has established that these three species are about as sensitive to diclofenac as G. bengalensis, with birds dying with the same clinical signs of visceral gout and characteristic renal damage. This experimental testing has established that diclofenac is toxic to four species of vultures in the genus Gyps, but information on the toxicity of diclofenac to other members of the genus is lacking.
Methods
On 20 November 2005, an injured Himalayan Vulture G. himalayensis was found by a member of the public on the outskirts of Kullu village, Himachal Pradesh, India. The bird was captured by villagers and taken on the same day to a state veterinarian of the local forest department. On examination the bird was found to have a broken leg and, in order to treat the associated swelling and pain, the bird was administered an intramuscular injection of 1 ml of an injectable veterinary formulation of diclofenac (Volvaren, diclofenac 25 mg/ml). The mass of the bird (recorded at death) was 6.5 kg indicating that the bird received a diclofenac dose of around 3.8 mg kg−1 vulture body weight. Staff at the Bombay Natural History Society/Haryana State Vulture Conservation Breeding Centre (VCBC) were informed of the bird’s capture on the following day and the vulture was transferred to the VCBC arriving at 18h00 on 23 November 2005. The bird was alive and dehydrated on arrival and was immediately given rehydration fluids (100 ml subcutaneous injection of ‘Ringer lacatate’) and, to treat pain, an intravenous injection of the NSAID meloxicam at a dose rate of 2 mg kg-1 (Melonex, Intas Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Ahmedebad). Following death, liver and kidney tissue samples were collected, and tissue residue analysis was undertaken at the University of Aberdeen, UK using a validated HPLC-MS-MS methodology (Oaks et al. Reference Oaks, Gilbert, Virani, Watson, Meteyer, Rideout, Shivaprasad, Ahmed, Chaudhry, Arshad, Mahmood, Ali and Khan2004, Shultz et al. Reference Shultz, Baral, Charman, Cunningham, Das, Ghalsasi, Goudar, Green, Jones, Nighot, Pain and Prakash2004). Concentrations of diclofenac are expressed per unit wet weight.
Results and Discussion
The bird died at 20h15 on 23 November 2005, two hours after arrival at the VCBC and 48–56 hours after dosing with diclofenac. Post-mortem examination revealed visceral gout: the same clinical sign observed in other Gyps vultures following diclofenac toxicity (Oaks et al. Reference Oaks, Gilbert, Virani, Watson, Meteyer, Rideout, Shivaprasad, Ahmed, Chaudhry, Arshad, Mahmood, Ali and Khan2004, Swan et al. Reference Swan, Cuthbert, Quevedo, Green, Pain, Bartels, Cunningham, Duncan, Meharg, Oaks, Parry-Jones, Shultz, Taggart, Verdoorn and Wolter2006a). With the exception of a fracture of the left femur, no other injuries or clinical signs could be found, and the bird was in good condition. Analysis of tissue samples confirmed that the bird was contaminated with diclofenac, with residue levels of 0.087 mg kg-1 and 0.034 mg kg-1 in the kidney and liver tissues, respectively.
The result of this case indicates that diclofenac is toxic to the Himalayan Vulture, adding a fifth species to the list of Gyps vultures known to be killed by this compound. The timing of death c. two days after receiving a high dose of diclofenac, the clinical signs of visceral gout, and the absence of any injuries likely to cause the bird’s immediate death, are consistent with diclofenac being the cause of death of this individual and closely match the clinical signs of toxicity of diclofenac in other Gyps vultures. The evidence for diclofenac toxicity is complicated by the administering of fluids and the NSAID meloxicam two hours before death. However, the meloxicam treatment is very unlikely to have contributed to the death of this vulture for the following reasons. (a) Extensive safety testing has established the safety of meloxicam to other Gyps vultures, with 40 birds from three Gyps species (africanus, bengalensis and indicus) administered meloxicam at 2 mg kg−1 (Swan et al. Reference Swan, Naidoo, Cuthbert, Green, Pain, Swarup, Prakash, Taggart, Bekker and Das2006b, Swarup et al. Reference Swarup, Patra, Prakash, Cuthbert, Das, Avari, Pain, Green, Sharma, Saini, Das and Taggart2007). (b) Clinical treatment of birds also indicates the safety of meloxicam, which has been administered to over 700 individuals from 60 species with no reported death or ill affects, including the treatment of seven Gyps himalayensis (Cuthbert et al. Reference Cuthbert, Parry-Jones, Green and Pain2006). (c) Meloxicam treatment did not result in any detectable elevation in the concentration of uric acid in the blood plasma of Gyps africanus, G. bengalensis and G. indicus (Swan et al. Reference Swan, Naidoo, Cuthbert, Green, Pain, Swarup, Prakash, Taggart, Bekker and Das2006b, Swarup et al. Reference Swarup, Patra, Prakash, Cuthbert, Das, Avari, Pain, Green, Sharma, Saini, Das and Taggart2007). (d) The timing of death just two hours after meloxicam treatment makes it too rapid for this drug to be responsible for the observed clinical signs of visceral gout (Oaks et al. Reference Oaks, Gilbert, Virani, Watson, Meteyer, Rideout, Shivaprasad, Ahmed, Chaudhry, Arshad, Mahmood, Ali and Khan2004, Swan et al. Reference Swan, Cuthbert, Quevedo, Green, Pain, Bartels, Cunningham, Duncan, Meharg, Oaks, Parry-Jones, Shultz, Taggart, Verdoorn and Wolter2006a, Naidoo et al. Reference Naidoo, Wolter, Cuthbert and Duncan2009). Even diclofenac treatment, which elevates the concentration of uric acid in the blood plasma by a factor of about ten times, 24 hours after treatment, has little effect on plasma uric acid levels within two hours of treatment, indicating little or no effect on kidney function within this time (Swan et al. Reference Swan, Cuthbert, Quevedo, Green, Pain, Bartels, Cunningham, Duncan, Meharg, Oaks, Parry-Jones, Shultz, Taggart, Verdoorn and Wolter2006a).
An additional important caveat of this case is that the vulture received a very high dose of diclofenac: a dose rate 17–39 times greater than the estimated median lethal dose for G. bengalensis (Swan et al. Reference Swan, Cuthbert, Quevedo, Green, Pain, Bartels, Cunningham, Duncan, Meharg, Oaks, Parry-Jones, Shultz, Taggart, Verdoorn and Wolter2006a) and in excess of the likely maximum level of exposure a vulture could potentially receive in the wild (RSPB unpublished data). However, the time to death and clinical signs were consistent with other cases of diclofenac toxicity in Gyps vultures with lower doses.
Some scavenging species appear to tolerate high levels of diclofenac, for example the Turkey Vulture Cathares aura, a New World species unrelated to Old World Gyps vultures, exhibited no overt signs of toxicity when dosed with diclofanac at concentrations greater than 100 times the estimated median lethal dose reported for Gyps vultures (Rattner et al. Reference Rattner, Whitehead, Gasper, Meteyer, Link, Taggart, Meharg, Pattee and Pain2008). However, the discovery that diclofenac is toxic to a fifth species of Gyps vultures and the phylogenetic position of these five species each forming a sister relationship with one or more of the remaining Gyps species (Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Lerner, Rasmussen and Mindell2006), strongly suggests that diclofenac is likely to be toxic to all Gyps vultures. The genus Gyps contains eight species, which includes the three resident Asian species, two migratory species (G. fulvus and G. himalayensis), and three species within Africa (G. africanus, G. coprotheres and G. rueppelli). The winter ranges of G. fulvus and G. himalayensis extend into areas of India and Nepal (del Hoyo et al. Reference Del Hoyo, Elliott and Sartagal1994) in which veterinary diclofenac is known to be in widespread use. Increasing numbers of juvenile and sub-adult birds from these two species are now seen in northern India (V. Prakash unpubl. data), presumably because of increased feeding opportunities available since the collapse of resident Gyps populations. As a consequence of these movements and the toxicity of diclofenac, northern India is likely to be acting as a major population sink for the pre-breeding cohorts of G. fulvus and G. himalayensis, and we therefore expect that long-term declines are now occurring, largely undetected, in the breeding populations of these species. Evidence from the Upper Mustang region of Nepal indicates that these declines may already be happening (Acharya et al. Reference Acharya, Cuthbert, Baral and Shah2009). Determining the location and monitoring these breeding areas is a priority, although, as is the case for the three resident Gyps species, the essential conservation solution is a complete cessation of the veterinary use of diclofenac and other toxic NSAIDs within the Indian subcontinent.
Acknowledgements
We are very grateful to the Forest Department of Himachal Pradesh for their prompt action in transferring this bird to the Vulture Conservation Breeding Centre for treatment and necropsy. Thanks to Dr Mark Taggart and the University of Aberdeen for analysis of diclofenac levels within the tissue samples and to Professor Rhys Green at the University of Cambridge for helpful comments on this manuscript. The UK Government’s Darwin Initiative and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds provided funding.