Marijuana Farms Expose Spotted Owls to Rat Poison in Northwest California

Authored by ucdavis.edu and submitted by drewiepoodle
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Wildlife species are being exposed to high levels of rat poison in northwest California, with illegal marijuana farms the most likely source point, according to a study led by the University of California, Davis, with the California Academy of Sciences.

The study, released Jan. 11 in the journal Avian Conservation and Ecology, showed that seven of the 10 northern spotted owls collected tested positive for rat poison, while 40 percent of 84 barred owls collected also tested positive for the poison.

The study is the first published account of anticoagulant rodenticide in northern spotted owls, which are listed as a threatened species under federal and state Endangered Species acts.

The study area encompasses Humboldt, Mendocino and Del Norte counties. It supports previous accounts that rat poison is contaminating the food web in this region, as the primary food source for owls — rodents — is being contaminated.

Lead author Mourad Gabriel is research faculty with the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and director of nonprofit Integral Ecology Research Center. (Morgan Heim/Day’s Edge Productions)

Driving the issue is the increasing conversion of private timberland into private, illegal and unpermitted marijuana cultivation sites. These sites often overlap with designated critical habitat for northern spotted owls, and the owls feed at their edges.

“Spotted owls are inclined to feed along forest edges. Because grow sites break apart these forest landscapes, they are likely source points for exposure,” said lead author Mourad Gabriel, a research faculty member with the UC Davis Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center within the School of Veterinary Medicine’s One Health Institute. He’s also executive director of nonprofit Integral Ecology Research Center.

Gabriel’s studies in 2012, 2013 and 2015 were the first to link rat poison and illegal marijuana farms to the deaths of fishers, a weasel-like mammal living in remote forests of California and the Pacific Northwest, bringing broad attention to the issue.

Abundance of grow sites, lack of oversight

Proposition 64, which legalizes recreational marijuana in the state, took effect this month. With its arrival, resource managers expect the number and size of unpermitted, private cultivation sites to grow, which could exacerbate the problem.

The study authors note that an estimated 4,500 – 15,000 private cultivation sites are in Humboldt County alone, yet the county has seen legal permits for only a small fraction of them. That means there are thousands of unpermitted private grow sites with no management oversight.

“When you have thousands of unpermitted grows and only a handful of biologists that regulate that for multiple counties, we’re deeply concerned that there aren’t sufficient conservation protective measures in place,” Gabriel said. “If 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.”

Anticoagulant rodenticides inhibit the ability of mammals and birds to recycle vitamin K. This creates a series of clotting and coagulation problems, which can lead to uncontrollable internal bleeding.

Barred owls are a physically larger group of owls currently competing for resources and space in critical habitat designated for northern spotted owls. Forty percent, or 34 of 84, of the barred owl tissue samples collected for this study tested positive for anticoagulant rodenticide. The owls are being exposed through the prey they eat.

Environmental contamination, when coupled with ongoing competition from barred owls, poses an additional stressor on northern spotted owls, the study said. The fact that barred owls are contaminated as well shows that the species may be used as potential surrogates for detecting these contaminants in northern spotted owls.

Jack Dumbacher with the owl collection at the California Academy of Sciences. (2017 California Academy of Sciences)

“Access to these owl specimens allows us to explore the health of the entire regional forest system,” says Jack Dumbacher, curator of Ornithology and Mammalogy at the California Academy of Sciences. “We’re using our collections to build a concrete scientific case for increased forest monitoring and species protection before it’s too late to intervene.”

This study’s researchers did not kill any owls for this study. Northern spotted owls were opportunistically collected when found dead in the field, while barred owl tissue samples were provided by outside investigators conducting an unrelated barred-owl project.

The necropsies for this study were conducted at the California Academy of Sciences and the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System, which is part of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.

Additional co-authoring institutions include Green Diamond Resource Company, Hoopa Valley Tribe and Humboldt State University.

The study was funded by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Arcata and Yreka California Field Offices.

bumbletowne on January 16th, 2018 at 06:51 UTC »

Interesting.

I work for Lindsay Wildlife and we had an unprecedented levels of poisoned owls.

Several institutions have reached out to us studying this exact phenomenon. RATS. EBPD. State Parks.

We are the first line in identifying bird deaths.

As far as I know our death numbers were not significantly different than the rest of California. Our owls are not located in places with close proximity to illegal marijuana farms (botanical surveys in the Mt Diablo area is my actual area of expertise, academically).

Our contact with DFW has a different hypothesis: we had a prolific rat breeding season after a LOOOOOOOONG drought. Over the last 8 years we have seen a dramatic decline in raptor populations, overall. The short-eared owl, the burrowing owl and the local osprey populations have alll but vanished in Contra Costa County (I say this but we got 2 burrowing owls in this year...one dead to poison the other electrocuted). With the loss of these predators the rats had little to no control over their populations. However this second winter was cold and dry....so the starving population of rats moved indoors. And people are ignorant and poison them.

As the point of public contact for wildlife problems for Lindsay for two days of the week, I am astounded by the increase in people with rat problems. It's far outstretched our previous years' call volume for the same problem.

And when you have a massive rat problem or are a corporate property manager you take the most cost and time effective route: poison.

But it really isn't. Because the rats will be back next year, shipped in from Oakland or crawling out of the valley farms. And there will be less owls and feral cats and bobcats to eat them.

I explain this to people several times each day. And they are surprised each time. An owl has 2 babies a year (maybe, that grow up) and each has to eat 5 mice a night (average). A mouse has 12-28 babies a year, each breeding before the end of the following year. You poison 5 mice and you kill 1 owl and that means you have an exponential increase in mice the next year.

druidbuddy on January 16th, 2018 at 01:45 UTC »

Im actually a masters student working on this exact topic but in southern California. the problem is that no one really knows how these animals are up-taking these posions into their bodies. it is assumed that it is from the rats that eat the poison, but most diet studies show that larger carnivores in the area (coyotes and bobcats) eat almost no commensal rodents (rats and mice). This points to some other pathway of exposure either through consumption of the bait directly or by eating native animals that are getting into the baits. Its good to know where most of the poison is coming from but without knowing what is causing the secondary exposure its very hard to combat.

Terreon on January 16th, 2018 at 01:44 UTC »

Fun fact: our most widely prescribed blood thinner warfarin (Coumadin) for things like DVTs, mechanical heart valves, A-fib got its start as rat poison. I guess somewhere it’s still used to kill rats, since this study did test for warfarin levels in the collected barn owls.