Diclofenac, the widely used veterinary painkiller was a
killer of vultures too, which has forced the Indian government to ban the usage
of it as a painkiller on animals. But a recent research review shows that the pharmaceutical
companies have introduced a new alternative named Aceclofenac, which is again
fatal to the vultures in the country.
White-rumped Vulture (Gyps bengalensis) Image Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons |
The review published in the Journal of Raptor Research, points out that the new entrant has a
structural and pharmaceutical similarity to the banned chemical. As per the
empirical studies cited by the paper, Aceclofenac turns into the same lethal Diclofenac
after metabolised inside the cattle body.
According to the
review, the non-steroidal drug which is used to suppress inflammations in animals
is again toxic to the Gyps genus of
birds which includes three major vulture species - Gyps bengalensis, G.
indicus and G. Tenuirostris - found in South Asian countries. All the three are listed as Critically Endangered vultures by IUCN. The paper
argues that the banned chemical and the alternative have at least two same
metabolites in mammals, indicating that the use of the alternative chemical on
cattle may harm the vultures in the region.
Indian Vulture (Gyps indicus) Image Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons |
Safety testing and precautionary ban
The paper also calls
for an urgent move to implement a regulation which makes it compulsory to
subject all veterinary drugs to safety testing before they are administered on animals.
It also calls for a precautionary ban on the use of the chemical till safety test
on vultures are done and the metabolism of Aceclofenac on cattle is studied in
detail.
Being scavengers, the well being of vultures is a crucial factor in the
survival of the food chains in a forest ecosystem. To save the vultures, the
country has declared Ramadevarabetta
near Bangalore in Karnataka as the first vulture sanctuary in India and is taking serious measures
to conserve these critically endangered birds in the country.
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