Principal Investigator: | Laird, Brian D (9) |
Licence Number: | 17442 |
Organization: | University of Waterloo |
Licensed Year(s): |
2024
2023
|
Issued: | Jan 03, 2024 |
Project Team: | Kelly Skinner, Kirsty Gurney, Heidi Swanson, Mylene Ratelle, Catarina Owen |
Objective(s): To evaluate the current PFAS level in birds harvested in the Sahtu region, and to estimate the human exposure patterns to PFAS through game bird consumption.
Project Description: This licence has been issued for the scientific research application No. 5807. The objective is to evaluate the current PFAS level in birds harvested in the Sahtu region, and to estimate the human exposure patterns to PFAS through game bird consumption. 1) Deliver a series of community-based bird-harvesting workshops to build local capacity and facilitate collection and preparation of tissue samples for contaminant testing. This is a skill that was identified as important to empower the Indigenous Guardians responsible for monitoring the Land in the region. During a previous pilot project (2021), a community-based study was implemented in Fort Good Hope and 10 carcasses were collected for the analysis of lead. The researchers will use a similar community-based approach to archive our current objectives. A local partner will contact hunters to invite them to provide game bird carcasses (whole), previously collected for subsistence food. Those birds are kept in the individuals' freezer. Each hunter will receive financial compensation for their contribution to the project (100$ cash per bird, which is enough to buy the meat equivalent from the market). Any harvested birds for consumption (i.e., spruce grouse; sharp-tailed grouse, ptarmigan, black duck, mallard, fish duck, long-tailed duck, wigeon/whistling duck, canvasback, Canada goose, snow goose, pintail, swan, etc.) can be provided by the hunter, and therefore can be part of the study. For each animal, the hunter will be invited to complete a 1-page short form with information on the harvest (e.g., the date of collection, bird species, tissue type, approximate weight, what bullet type was used). Other traditional knowledge might also be collected, such as harvesting location. The regional Renewable Resources Council will select the workshop participants (e.i., Indigenous Guardians and hunters). The workshop will be provided by a wildlife expert (Kirsty Gurney or her assistant). The workshops will focus on training related to biosafety, dissection, measurement, and collection of biological data from harvested birds, shipping samples, providing the opportunity for local people to develop the technical skills needed to support community interests in bird health and contaminant monitoring. During the workshop, the aim will be to collect and dissect samples from 20 birds in each community. Each bird will be weighed and assigned fat (0 – 3.5, based on the amount of visible fat on the belly) and muscle (0 – 3.5, based on the amount of breast muscle) scores. Key organs (primarily gastrointestinal) will be removed and measured, and liver and breast muscle will be placed in chemically clean vials for subsequent analyses of persistent organic pollutants, including PFAS. To evaluate the extent to which contaminant burdens reflect changes in local conditions (compared to changes on wintering areas used by the birds), the researchers will also collect feathers for stable isotope analyses, which will help identify geographic links between the Sahtú and other areas used by birds during the non-breeding season. After the workshop, the carcasses will be placed in a waste bag and be discarded as food waste, or as per recommended according to local customs. The workshop instructor will freeze the tissues and will ship the cooler via North Wright Airline to the analytical service provider. The bird samples (foods) are expected to not be dangerous goods, but to be safe we will conform with the current IATA packaging instructions for dangerous goods for air transport (http://www2.cwhc-rcsf.ca/forms/CCWHC_Packaging_Shipping_instructions.pdf). The samples will be placed in a puncture-resistant leak-proof plastic bag of appropriate size. It will be double-bagged, with newspaper in the second bag to absorb any possible leak. The bagged samples will be placed in a hardsided plastic insulated cooler before shipping to the lab. The shipments will be marked as “exempt animal specimen” on the package and waybill. 2) Analyse PFAS in samples. Tissues (liver, muscle) will be analysed for PFAS at SGS AXYS Analytical Services Ltd. The analytical suite will include NCP Schedule B Chemicals of Emerging Arctic Concern – perfluorocarboxylic acids (C9-C20 PFCAs), perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS), and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), among others. SGS AXYS offers an EPA-validated method of PFAS measurement, consistent with laboratory analytical best practices. Briefly, samples will be lyophilized, spiked with a labeled internal standard, solvent-extracted and cleaned-up (weak anion exchange, carbon), prior to quantitative determination of PFAS via liquid chromatography tandem-mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS or LC-MS/MS). 3) A statistical approach will be used to estimate the human exposure to PFAS via game bird consumption. With those data, the researchers will use a variety of statistical methods to assess the associations between demographic and survey data -previously collected (e.g., age, sex, country food consumption, harvesting practices) and PFAS levels. The Monte Carlo models describing the nutritional benefits of traditional food as well as their contribution to PFAS exposures will be completed. This Monte Carlo PFAS model will be based on similar models already constructed for HCB and methylmercury. The findings will provide an initial assessment of the PFAS levels expected in game birds in the region, part of a bigger assessment of the contaminant exposure for people living in the Sahtú region. This project will help fill important gaps on the ways by which traditional food patterns impact contaminant exposure of First Nations. The research team has been working in the Sahtu region since 2015 and has an extensive network of collaborators. In preparation for this proposal, a series of phone calls and Zoom meetings were held with community and regional partners (e.g., SRRB, RRC) in April 2022. Letters of support for the community-bird harvest were provided by the Renewable Resources Council of Deline and Tulit'a in Spring 2022. These conversations have indicated strong support for this proposed work. Much of the NWT-focused research in the past year has focused on engagement activities in Fort Good Hope (Nov 12-13, 2020) and with other Sahtú communities throughout the year. We also had regular phone calls with Daniel Jackson (president of the FGH RRC), Danny Masuzumi (Executive Director, K’ahsho Got’ine Foundation), and the local coordinators working on the project. Another on-the-land camp as part of the Water Knowledge Camps project in the Sahtú is scheduled for Summer 2023 (postponed from August 2021 due to the pandemic) with Sahtú community members, and members of our team are involved with the collaborative camp planning. In addition, a regional support coordinator (housed at the SRRB) served as the primary liaison for community consultations. The communications associated with this project will be guided by the inputs from the community consultations undertaken since 2014. In line with our previous projects, the researchers will provide our community contacts with regular phone/email updates of the research progress. 1-pager, short reporting summary, and longer extensive report (i.e., manuscript style) are sent to our partners when results are available. The knowledge products are also shared with the regional contaminants committees and Departments of Health and Social Services as well as Environment and Natural Resources. The aim is to provide contacts with bi-monthly phone/email updates of the research progress. Additionally, we regularly participate in virtual networking opportunities, such as in the Sahtú Environmental Research and Monitoring Forum, providing additional opportunities to liaise with other researchers, local organization members and community leaders. The fieldwork for this study will be conducted from: January 10 - December 30, 2024