Page 79 - Veterinary Toxicology, Basic and Clinical Principles, 3rd Edition
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46  SECTION | I General




  VetBooks.ir  TABLE 3.1 Abbreviations for Countries Used in    et al., 2015), usually followed by sheep and goats. The
                                                                last two are also the most common species implicated in
               Table 3.2
                                                                poisoning incidents in Greece (Roubies et al., 2008;
               AT                      Austria                  Guitart et al., 2010a). Generally, poultry and pigs are
                                                                rarely involved in poisoning episodes, and minor percen-
               BE                      Belgium
                                                                tages are also reported for exotic animals and rabbits
               CZ                      Czech Republic           (often included in the group “other species”), although
                                                                these species are becoming more present in daily calls.
               DE                      Germany
                                                                  As far as wildlife, birds, especially waterfowl and
               DK                      Denmark
                                                                raptors, are more commonly reported than mammals as
               EL                      Greece                   victims of poisoning (Samouris et al., 2007; Guitart et al.,
               ES                      Spain                    2010b; Delahay and Spray, 2015). Apart from specific
                                                                toxic environmental disasters, deliberate primary or sec-
               FI                      Finland
                                                                ondary poisoning incidents are of concern in all European
               FR                      France
                                                                countries and mainly involve birds of prey such as com-
               IE                      Ireland                  mon buzzards and red kites (Guitart et al., 2010b;
                                                                Vandenbroucke et al., 2010; Berny et al., 2015). Indeed,
               IT                      Italy
                                                                the proportion of wildlife cases at the ToxLab diagnostic
               NL                      Netherlands
                                                                laboratory, a part of the national wildlife disease surveil-
               PL                      Poland                   lance network (SAGIR), is very high (Berny, 2007; Berny
               PT                      Portugal                 et al., 2015). As this network is supported financially by
                                                                hunters, it mostly deals with game species, but an increas-
               SE                      Sweden
                                                                ing number of cases regarding protected and endangered
               UK                      United Kingdom
                                                                species has also been recorded (Berny and Gaillet, 2008).
                                                                A Spanish national  program (Programa Antı ´ doto)
                                                                reported several cases of deliberate poisoning of wild





































             FIGURE 3.1 Distribution of species (including bait) in poisoning cases at the Belgian Poison Center (BPC calls, n 5 21,120 from 2010 to 2016), the
             French Animal Poison Control Center (CNITV calls, n 5 115,502 from 2010 to 2016), the Belgian Laboratory of Toxicology of the Faculty of
             Veterinary Medicine from Ghent University (LTGU lab, n 5 1155 cases from 2010 to 2016), and the French College of Veterinary Medicine
             Diagnostic Toxicology Laboratory in Lyon (CNITV lab, n 5 7278 cases from 2010 to 2016).
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