Call For Livestock Drug Deadly To Vultures To Be Outlawed In Spain

Call For Livestock Drug Deadly To Vultures To Be Outlawed In Spain

LAST UPDATED: 9 January, 2015 @ 9:58 pm
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DICLOFENAC: A pain-killing anti-inflammatory medicine used on livestock – causes rapid, lethal kidney failure to vultures eating contaminated carrion

DICLOFENAC: A pain-killing anti-inflammatory medicine used on livestock – causes rapid, lethal kidney failure to vultures eating contaminated carrion
DICLOFENAC: A pain-killing anti-inflammatory medicine used on livestock – causes rapid, lethal kidney failure to vultures eating contaminated carrion

PRESSURE is mounting on Europe to ban a drug that is lethal to vultures.

Veterinary drug diclofenac – a pain-killing anti-inflammatory medicine used on livestock – causes rapid, lethal kidney failure to vultures eating contaminated carrion.

The drug decimated vulture populations across Asia in the 1990s and early 2000s.

However, a loophole in Europe allows it to be legally used in Spain, where 95% of Europe’s estimated 55,000 vultures live.

Research from the Peregrine Fund concluded that Spain’s vulture population could be wiped out even if less than 1% of the carcasses eaten are contaminated.

According to the European Medicines Agency, withdrawal of the drug from is the only measure that would completely remove the risk to the birds’ welfare.

A coalition of organisations to protect vultures said: “Decades and millions of euros have been spent protecting Europe’s vultures. We can’t now let all of them disappear.”

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