Lack of Isoflurane-Sparing Effect of Butorphanol in Field Anesthesia of Harlequin Ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus)
Abstract
We investigated the effect of administration of butorphanol at several dosages on the use of
isoflurane as an anesthetic for the implantation of abdominal radio transmitters into harlequin ducks (Histrionicus
histrionicus) under field surgery conditions. Transmitters were implanted using a standard technique.2
This study was conducted at Prince William Sound, Alaska as part of a project following the 1989 M/V
Exxon Valdez oil spill comparing over-winter survival of mature female harlequin ducks from the western, oil-exposed side
to the eastern, unoiled side of Prince William Sound. We sampled free-ranging female harlequin ducks greater than 3 yr of
age based upon cloacal examination of bursal involution.3 The birds were captured using shore net traps during
early fall molt of the primary feathers in 1997. The body weights averaged 620 g. Birds were captured and placed on board
ship within 90 min of initiation of chase in ambient temperatures between 14.5 and 16.2°C.
Intramuscular injections of 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, or 2.0 mg/kg butorphanol tartrate were given to the ducks
15 min prior to induction. We induced all birds by mask with isoflurane (Forane, Ohio Medical Products, Madison, WI 53707
USA) at 5% in oxygen (1.0 L/min) delivered from an out-of-circuit, agent specific, flow and temperature compensated
vaporizer using a mask attached to a modified Jackson-Rees non-rebreathing circuit. Early efforts to use a toe pinch with
a forceps to elicit a response to pain, similar to that described in studies in other birds, were unsuccessful as even
unanesthetized birds failed to demonstrate withdrawal. Because the toe pinch convention was ineffective, the bird's
response to plucking of the surgical site, skin incision, and suturing during the transmitter implantation was used to
evaluate the effectiveness of the anesthetic gas concentration after a minimum of 2 min equilibration at a given
concentration.
Intramuscular injections of ducks with 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, or 2.0 mg/kg butorphanol tartrate 15 min prior
to surgery did not reduce levels of isoflurane required to maintain a surgical plane of anesthesia compared to control
harlequin ducks which did not receive butorphanol premedication. Our findings differed from a study involving psittacine
birds in which doses < 2.0 mg/kg effectively reduced the required level of inhalant anesthesia.1
Higher dosages of butorphanol may have been more effective in harlequin ducks, but we were reluctant to test such dosages
because of the risk of residual depression that could have affected post-release survival in the wild.
References
1. Curro TG, DB Brunson, J Paul-Murphy. 1994. Determination of the ED50 of isoflurane and
evaluation of the isoflurane-sparing effect of butorphanol in cockatoos (Cacatua spp.). Vet. Surg. 23:
429-433.
2. Korschgen CE, KP Kenow, A Gendron-Fitzpatrick, WL Green, FJ Dein. 1996. Implanting
intra-abdominal radiotransmitters with external whip antennas in ducks. J. Wildl. Manage. 60: 132-137.
3. Mather DM, D Esler. 1999. Evaluation of bursal depth as an indicator of age class of
harlequin ducks. J. Field. Ornithol. 70: 200-205.