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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Public concerns over presumed metal and radionuclide pollution: testing a possible link to ovine hepatic melanosis in South Greenland.

Journal:
Environmental monitoring and assessment
Year:
2026
Authors:
Hansen, Violeta et al.
Affiliation:
Institute of Clinical Sciences

Abstract

In South Greenland, public concerns have linked "black livers" in sheep to presumed environmental pollution from the Kvanefjeld mining exploration project. Elevated concentrations of metals and radionuclides in the area reflect natural geochemistry and weathering processes, not pollution from exploration activities. However, in response, we conducted a preliminary case-control study to diagnose the condition, investigate links between liver discoloration and environmental concentrations of metals and radionuclides, and to estimate the annual effective dose to the public from polonium-210 (Po) ingestion via sheep and lamb liver consumption. We also evaluated the prevalence of acquired melanosis, grazing and herd effects, and their association with carcass quality and disease markers. Histological analysis confirmed acquired melanosis in affected liver samples. No statistically significant differences in concentrations of chemical elements or radionuclides (includingPo andPb) were found between case and control groups, across age groups, grazing areas, or farms. Except for the most exposed children (10% percentile), the estimated annual effective dose to adults and children fromPo ingestion in black and healthy livers remained below the world average of 120 µSv due to the ingestion of naturally occurring radionuclides. The overall prevalence of ovine acquired melanosis based on a large sample size was 10.59%, with herd prevalence ranging from 0% to 51.79%. Age-specific prevalence was 10.38% in lambs and 13.40% in adult sheep. Acquired melanosis was negatively correlated with fat and muscle content in carcasses. The consumption of sheep livers from South Greenland does not appear to pose a toxicological or radiological risk.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41565888/