Categories
Australia

Why eggs from backyard chooks may be putting your family’s health at risk

This story was first published in The Conversation.

There’s nothing like the fresh eggs from your own hens, the more than 400,000 Australians who keep backyard chooks will tell you.

Unfortunately, it’s often not just freshness and flavor that set their eggs apart from those in the shops.

For more Food related news and videos check out Food >>

Our newly published research found backyard hens’ eggs contain, on average, more than 40 times the lead levels of commercially produced eggs.

Almost one in two hens in our Sydney study had significant lead levels in their blood.

Similarly, about half the eggs analyzed contained lead at levels that may pose a health concern for consumers.

Even low levels of lead exposure are considered harmful to human health, including among other effects, cardiovascular disease and decreased IQ and kidney function.

Chickens in an Australian backyard. File image. Credit: Thurtell/Getty Images

Indeed, the World Health Organization has stated there is no safe level of lead exposure.

So how do you know whether this is a likely problem in the eggs you’re getting from backyard hens? It depends on lead levels in your soil, which vary across our cities.

We mapped the areas of high and low risk for hens and their eggs in our biggest cities – Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane – and present these maps here.

Our research details lead poisoning of backyard chickens and explains what this means for urban gardening and food production.

In older homes close to city centers, contaminated soils can greatly increase people’s exposure to lead through eating eggs from backyard hens.

What did the study find?

Most lead gets into the hens as they scratch in the dirt and peck food from the ground.

We assessed trace metal contamination in backyard chickens and their eggs from garden soils across 55 Sydney homes. We also explored other possible sources of contamination such as animal drinking water and chicken feed.

Our data confirmed what we had anticipated from our analysis of more than 25,000 garden samples from Australia gardens collected via the VegeSafe program. Lead is the contaminant of most concern.

The amount of lead in the soil was significantly associated with lead concentrations in chicken blood and eggs. We found potential contamination from drinking water and commercial feed supplies in some samples but it is not a significant source of exposure.

Unlike for humans, there are no guidelines for blood lead levels for chickens or other birds.

Levels of lead risk for backyard chickens across Sydney. Dark green dots indicate areas with safe lead levels. Light green and yellow dots are areas over the safe lead level. Orange and red dots indicate areas with high levels. Credit: Max M. Gillings, Mark Patrick Taylor/ The Conversation

Veterinary assessments and research indicate levels of 20 micrograms per deciliter (µg/dL) or more may harm their health.

Our analysis of 69 backyard chickens across the 55 participants’ homes showed 45 per cent had blood lead levels above 20µg/dL.

We analyzed eggs from the same birds. There are no food standards for trace metals in eggs in Australia or globally.

However, in the 19th Australian Total Diet Study, lead levels were less than 5µg/kg in a small sample of shop-bought eggs.

The average level of lead in eggs from the backyard chickens in our study was 301µg/kg. By comparison, it was 7.2µg/kg in the nine commercial free-range eggs we analyzed.

Map of Brisbane showing levels of lead risk for backyard chickens. Dark green dots indicate areas with safe lead levels. Light green and yellow dots are areas over the safe lead level. Orange and red dots indicate areas with high levels. Credit: Max M. Gillings, Mark Patrick Taylor/ The Conversation

International research indicates that eating one egg a day with a lead level of less than 100μg/kg would result in an estimated blood lead increase of less than 1μg/dL in children.

That’s around the level found in Australian children not living in areas affected by lead mines or smelters. The level of concern used in Australia for investigating exposure sources is 5µg/dL.

Some 51 per cent of the eggs we analyzed exceeded the 100µg/kg “food safety” threshold. To keep egg lead below 100μg/kg, our modeling of the relationship between lead in soil, chickens and eggs showed soil lead needs to be under 117mg/kg. This is much lower than the Australian residential guideline for soils of 300mg/kg.

To protect chicken health and keep their blood lead below 20µg/kg, soil concentrations need to be under 166mg/kg. Again, this is much lower than the guideline.

How did we map the risks across cities?

We used our garden soil trace metal database (more than 7,000 homes and 25,000 samples) to map the locations in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne most at risk from high lead values.

Deeper analysis of the data showed older homes were much more likely to have high lead levels across soils, chickens and their eggs.

This finding matches other studies that found older homes are most at risk of legacy contamination from the former use of lead-based paints, leaded petrol and lead pipes.

Map of Melbourne showing levels of lead risk for backyard chickens. Dark green dots indicate areas with safe lead levels. Light green and yellow dots are areas over the safe lead level. Orange and red dots indicate areas with high levels. Credit: Max M. Gillings, Mark Patrick Taylor/ The Conversation

What can backyard producers do about it?

These findings will come as a shock to many people who have turned to backyard food production.

It has been on the rise over the past decade, spurred on recently by soaring grocery prices.

People are turning to home-grown produce for other reasons, too.

They want to know where their food came from, enjoy the security of producing food with no added chemicals, and feel the closer connection to nature.

While urban gardening is a hugely important activity and should be encouraged, previous studies of contamination of Australian home garden soils and trace metal uptake into plants show it needs to be undertaken with caution.

A productive red hen perches above three eggs in a backyard chicken coop. Similar Images: Credit: SimplyCreativePhotography/Getty Images

Contaminants have built up in soils over the many years of our cities’ history. These legacy contaminants can enter our food chain via vegetables, honey bees and chickens.

Urban gardening exposure risks have typically focused on vegetables and fruits.

Limited attention has been paid to backyard chickens. The challenge of sampling and finding participants meant many previous studies have been smaller and have not always analyzed all possible exposure routes.

Mapping the risks of contamination in soils enables backyard gardeners and chicken keepers to consider what the findings may mean for them.

Particularly in older, inner-city locations, it would be prudent to get their soils tested.

People can do this at VegeSafe or through a commercial laboratory. Soils identified as a problem can be replaced and chickens kept to areas of known clean soil.

This article was co-authored by: Mark Patrick Taylor, Chief Environmental Scientist, EPA Victoria; Honorary Professor, Macquarie University; Dorrit E Jacob – Professor, Research School of Earth Sciences, Australian National University and Vladimir Strezov – Professor, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University

Police called to remove wild turkey from apartment.

Police called to remove wild turkey from apartment.

.

Categories
Australia

Woman charged by WA Police after tow truck stolen from Lansdale business

A woman has been charged with stealing a tow truck from a northern Perth business in the early hours of Saturday morning.

A white Hino tow truck was stolen from a commercial premise on Attwell Street in Landsdale about 3.20am.

The 32-year-old woman has been charged with one count of stealing a motor vehicle and one count of possessing a prohibited drug.

Police were alerted to suspicious activity at the business and, upon arrival, spotted the truck was leaving the premises.

Officers attempted to stop the vehicle, however, the driver allegedly fled the scene prompting a pursuit.

The chase was then terminated a short time later after driving conditions were deemed unsafe.

The tow truck was later found abandoned on Gnangara Road.

WA Police found the woman inside a red Volvo on Attwell Street in Landsdale and suspect she may be linked to the burglary.

She was taken into custody at the scene and later questioned by authorities.

The woman was released on bail and is set to appear in court at a later date.

A WA Police spokeswoman said inquiries are ongoing to locate a male driver and passenger.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or report online at crimestopperswa.com.au.

.

Categories
Australia

Perth family take home unique prize after being crowned one-millionth WA Museum Boola Bardip visitors

Heading to WA Museum Boola Bardip on a gloomy Saturday afternoon to escape the rain has resulted in one Perth family scoring a unique prize.

Olivia Pizzale-Bryce, Jack Mcauliffe, and baby Pia had the shock of their lives when they went to the museum only to be greeted by the waiting media and Housing Minister John Carey as they became the one-millionth visitors.

The family has visited the museum five times and said they were heading there to see the Dinosaurs of Patagonia exhibition as it’s little Pia’s favorite.

“It’s really nice, we love coming here… it’s a place we can come for her, which is really nice,” mum Olivia said.

“We both support creative industries and museums and the gallery,” dad Jack added.

.

Categories
Australia

NT Police charge 50-year-old Darwin woman over disappearance of five-year-old Grace Hughes

Northern Territory Police have charged a 50-year-old woman with child abduction over the disappearance of five-year-old Grace Hughes from the Darwin suburb of Berrimah last weekend.

Her 34-year-old mother Laura Hinks, who is also known as Laura Bolt, is also missing.

Police say Grace was taken without permission by her mother during a supervised parental visit at 1pm last Sunday.

Detective Superintendent Kirsten Engels said police were “throwing every resource we have into this investigation, we will continue to do so until we locate Grace.”

“Our primary concern is the safety and wellbeing of Grace, knowing that this would’ve been a very traumatic event, being removed from this meeting, and separated from her siblings,” Detective Superintendent Engels said.

50-year-old woman to face court on Monday

During their investigation, police interviewed a 50-year-old woman at a property in Anula and later arrested her for allegedly refusing to give information about Grace and her mother’s whereabouts.

She was charged with one count of abducting a child under 16 and one count of attempting to abduct a child under 16.

“We know that some effort is being put into hiding Grace, and that it would be very frightening for a five-year-old child,” Detective Superintendent Engels said.

The woman was ordered in custody and will face court on Monday.

“Whatever issues that are preventing her return, should and could be dealt with in appropriate ways,” Detective Superintendent Engels said.

“Taking Grace in this manner is not appropriate and we know that there will be people in the community that will be able to assist us.”

“They will know where Grace is, and they’ll be able to help us.”

Police say it is possible Laura and Grace could now be interstate and are appealing for anyone with information to contact 131 444.

.

Categories
Australia

With a state election looming, a crisis has left Victoria’s opposition with no choice but to regroup

Just months out of a state election, Victoria’s alternative government has been thrown into disarray by a leaked email, a “disastrous” interview and a slow-moving fallout.

Details of a proposed arrangement between a wealthy Liberal Party donor and the Opposition Leader’s chief of staff came to light at the beginning of last week.

Matthew Guy fronted the media within hours and announced his chief of staff had resigned, and seemed determined to put the issue to bed.

However, in the days since, the series of events stemming from that initial revelation have only gathered momentum.

A Liberal MP, who did not want to be named, recently told the ABC that Mr Guy’s position as leader was precarious and another scandal would be fatal, but said that, in the absence of an alternative, he may hang on until the election.

At the start of May, when Mr Guy pledged extra funding for Victoria’s watchdogs, the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) and the Victorian Ombudsman, he said his party was “focused on rebuilding our system of integrity and honesty in government “.

The government’s integrity came under fire last month, with the release of the results of an IBAC investigation detailing “extensive misconduct” by Labor MPs, as well as an ombudsman’s report rehashing the “red shirts” scandal.

The Opposition Leader has been eager to turn voters’ minds to integrity and trust in government, but struggled to formulate a response as his own office was subject to scrutiny.

So, how did the opposition get to this point just over three months out from a state election?

The proposed arrangement

On August 2The Age published revelations about Mr Guy’s chief of staff, Mitch Catlin, approaching billionaire party donor Jonathan Munz for payments totaling more than $100,000 to his private marketing business, Catchy Media.

a man in a suit smiles at the camera.
Mitch Catlin resigned as Matthew Guy’s chief of staff.(Supplied: LinkedIn)

Mr Catlin said no contract was signed, and Mr Guy fronted the media and asserted more than once that the arrangement, brought to light by a leaked email, had only ever been a proposal.

“We’re acting on a perception — this wasn’t even put in place,” he said.

That day, the Andrews government announced it would refer the matter to the state’s integrity agencies, IBAC and the ombudsman, Victoria Police, the Australian Federal Police and the Victorian Electoral Commission (VEC).

It also published a list of 14 questions directed at Mr Guy about Mr Catlin’s proposed arrangement.

The interview

Almost a week after the initial reports, Mr Guy appointed his childhood friend, Nick McGowan, as his new chief of staff on August 8.

Mr McGowan has also been preselected as a Liberal candidate for an upper house seat in the Eastern Metropolitan Region, but Mr Guy stated his new chief of staff wouldn’t be campaigning for the seat during working hours.

The Opposition Leader and Mr McGowan have a close personal and professional relationship, with Mr McGowan best man at Mr Guy’s wedding, and his chief of staff while he was planning minister in the Baillieu-Napthine government.

Mr McGowan will also be forced to take leave by November 10 when the VEC deadline for candidate nominations closes, meaning Mr Guy will also need to find a replacement for his top aid for the final two weeks before the election.

Nick McGowan, in a blue hoodie reading 'Nick McGowan Eltham' next to a smiling Matthew Guy in a suit, both reaching out hands.
Nick McGowan, Matthew Guy’s new chief of staff, is also an upper house candidate for the state election.(AAP: James Ross)

The appointment caused some frustration inside the party, with one Liberal MP, who did not want to be named, labeling the move a “shocker” and “a job for a mate”.

They said it sent a “poor message” to the party’s other candidates that they did not need to bother campaigning until they lodged their nomination.

On that same day, Mr Guy was criticized for his performance during a 12-minute radio interview on 3AW where he repeatedly refused to answer questions about when he first found out that Mr Catlin had approached Mr Munz about the proposed arrangement.

Rather than starting a fresh week on the front foot, Monday’s events put Mr Guy right back to square one, and the interview drew harsh responses from listeners.

One man who identified himself as a “rusted-on Liberal voter” said Mr Guy had “lost the election” by being evasive.

Another caller described the interview as “disastrous.”

The departures

.

Categories
Australia

John Barilaro inquiry canceled due to mental health reasons

John Barilaro’s second day of evidence to a parliamentary inquiry examining his appointment as US trade commissioner has been canceled after the former NSW deputy premier said he would be unable to attend due to mental health reasons.

The committee conducting the ongoing probe into his recruitment for the New York role received notice on Friday morning that Barilaro would not appear on Friday. However, he has indicated his intention to appear at a later date.

John Barilaro giving evidence to the inquiry on Monday.

John Barilaro giving evidence to the inquiry on Monday.Credit:Kate Geraghty

Nationals MP and NSW Minister for Mental Health Bronnie Taylor, who is a close friend of Barilaro, said he told her on Friday morning he was not up to attend while he sought help amid intense public scrutiny.

Taylor suggested Barilaro had not been treated fairly by the inquiry, which took three weeks to call him to give evidence.

“This constant, constant attention on him. Him waiting three weeks until he was able to give his side of a story at an inquiry. I say to you and I say to anyone out there, ‘How would that make you feel and how do you think you would manage with that?’ ” she said on Friday.

Barilaro was due to give a full day of evidence to the long-running upper house inquiry, which has been reviewing the public service recruitment that saw him appointed to the US trade role in June. He has since withdrawn from the role amid intense backlash over the process.

Committee chair and Greens MP Cate Faerhmann said she was informed about 8am on Friday that Barilaro could not attend due to ill health.

In his first day facing the upper house inquiry on Monday, Barilaro said he had endured a “personal hell” since his controversial appointment and wished he never applied for the trade commissioner role.

“If I knew what I know now, I wouldn’t have walked into this shit show. I’m going to use those terms, I’m sorry to say because the trauma I’ve gone through over the last six, seven weeks has been significant,” he said.

Categories
Australia

How Gerry was freed from Sydney ocean pool

When beachgoers contacted Sea Life Sydney Aquarium reporting a small shark stuck in Fairlight Rockpool, they were surprised to see the docile animal simply picked up and carried back to the ocean by wildlife rescue.

The thrilled onlookers and enthusiastic children, who had nicknamed the crested horn shark “Gerry”, watched it swim away to safety on Saturday afternoon after being stranded by low tide in the pool.

Emily Best, aquarist from the Sealife Sydney Aquarium, rescued a crested horn shark that was stuck in Fairlight Rockpool.

Emily Best, aquarist from the Sealife Sydney Aquarium, rescued a crested horn shark that was stuck in Fairlight Rockpool.Credit:Flavio Brancalone

Aquarium aquarist Emily Best, who freed the shark, said the animals commonly became stuck in ocean pools from big surf or high tides.

“It happens quite a lot, especially in the netted swimming areas and ocean pools, this is the main thing we respond to,” she said.

“Once they’re in, it’s very difficult for them to get out of there; generally it takes someone to actually take them out again.

“It’s usually the council calling us when they are draining or cleaning the pools.”

The crested horn shark is a shallow dwelling species often found in rocky areas of Sydney Harbor and is harmless to humans.

Best said the animals commonly became stuck in ocean pools from big surf or high tides.

Best said the animals commonly became stuck in ocean pools from big surf or high tides.Credit:Flavio Brancalone

They are commonly seen during the winter because they will be mating and laying their eggs – which are a distinctive spiral shape – in the shallow, rocky waters.

Categories
Australia

Meth user who fell asleep at the wheel killing pregnant partner in Coolup crash jailed in Perth

A driver whose pregnant partner was killed when he fell asleep at the wheel, a year before he caused another crash in Darwin that seriously injured his new partner, has been jailed in Western Australia.

Michael Dixon, 37, pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing the death of 31-year-old Mel Duffey in Coolup, about 100 kilometers south of Perth, on December 13, 2019.

The District Court was told Dixon had not slept for more than 72 hours.

Traces of methamphetamine were also found in his blood and he admitted injecting the drug two days before the crash.

Ms Duffey, who had wanted to return home from their camping trip because she was worried about her three children, was thrown from the vehicle and died at the scene.

She was six months pregnant.

A close up of a woman wearing glasses with a nose piercing and two lip piercings
Mel Duffey was killed when his partner Michael Dixon fell asleep at the wheel while driving.(Facebook: Mel Duffey)

After the crash, Dixon moved to Darwin, where a year later, in December 2020, he crashed an all terrain vehicle into a street sign, seriously injuring his new partner, former police officer Kristi Wenck.

Dixon had been drinking with friends at a party beforehand and he pleaded guilty in the Northern Territory to driving under the influence as well as dangerous driving causing harm.

Emergency vehicles are by the edge of the road where an ATV is on its side.
The aftermath of the crash in Darwin, in which Michael Dixon’s new partner received serious injuries. (ABC News: Dane Hirst)

He was given a suspended jail term, but he was later extradited to Perth to face the charge over the crash that claimed the life of Ms Duffey.

‘disastrous decision’

Judge Mara Barone accepted Dixon had made the decision to drive because Ms Duffey was concerned and anxious about her children and not because of a selfish desire to return home.

“You drove because you believed it was the right thing … it proved to be a disastrous decision,” Judge Barone told a tearful Dixon.

A dark photo of a badly damaged vehicle on a tow truck ramp.
The wreckage after Michael Dixon fell asleep at the wheel while driving in Coolup in December 2019, killing his partner Mel Duffey.(ABCNews)

She said Dixon must have been aware of the extent of his fatigue and of the risk he would fall asleep.

Judge Barone highlighted Dixon’s subsequent offenses in the Northern Territory and told him he needed to understand that he could not drive in a manner that put the safety and lives of others in danger.

She sentenced him to three years’ jail — he will have to serve 18 months before he can be released on parole.

Dixon was also disqualified from driving for five years.

Three people in face masks walk along a city street.
Mel Duffey’s mother Cindy Rogers (right), pictured with her family outside court, criticized the sentence. (ABC News: Greg Pollock)

Outside the court Ms Duffey’s mother, Cindy Rogers, fought back tears as she described the sentence as “wrong”.

“I’ve still got her children, they’re with me and they want their mum and I can’t give them their mum and it’s his fault,” she said.

.

Categories
Australia

‘Vindictive’ father tried to gas young daughter to death after fighting with wife

An Adelaide father who tried to gas himself and his young daughter has been jailed for more than 14 years for the attempted murder of the girl.

Shaun Mate and his three-year-old daughter were found unconscious in July 2020 in what a judge described as a vindictive act of domestic violence.

Watch more in the video above

Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>

In the days leading up to the crime, he had bought two gas tanks, putting his plan into place after an argument with his then-wife.

Sentencing Mate in the Supreme Court on Friday, Justice Geraldine Davison said the impact of the 45-year-old’s offending was significant and widespread.

“Sadly, in many marriage breakdowns, when feelings are running high and the parties are feeling aggrieved and vindictive, the notion of depriving their partner of one of the greatest joys of their life can seem to be a way of wreaking revenge,” she said .

“There is a significant element of vindictiveness, planning and preparation in your offending.”

Shaun Mate was sentenced to more than 14 years behind bars over the attempted murder of his daughter. Credit: 7NEWS

On the night of the offending, Mate had made a photo montage of the couple, which he played on the television and said to his wife, “this is what you’re going to miss out on”.

Davison said he later became angry and his ex-wife began to feel unsafe and called the police.

Police arrived and the couple agreed he would stay in a room downstairs.

The judge said the girl’s mother woke up during the night to find her daughter missing from her bed and when she tried to open the door to her husband’s room he told her to “go away, we’re having a little sleep now”.

At that point, the mother heard both her daughter groan and the sound of gas and called police again.

While Mate had barricaded himself in, officers eventually gained entry where they found the girl unconscious and suffering from hypoxia.

Mate barricaded himself in the bathroom and tried to gas himself and his daughter to death. Credit: 7NEWS

Davison said while the offending was both planned and premeditated she accepted a psychologist’s finding that he was suffering from a major depressive disorder at the time.

However, she said regarded his crime as at the higher end of the scale.

“The victim was a vulnerable three-year-old child. Your planning indicates that it was premeditated offending,” the judge said.

“It was the most significant abuse of trust placed on a parent.

“Your intention was to take your child’s life as an act of vindictiveness against your wife thus depriving her of that child.

“Your plan failed by the good fortune of your wife waking and acting as swiftly as she did, along with the first responders.”

The judge accepted a psychologist’s finding that he was suffering from a major depressive disorder at the time, but said it was the ‘most significant abuse of trust’. Credit: 7NEWS

Mate’s daughter, now almost five years old, is said to have no memory of the event.

Her mother told 7NEWS that recovering from the ordeal has been “very tough”, but her little girl was “doing as best we can”.

“No one wins out of this, this is not a great scenario for anyone,” she said outside court.

Mate showed no emotion in sentencing, while his father put his head in his hands and cried.

Davison jailed the man for 14 years and three months, reduced from 15 years because of his guilty plea.

-With 7 NEWS

If you need help in a crisis, call life line on 13 11 14.

For further information about depression contact beyond blue on 1300224636 or talk to your GP, local health professional or someone you trust.

McDonald’s staff in terrifying knife hold-up.

McDonald’s staff in terrifying knife hold-up.

.

Categories
Australia

Artworks damaged by car smashing into gallery

An allegedly stolen car with six youths inside has caused thousands of dollars worth of damage to artworks after crashing into a community gallery in Melbourne’s outer east overnight.

Police say the Audi ploughed into the Kapi Art Space in Kalorama, in the Dandenong Ranges, shortly after 3am, crashing through a stone barrier and pushing into the gallery before the youths fled the scene.

Police arrested a teenage girl near the gallery before receiving a report of an attempted car theft on nearby Price Road.

Three male teenagers and a female youth were then arrested after police flagged down a ride-share vehicle.

A sixth teenager was taken to hospital with a leg injury after police used the dog squad to locate them.

Kapi Art Space business owner Heather Bradbury said the car had pushed a number of meters into a corner of the gallery before nearly exiting through another wall, damaging about six works by local artists collectively worth thousands of dollars.

Police say the Audi ploughed into the Kapi Art Space in Kalorama, in the Dandenong Ranges, shortly after 3am.

Police say the Audi ploughed into the Kapi Art Space in Kalorama, in the Dandenong Ranges, shortly after 3am.Credit:Nine

She said the vehicle narrowly missed a painting of a black cockatoo worth about $40,000 and emergency workers were able to salvage a valuable marble bust from the wreckage.

“I am shocked and really sad,” Bradbury said. “People love coming in and being part of the lovely community that we’ve created, but we’ll rebuild.”