We study the spatial distribution of the physical properties and of oxygen
and nitrogen abundances in three Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxiess (HS 0128+2832, HS
0837+4717 and Mrk 930) with a reported excess of N/O in order to investigate
the nature of this excess and, particularly, if it is associated with
Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars We have observed these BCDs by using PMAS integral field
spectroscopy in the optical spectral range (3700 - 6900 {\AA}), mapping their
physical-chemical properties, using both the direct method and appropriate
strong-line methods. We make a statistical analysis of the resulting
distributions and we compare them with the integrated properties of the
galaxies. Our results indicate that outer parts of the three galaxies are
placed on the "AGN-zone" of the [NII]/H{\alpha} vs. [OIII]/H{\beta} diagnostic
diagram most likely due to a high N/O combined with the excitation structure in
these regions. From the statistical analysis, it is assumed that a certain
property can be considered as spatially homogeneous (or uniform) if a normal
gaussian function fits its distribution in several regions of the galaxy.
Moreover, a disagreement between the integrated properties and the mean values
of the distribution usually appears when a gaussian does not fit the
corresponding distribution. We find that for Mrk 930, the uniformity is found
for all parameters, except for electron density and reddening. The rotation
curve together with the H{\alpha} map and UV images, reveal a perturbed
morphology and possible interacting processes. The N/O is found to be constant
in the three studied objects at spatial scales of the order of several kpc so
we conclude that the number of WR stars estimated from spectroscopy is not
sufficient to pollute the ISM and to produce the observed N/O excess in these
objectsComment: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic