Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Jan 2022)
Anadromous fish as biomarkers for the combined impact of marine and freshwater heavy metal pollution
Abstract
Rivers along the eastern seaboard of the United States and Canada are becoming increasingly contaminated with heavy metals. This includes the Tusket River (Nova Scotia, Canada) which empties into the Gulf of Maine, near the Bay of Fundy. Whether anadromous fish such as alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), exposed both to marine and freshwater contaminants, are accumulating these heavy metals and experiencing any changes in their morphology was explored in this study. Adult (4–6 years of age) Tusket River alewife (n = 38) were harvested and had external examinations including morphometrics (fork length, weight). Biopsies were taken and structural abnormalities noted. Morphometric data was compared to historical alewife reference data from 1985. Biopsies of muscle, liver and kidney had heavy metal profiles assessed. Major findings of this study include detectable levels (µg/g wet weight) of a number of heavy metals and concerning maximum concentrations achieved of arsenic (liver: 14 µg/g), cadmium (kidney: 2.6 µg/g), mercury (liver: 0.26 µg/g), magnesium (muscle: 460 µg/g), selenium (kidney: 4.0 µg/g) and zinc (liver: 38.0 µg/g). As well, reduced body weight for length and in 87% of fish, presence of spine curvatures (3–24°) not visible externally were noted. This study is the first detailed report in alewife of key tissue heavy metals, some at levels of concern, reductions in weight for length and spine abnormalities. These findings validate concerns regarding potential impacts of deteriorating conditions of rivers and their surrounding waters such as the Gulf of Maine on anadromous fish species.