Responses of Arctic Grayling ( Thymallus arcticus) to Acute and Prolonged Exposure to Yukon Placer Mining Sediment

Underyearling Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) from the Yukon River system were expsed for 4 d to suspensions of fine inorganic (≤ 250 g∙L −1 ) and organic (≤ 50 g∙L −1 ) sediment and for 6 wk to inorganic sediment (≤ 1000 mg∙L −1 ) under laboratory conditions. The test sediments were collected...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
Main Authors: McLeay, D. J., Birtwell, I. K., Hartman, G. F., Ennis, G. L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1987
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/f87-080
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/f87-080
Description
Summary:Underyearling Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) from the Yukon River system were expsed for 4 d to suspensions of fine inorganic (≤ 250 g∙L −1 ) and organic (≤ 50 g∙L −1 ) sediment and for 6 wk to inorganic sediment (≤ 1000 mg∙L −1 ) under laboratory conditions. The test sediments were collected from an active placer mining area near Mayo, Yukon Territory. The exposures evoked sublethal responses but did not cause gill damage. Mortalities (10 and 20%) occurred only in experiments at 5 °C with inorganic sediment concentrations ≤ 20 g∙L −1 . Six weeks of exposure to sediment concentrations > 100 mg∙L −1 impaired feeding activity, reduced growth rates, caused downstream displacement, colour changes, and decreased resistance to the reference toxicant pentachlorophenol, but did not impair respiratory capabilities. Stress responses (elevated and/or more varied blood sugar levels, depressed leucocrit values) were recorded after short exposure (1–4 d) to organic sediment concentrations as low as 50 mg∙L −1 . Inorganic sediment strengths ≥ 10 g∙L −1 caused fish to surface. The lethal and sublethal responses of Arctic grayling to pentachlorophenol were similar to those determined for other healthy salmonid fishes.