Toxicity of Salts, Metals, and Nitrogenous Contaminants to Cold-Water Fish Under Northern Conditions

The goal of this thesis was to assess whether the current rainbow trout reference method used to ensure protection of native cold-water fish in Canada is adequately sensitive for application in northern environments. Comparative acute toxicity testing of seventeen inorganic contaminants found in min...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moore, Dana
Other Authors: Sibley, Paul, Solomon, Keith
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Guelph 2016
Subjects:
pH
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10214/10015
Description
Summary:The goal of this thesis was to assess whether the current rainbow trout reference method used to ensure protection of native cold-water fish in Canada is adequately sensitive for application in northern environments. Comparative acute toxicity testing of seventeen inorganic contaminants found in mine effluents (CaCl2, MgCl2, KCl, NaCl, SO4 - , MoO4 2-, Al, As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Se, and Zn, NH3, NO2 - and NO3 -) was conducted using rainbow trout and five northern species of interest (arctic char, lake trout, lake whitefish, round whitefish, and arctic grayling) at three cold-water temperatures (5, 10, and 15°C); three water hardness levels (30, 60, and 120 mg CaCO3/L) for metals and metalloids; and 7 pH levels (pH 5.0, 5.5, 6.0, 6.5, iii 7.0, 7.5, 8.0) for NH3. The suite of assays produced 383 new 96-h LC50 values for juvenile cold-water fish. The ability of the reference species to protect other cold-water fish under dynamic conditions was assessed by comparing the 96-h rainbow trout LC50 for each contaminant reference conditions to the 96-h LC50 for each novel assay. To assess hazard to cold-water fish under existing or likely conditions, observed LC50s were used to calculate Hazard Quotients using available water quality guidelines and measured mine effluent concentrations. To assess the influence of test duration, acute LC50 values were calculated for mortalities observed at 24-, 48-, and 72-h of exposure for each assay, pooled, and assessed for trends in time required to achieve maximal toxic effect between species, contaminants, and water hardness level. The overall conclusion of this thesis is that rainbow trout are an adequate surrogate for cold-water fish species when environmental conditions are accounted for and an inter-species ecological safety factor of 10 applied. Some potential hazards under existing exposure conditions were identified, but only under spill or exceedance concentrations (effluents above regulatory limits) and not under current management levels. All species displayed similar trends ...