Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?

Fish are suddenly exposed to hypoxic conditions during diverse events such as seiche- or turnover-related water movements, bottom water release from reservoirs, ice-over of eutrophic arctic lakes, and rapid shifts in respiration: photosynthesis associated with cultural eutrophication. In each case,...

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Main Author: Newman, Michael C.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: W&M ScholarWorks 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsbooks/15
https://scholarworks.wm.edu/context/vimsbooks/article/1013/viewcontent/SympFishPhysToxWQ2003m_new.pdf
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spelling ftwilliammarycol:oai:scholarworks.wm.edu:vimsbooks-1013 2023-06-11T04:09:52+02:00 Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival? Newman, Michael C. 2004-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsbooks/15 https://scholarworks.wm.edu/context/vimsbooks/article/1013/viewcontent/SympFishPhysToxWQ2003m_new.pdf unknown W&M ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsbooks/15 https://scholarworks.wm.edu/context/vimsbooks/article/1013/viewcontent/SympFishPhysToxWQ2003m_new.pdf VIMS Books and Book Chapters Aquatic Health Sciences Reports Aquaculture and Fisheries Environmental Monitoring text 2004 ftwilliammarycol 2023-05-04T17:44:25Z Fish are suddenly exposed to hypoxic conditions during diverse events such as seiche- or turnover-related water movements, bottom water release from reservoirs, ice-over of eutrophic arctic lakes, and rapid shifts in respiration: photosynthesis associated with cultural eutrophication. In each case, chemical equilibria established under hypoxic conditions that result in metal dissolution and accumulation suddenly shift toward chemical equilibria of oxic conditions. Critical changes in speciation include those determining the free ion activity that, as expressed by the Free Ion Activity Model (FIAM), is often the most bioactive form of a dissolved metal. Metal phase can also change rapidly and, in some cases, result in a precipitate on respiratory surfaces. Exposure of fish gills to metal (and integument of larval or small fish) changes O2 exchange dynamics. Changes in mucus quality and production and lamellae morphology decrease the amount of effective gill exchange surface and increase the diffusive layer thickness. These changes exacerbate those associated with the reduced O2 partial pressure gradient. Consequent shifts in blood chemistry (e.g., pH and ion composition) and ventilation also affect metal transport and deposition within fish tissues. Some of these changes have immediate consequences, but others can continue for long periods after the hypoxic conditions pass. Long-term metal effects can influence fish tolerance during future hypoxic episodes. A joint, similar action model can be applied if the parsimonious assumption is made that asphyxiation constitutes a common mode-of-action for both acute metal effects and hypoxia. Joint action models are applicable based on either conventional dose-effect or survival time approaches. Expansion of such models to a physiologically-based toxicokineticstoxicodynamics framework (e.g., framed around the Fick equation) would be desirable, provided that model parameter requirements remain realistic. Long-term effects may be better addressed with models such as the ... Text Arctic W&M ScholarWorks Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection W&M ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftwilliammarycol
language unknown
topic Aquatic Health Sciences Reports
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Environmental Monitoring
spellingShingle Aquatic Health Sciences Reports
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Environmental Monitoring
Newman, Michael C.
Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?
topic_facet Aquatic Health Sciences Reports
Aquaculture and Fisheries
Environmental Monitoring
description Fish are suddenly exposed to hypoxic conditions during diverse events such as seiche- or turnover-related water movements, bottom water release from reservoirs, ice-over of eutrophic arctic lakes, and rapid shifts in respiration: photosynthesis associated with cultural eutrophication. In each case, chemical equilibria established under hypoxic conditions that result in metal dissolution and accumulation suddenly shift toward chemical equilibria of oxic conditions. Critical changes in speciation include those determining the free ion activity that, as expressed by the Free Ion Activity Model (FIAM), is often the most bioactive form of a dissolved metal. Metal phase can also change rapidly and, in some cases, result in a precipitate on respiratory surfaces. Exposure of fish gills to metal (and integument of larval or small fish) changes O2 exchange dynamics. Changes in mucus quality and production and lamellae morphology decrease the amount of effective gill exchange surface and increase the diffusive layer thickness. These changes exacerbate those associated with the reduced O2 partial pressure gradient. Consequent shifts in blood chemistry (e.g., pH and ion composition) and ventilation also affect metal transport and deposition within fish tissues. Some of these changes have immediate consequences, but others can continue for long periods after the hypoxic conditions pass. Long-term metal effects can influence fish tolerance during future hypoxic episodes. A joint, similar action model can be applied if the parsimonious assumption is made that asphyxiation constitutes a common mode-of-action for both acute metal effects and hypoxia. Joint action models are applicable based on either conventional dose-effect or survival time approaches. Expansion of such models to a physiologically-based toxicokineticstoxicodynamics framework (e.g., framed around the Fick equation) would be desirable, provided that model parameter requirements remain realistic. Long-term effects may be better addressed with models such as the ...
format Text
author Newman, Michael C.
author_facet Newman, Michael C.
author_sort Newman, Michael C.
title Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?
title_short Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?
title_full Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?
title_fullStr Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?
title_full_unstemmed Can We Predict Joint Effects Of Hypoxia And Metals On Fish Survival?
title_sort can we predict joint effects of hypoxia and metals on fish survival?
publisher W&M ScholarWorks
publishDate 2004
url https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsbooks/15
https://scholarworks.wm.edu/context/vimsbooks/article/1013/viewcontent/SympFishPhysToxWQ2003m_new.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source VIMS Books and Book Chapters
op_relation https://scholarworks.wm.edu/vimsbooks/15
https://scholarworks.wm.edu/context/vimsbooks/article/1013/viewcontent/SympFishPhysToxWQ2003m_new.pdf
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