Hammock Bruce G, Hobbs James A, Slater Steven B, Acuña Shawn, Teh Swee J
Aquatic Health Program, School of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Cell Biology, One Shields Avenue, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2015 Nov 1;532:316-26. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.06.018. Epub 2015 Jun 14.
The abundance of Delta Smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus), a fish species endemic to the upper San Francisco Estuary (SFE), is declining. Several causes for the population decline have been proposed, including food limitation and contaminant effects. Here, using juvenile Delta Smelt collected from throughout their range, we measured a suite of indices across three levels of biological organization (cellular, organ, individual) that reflect fish condition at temporal scales ranging from hours to weeks. Using these indices, the relative conditions of fish collected from five regions in the SFE were compared: Cache Slough, Sacramento River Deep Water Ship Channel, Confluence, Suisun Bay and Suisun Marsh. Fish sampled from Suisun Bay and, to a lesser extent the Confluence, exhibited relatively poor short-term nutritional and growth indices and morphometric condition, while fish from the freshwater regions of the estuary, and Cache Slough in particular, exhibited the most apparent histopathological signs of contaminant exposure. In contrast, fish from the Suisun Marsh region exhibited higher short-term nutrition and growth indices, and better morphometric and histopathological condition. For instance, fish collected from Suisun Marsh had a mean stomach fullness, expressed as a percentage of fish weight, that was 3.4-fold higher than fish collected from Suisun Bay, while also exhibiting an incidence of histopathological lesions that was 11-fold lower than fish collected from Cache Slough. Thus, our findings support the hypothesis that multiple stressors, including food limitation and contaminants, are contributing to the decline of Delta Smelt, and that these stressors influence Delta Smelt heterogeneously across space.
三角洲胡瓜鱼(Hypomesus transpacificus)是旧金山河口上游(SFE)特有的一种鱼类,其数量正在减少。人们提出了几种导致其种群数量下降的原因,包括食物限制和污染物影响。在这里,我们使用从三角洲胡瓜鱼整个分布范围内收集的幼鱼,测量了跨越生物组织三个层次(细胞、器官、个体)的一系列指标,这些指标反映了从数小时到数周时间尺度内的鱼类状况。利用这些指标,我们比较了从旧金山河口五个区域收集的鱼类的相对状况:卡奇斯劳、萨克拉门托河深水航道、汇流处、苏森湾和苏森沼泽。从苏森湾采集的鱼类,以及在较小程度上从汇流处采集的鱼类,表现出相对较差的短期营养和生长指标以及形态测量状况,而来自河口淡水区域,特别是卡奇斯劳的鱼类,表现出最明显的污染物暴露组织病理学迹象。相比之下,来自苏森沼泽地区的鱼类表现出较高的短期营养和生长指标,以及较好的形态测量和组织病理学状况。例如,从苏森沼泽采集的鱼类的平均胃饱满度(以鱼体重的百分比表示)比从苏森湾采集的鱼类高3.4倍,同时其组织病理学病变发生率比从卡奇斯劳采集的鱼类低11倍。因此,我们的研究结果支持以下假设:包括食物限制和污染物在内的多种压力源正在导致三角洲胡瓜鱼数量下降,并且这些压力源在空间上对三角洲胡瓜鱼的影响是不均匀的。