Thomas Linnea M, Jorgenson Zachary G, Brigham Mark E, Choy Steven J, Moore Jeremy N, Banda Jo A, Gefell Daniel J, Minarik Thomas A, Schoenfuss Heiko L
Aquatic Toxicology Laboratory, St. Cloud State University, St. Cloud, Minnesota, United States of America.
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Bloomington, Minnesota, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Sep 27;12(9):e0184725. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184725. eCollection 2017.
The Laurentian Great Lakes contain one fifth of the world's surface freshwater and have been impacted by human activity since the Industrial Revolution. In addition to legacy contaminants, nitrification and invasive species, this aquatic ecosystem is also the recipient of Contaminants of Emerging Concern (CECs) with poorly understood biological consequences. In the current study, we documented the presence, concentrations, and biological effects of CECs across 27 field sites in six Great Lakes tributaries by examining over 2250 resident and caged sunfish (Lepomis ssp.) for a variety of morphological and physiological endpoints and related these results to CEC occurrence. CEC were ubiquitous across studies sites and their presence and concentrations in water and sediment were highest in effluent dominated rivers and downstream of municipal wastewater treatment plant discharges. However, even putative upstream reference sites were not free of CEC presence and fish at these sites exhibited biological effects consistent with CEC exposure. Only the Fox River exhibited consistent adverse biological effects, including increased relative liver size, greater prominence of hepatocyte vacuoles and increased plasma glucose concentrations. Canonical Redundancy Analysis revealed consistent patterns of biological consequences of CEC exposure across all six tributaries. Increasing plasma glucose concentrations, likely as a result of pollutant-induced metabolic stress, were associated with increased relative liver size and greater prominence of hepatocyte vacuoles. These indicators of pollutant exposure were inversely correlated with indicators of reproductive potential including smaller gonad size and less mature gametes. The current study highlights the need for greater integration of chemical and biological studies and suggests that CECs in the Laurentian Great Lakes Basin may adversely affect the reproductive potential of exposed fish populations.
五大湖包含了世界上五分之一的地表淡水,自工业革命以来一直受到人类活动的影响。除了遗留污染物、硝化作用和入侵物种外,这个水生生态系统还受到新兴关注污染物(CECs)的影响,其对生物的影响尚不清楚。在当前的研究中,我们通过检查超过2250条本地和圈养的太阳鱼(Lepomis ssp.)的各种形态和生理终点,记录了六大湖支流27个野外地点CECs的存在、浓度和生物效应,并将这些结果与CECs的出现情况相关联。CECs在所有研究地点普遍存在,其在水和沉积物中的存在及浓度在以废水为主的河流以及城市污水处理厂排放下游最高。然而,即使是假定的上游参考地点也并非没有CECs的存在,这些地点的鱼类表现出与CECs暴露一致的生物效应。只有福克斯河表现出持续的不良生物效应,包括相对肝脏大小增加、肝细胞空泡更明显以及血浆葡萄糖浓度升高。典范冗余分析揭示了所有六条支流中CECs暴露的生物后果的一致模式。血浆葡萄糖浓度升高,可能是由于污染物诱导的代谢应激,与相对肝脏大小增加和肝细胞空泡更明显有关。这些污染物暴露指标与生殖潜力指标呈负相关,包括性腺较小和配子成熟度较低。当前的研究强调了化学和生物学研究更紧密结合的必要性,并表明五大湖流域的CECs可能会对受影响鱼类种群的生殖潜力产生不利影响。