Washington State University, School of the Environment, Puyallup Research and Extension Center, 2606 W Pioneer Ave, Puyallup, WA 98371, USA.
Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2725 Montlake Blvd. E., Seattle, WA 98112, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2023 Dec 1;902:165759. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165759. Epub 2023 Jul 24.
As the human population of western North America continues to expand, widespread patterns of urban growth pose increasingly existential threats to certain wild stocks of Pacific salmon and steelhead (Oncorhynchus sp.). Rainfall previously absorbed into the soils of forests and grasslands falls instead on pavement and other hardened surfaces. This creates stormwater runoff that carries toxic metals, oil, and many other contaminants into salmon-bearing habitats. These include freshwater streams where coho salmon (O. kisutch) spawn in gravel beds. Coho salmon embryos develop within a thick eggshell (chorion) for weeks to months before hatching as alevins and ultimately emerging from the gravel as fry. Untreated urban runoff is highly toxic to older coho salmon (freshwater-resident juveniles and adult spawners), but the vulnerability of the earliest life stages remains poorly understood. To address this uncertainty, we fertilized eggs and raised them under an episodic stormwater exposure regimen, using runoff collected from a high-traffic arterial roadway from 15 discrete storm events. We monitored survival and morphological development, as well as molecular markers for contaminant exposure and cardiovascular stress. We also evaluated the benefit of treating runoff with green infrastructure (bioretention filtration) on coho salmon health and survival. Untreated runoff caused subtle sublethal toxicity in pre-hatch embryos with no mortality, followed by high rates of mortality from exposure at hatch. Bioretention filtration removed most measured contaminants (bacteria, dissolved metals, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), and the treated effluent was considerably less toxic - notably preventing mortality at the alevin stage. Our findings indicate that untreated urban runoff poses an important threat to early life stage coho salmon, in terms of both acute and delayed-in-time mortality. Moreover, while inexpensive management strategies involving bioinfiltration are promising, future green infrastructure effectiveness research should emphasize sublethal metrics for contaminant exposure and adverse health outcomes in salmonids.
随着北美西部的人口不断增加,城市扩张的普遍模式对某些太平洋三文鱼和虹鳟(Oncorhynchus sp.)的野生种群构成了日益严重的生存威胁。以前被森林和草原土壤吸收的降雨现在直接落在了路面和其他硬化表面上。这导致了雨水径流,将有毒金属、石油和许多其他污染物带入了承载三文鱼的栖息地。这些栖息地包括在砾石床上产卵的银鲑(O. kisutch)的淡水溪流。银鲑的胚胎在蛋壳(绒毛膜)内发育数周到数月,然后孵化成幼鱼,最终从砾石中孵出。未经处理的城市径流对成年银鲑(淡水居留的幼鱼和成年产卵鱼)具有高度毒性,但早期生命阶段的脆弱性仍知之甚少。为了解决这一不确定性,我们使用从一条高流量主要道路上收集的径流,在间歇式雨水暴露方案下对卵子进行了受精并进行了培育,监测了存活率和形态发育,以及污染物暴露和心血管压力的分子标记。我们还评估了用绿色基础设施(生物滞留过滤)处理径流对银鲑健康和存活率的好处。未经处理的径流在孵化前对胚胎造成了轻微的亚致死毒性,但孵化后死亡率很高。生物滞留过滤去除了大多数测量到的污染物(细菌、溶解金属和多环芳烃),处理后的废水毒性明显降低 - 特别是在幼鱼阶段防止了死亡。我们的研究结果表明,未经处理的城市径流对早期生命阶段的银鲑构成了重要威胁,无论是急性的还是延迟性的死亡率。此外,虽然涉及生物渗透的廉价管理策略很有前景,但未来的绿色基础设施有效性研究应强调亚致死指标,以评估污染物暴露和鲑鱼类的不良健康后果。