2 research outputs found
Congener Patterns of Persistent Organic Pollutants Establish the Extent of Contaminant Biotransport by Pacific Salmon in the Great Lakes
In
the Great Lakes, introduced Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) can transport persistent organic pollutants (POPs), such as
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers
(PBDEs), to new environments during their spawning migrations. To
explore the nature and extent of POP biotransport by salmon, we compared
58 PCB and 6 PBDE congeners found in spawning salmon directly to those
in resident stream fish. We hypothesized that stream fish exposed
to salmon spawners would have congener patterns similar to those of
salmon, the presumed contaminant source. Using permutational multivariate
analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) and nonmetric multidimensional scaling
(NMDS), we found that POP congener patterns of Pacific salmon varied
among regions in the Great Lakes basin (i.e., Lake Huron, Lake Michigan,
or Lake Superior), tissue type (whole fish or eggs), and contaminant
type (PCB or PBDE). For stream-resident fish, POP congener pattern
was influenced by the presence of salmon, location (i.e., Great Lakes
Basin), and species identity (i.e., brook trout [Salvelinus
fontinalis] or mottled sculpin [Cottus
bairdii]). Similarity in congener patterns indicated
that salmon are a source of POPs to brook trout in stream reaches
receiving salmon spawners from Lake Michigan and Lake Huron but not
from Lake Superior. Congener patterns of mottled sculpin differed
from those of brook trout and salmon, suggesting that brook trout
and mottled sculpin either use salmon tissue to differing degrees,
acquire POPs from different dietary sources, or bioaccumulate or metabolize
POPs differently. Overall, our analyses identified the important role
of salmon in contaminant biotransport but also demonstrated that the
extent of salmon-mediated POP transfer and uptake in Great Lakes tributaries
is location- and species-specific