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Cumulative impacts assessment along a large river, using brown bullhead catfish (Ameiurus nebulosus) populations

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dc.contributor.author West, David William
dc.contributor.author Ling, Nicholas
dc.contributor.author Hicks, Brendan J.
dc.contributor.author Tremblay, Louis A.
dc.contributor.author Kim, Nicholas D.
dc.contributor.author van den Heuvel, Michael R.
dc.date.accessioned 2010-06-18T04:31:06Z
dc.date.available 2010-06-18T04:31:06Z
dc.date.issued 2009
dc.identifier.citation West, D.W., Ling, N., Hicks, B.J., Tremblay, L.A., Kim, N.D. & van den Heuvel, M. (2009). Cumulative impacts assessment along a large river, using brown bullhead catfish (Ameiurus nebulosus) populations. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 25(7), 1868-1880. en_NZ
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10289/4018
dc.description.abstract The effects of point-source and diffuse discharges on resident populations of brown bullhead catfish (Ameiurus nebulosus (LeSueur, 1819)) in the Waikato River (New Zealand) were assessed at sites both upstream and downstream of point-source discharges. At each site, the population parameters, relative abundance, age structure, and individual indices, such as condition factor, organ (gonad, liver, and spleen) to somatic weight ratios, and number and size of follicles per female, were assessed. Physiological (blood), biochemical (hepatic ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase [EROD] and plasma steroids), and other indicators (bile chemistry and liver metals) of exposure or response also were measured. No impacts on brown bullhead health were obvious at individual geothermal, municipal sewage, or thermal discharge sites or cumulatively along the river. Brown bullhead from the bleached kraft mill effluent site showed elevated levels of EROD, decreased numbers of red blood cells, increased numbers of white blood cells, and depressed levels of sex steroids. However, growth rates, condition factor, age structure, and gonadosomatic index suggest that discharges with significant heat or nutrients benefit catfish despite physiological impairment at one site. Consideration of brown bullhead population-level responses to discharges in a monitoring framework revealed three different population-level response patterns resulting from the point-source discharges. en_NZ
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject fish health en_NZ
dc.subject discharges en_NZ
dc.subject steroids en_NZ
dc.subject blood en_NZ
dc.subject pulp and paper en_NZ
dc.title Cumulative impacts assessment along a large river, using brown bullhead catfish (Ameiurus nebulosus) populations en_NZ
dc.type Journal Article en_NZ
dc.identifier.doi 10.1897/05-315R.1 en_NZ


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