Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Water chemistry at the gill surfaces of fish and the uptake of xenobiotics
- Bioaccumulation of waterborne 1,2,4,5-tetrachlorobenzene in tissues of rainbow trout
- Dietary exposure to toxic metals in fish
- The physiology and toxicology of zinc in fish
- Lethal and sub-lethal effects of copper upon fish: a role for ammonia toxicity?
- The physiological status of brown trout exposed to aluminium in acidic soft waters
- Physiological and metabolic costs of acclimation to chronic sub-lethal acid and aluminium exposure in rainbow trout
- Physiological effects of nitrite in teleosts and crustaceans
- Metallothioneins in fish: induction and use in environmental monitoring
- Oestrogenic substances in the aquatic environment and their potential impact on animals, particularly fish
- Effect of genetic toxicants in aquatic organisms
- In vitro toxicology of aquatic pollutants: use of cultured fish cells
- Principles governing the use of cytochrome P4501A1 measurement as a pollution monitoring tool in the aquatic environment
- Index
The physiological status of brown trout exposed to aluminium in acidic soft waters
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Water chemistry at the gill surfaces of fish and the uptake of xenobiotics
- Bioaccumulation of waterborne 1,2,4,5-tetrachlorobenzene in tissues of rainbow trout
- Dietary exposure to toxic metals in fish
- The physiology and toxicology of zinc in fish
- Lethal and sub-lethal effects of copper upon fish: a role for ammonia toxicity?
- The physiological status of brown trout exposed to aluminium in acidic soft waters
- Physiological and metabolic costs of acclimation to chronic sub-lethal acid and aluminium exposure in rainbow trout
- Physiological effects of nitrite in teleosts and crustaceans
- Metallothioneins in fish: induction and use in environmental monitoring
- Oestrogenic substances in the aquatic environment and their potential impact on animals, particularly fish
- Effect of genetic toxicants in aquatic organisms
- In vitro toxicology of aquatic pollutants: use of cultured fish cells
- Principles governing the use of cytochrome P4501A1 measurement as a pollution monitoring tool in the aquatic environment
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Low environmental pH and increased concentrations of various metals such as Cu, Mn, and Al interact in determining the toxicity of acidic soft waters to fish. Of the trace metals, Al has been highlighted as causing the greatest concern to date (Rosseland, Eldhurst & Staurnes, 1990), and numerous investigations have reported physiological disturbances in adult or juvenile fish, especially salmonid species, exposed to aluminium in soft acidic waters. Most of these studies have been concerned with the responses of the rainbow trout and brook trout (Neville, 1985; Playle, Goss & Wood, 1989; Witters et al, 1990, 1991, 1992; Wood et al, 1988a,b) while far fewer studies have centred on the brown trout, Salmo trutta, even though this is a major indigenous salmonid in European waters. The responses of brown trout to acidic waters in the absence of aluminium have been investigated in some depth by McWilliams & Potts (McWilliams, 1982, 1983), but the effects of aluminium in acidic waters are less clear though of greater environmental relevance. Some studies have suggested that aluminiumexposed brown trout show osmoregulatory and/or respiratory disturbances similar to those occurring in other salmonids (Muniz & Leivestad, 1980; Rosseland & Skogheim, 1984; Gagen & Sharpe, 1987; Battram, 1988; Dietrich & Schlatter, 1989b; Reader et al, 1991; Sayer et al, 1991) but in most of these studies aluminium concentrations were high and mortalities common. A knowledge of the effects of lower, sub-lethal concentrations of aluminium is particularly important in understanding acclimation and long-term survival as ecosystems recover.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Toxicology of Aquatic PollutionPhysiological, Molecular and Cellular Approaches, pp. 115 - 142Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996