Pollutant waits to
smite salmon at sea
By J. Raloff
 |
| Atlantic salmon (Art MacKay, St. Andrews, NB) |
Canadian scientists have identified the likely culprit behind some
historic, regional declines in Atlantic salmon. The researchers find
that a near-ubiquitous water pollutant can render young, migrating fish
unable to survive a life at sea.
Heavy, late-spring spraying of forests with a pesticide laced with
nonylphenol during the 1970s and '80s was the clue that led the biologists
to unmask that chemical's role in the transitory decline of salmon in
East Canada. Though these sprays have ended, concentrations of nonylphenols
in forest runoff then were comparable to those in the effluent of some
pulp mills, industrial facilities, and sewage-treatment plants today.
Downstream of such areas, the scientists argue, salmon and other migratory
fish may still be at risk.
Nonylphenols are surfactants used in products from pesticides to dishwashing
detergents, cosmetics, plastics, and spermicides. Because waste-treatment
plants don't remove nonylphenols well, these chemicals can build up
in downstream waters (SN: 1/8/94, p. 24).
When British studies linked ambient nonylphenol pollution to reproductive
problems in fish (SN: 2/26/94, p. 142), Wayne L. Fairchild of Canada's
Department of Fisheries and Oceans in Moncton, New Brunswick, became
concerned. He recalled that an insecticide used on local forests for
more than a decade had contained large amounts of nonylphenols. They
helped aminocarb, the oily active ingredient in Matacil 1.8D, dissolve
in water for easier spraying.
Runoff of the pesticide during rains loaded the spawning and nursery
waters of Atlantic salmon with nonylphenols. Moreover, this aerial spraying
had tended to coincide with the final stages of smoltificationthe
fish's transformation for life at sea.
To probe for effects of forest spraying, Fairchild and his colleagues
surveyed more than a decade of river-by-river data on fish. They overlaid
these numbers with archival data on local aerial spraying with Matacil
1.8D or either of two nonylphenol-free pesticides. One contained the
same active ingredient, aminocarb, as Matacil 1.8D does.
Most of the lowest adult salmon counts between 1973 and 1990 occurred
in rivers where smolts would earlier have encountered runoff of Matacil
1.8D, Fairchild's group found. In 9 of 19 cases of Matacil 1.8D spraying
for which they had good data, salmon returns were lower than they were
within the 5 years earlier and 5 years later, they report in the May
Environmental Health Perspectives. No population declines were
associated with the other two pesticides.
The researchers have now exposed smolts in the laboratory to various
nonylphenol concentrations, including some typical of Canadian rivers
during the 1970s. The fish remained healthyuntil they entered salt water,
at which point they exhibited a failure-to-thrive syndrome.
"They looked like they were starving," Fairchild told Science News.
Within 2 months, he notes, 20 to 30 percent died. Untreated smolts adjusted
normally to salt water and fattened up.
Steffen S. Madsen, a fish ecophysiologist at Odense University in Denmark,
is not surprised, based on his own experiments.
To move from fresh water to the sea, a fish must undergo major hormonal
changes that adapt it for pumping out excess salt. A female preparing
to spawn in fresh water must undergo the opposite change. Since estrogen
triggers her adaptation, Madsen and a colleague decided to test how
smolts would respond to estrogen or nonylphenol, an estrogen mimic.
In the lab, they periodically injected salmon smolts with estrogen
or nonylphenol over 30 days, and at various points placed them in seawater
for 24 hours. Salt in the fish's blood skyrocketed during the day-long
trials, unlike salt in untreated smolts. "Our preliminary evidence indicates
that natural and environ- mental estrogens screw up the pituitary,"
Madsen says. The gland responds by making prolactin, a hormone that
drives freshwater adaptation.
Judging by Fairchild's data, Madsen now suspects that any fish that
migrates between fresh and salt water may be similarly vulnerable to
high concentrations of pollutants that mimic estrogen.