ASSESSING RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN CHEMICAL EXPOSURE, PARASITE INFECTION, FISH HEALTH, AND FISH ECOLOGICAL STATUS: A CASE STUDY USING CHUB (LEUCISCUS CEPHALUS) IN THE BILINA RIVER, CZECH REPUBLIC

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Authors

WENGER Michael ONDRAČKOVÁ Markéta MACHALA Miroslav NEČA Jiří HYRŠL Pavel VETEŠNÍKOVÁ ŠIMKOVÁ Andrea JURAJDA Pavel VON DER OHE Peter SEGNER Helmut

Year of publication 2010
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Field Zoology
Keywords Multiple stressors; Environmental risk assessment; Exposure biomarkers; Parasites; Fish health
Description Multiple stressor scenarios, as they are relevant in many watersheds, call for approaches extending beyond conventional chemical-focused approaches. The present study, investigated the fish population, represented by chub (Leuciscus cephalus), in the Bilina River (Czech Republic), which is impacted by various pollution sources and might pose a fisk on the fish population. To confirm or reject this hypothesis, it was examined whether there exists an association between abundance of chub and exposure to toxic chemicals as well as natural stressors, represented by parasites, and whether health-related suborganismal traits, namely, organ indices, tissue histopathology, and immune parameters, would help in revealing relationships between stressor impact and population status. Toxic pressure was assessed by the toxic unit approach, which gives an integrative estimate of toxic effect concentrations and by measuring the biomarkers cytochrome P4501A and vitellogenin, which indicate exposure to bioavailable arylhydrocarbon-or estrogen receptor ligands. Parasite pressure was estimated by determining abundance and species composition of ecto- and endoparasites of chub. Chub abundance was high upstream in the Bilina, low to zero in the middle stretches, and increased again downstream. Toxic pressure increased in the downstream direction, while parasite intensity decreased in this direction. Health status of chub did not differ clearly between up-, middle-, and downstream sites. Thus, it appears that neither toxic pressure nor parasite pressure nor their combination translates into a change of chub health status' By using varied assessment tools, this study provides evidence against a presumed causative role of toxicants impairing the fish ecological status of the Bilina River
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