首页 | 官方网站   微博 | 高级检索  
     


A field investigation of water quality, fish and invertebrates in the Mawddach river system, Wales
Authors:E J Howells  M E Howells  J S Alabaster
Affiliation:Cremer and Warner, Consulting Engineers and Scientists, 140 Buckingham Palace Rd., London. S.W.I.;Consultant, Pollution and Fisheries, I Granby Rd, Stevenage, England
Abstract:A 3-year study was made of the soft, acid waters of the Rivers Mawddach, Wen and Gain, which contained copper, zinc and iron from natural outcrops and abandoned mines. Invertebrates, typical of acid to neutral streams, were present but there was no pattern in overall numbers or in biomass between stations. However, the abundance and distribution of Ephemeroptera were related to pH and water hardness although not to copper and zinc. Brown trout, Salmo trutta , were present and there was little difference in rate of growth between stations, whereas biomass and population density varied considerably between stations, being related to water quality such that, where annual median and 95-percentile of the summed proportions ( p ) of the threshold LC50 concentrations of copper and zinc to rainbow trout, S. gairdneri were 0·3 and 0·7 respectively, biomass was half that in the absence of the metals and, where they were 0·6 and 1·3 respectively, no fish would be expected to occur. Low pH was an additional adverse factor at some locations. Salmon, S. salar , failed to populate a tributary where the sum of the p t LC50 values of copper and zinc was 0·45. High aqueous concentrations of copper resulted in elevated concentrations of copper in the liver of trout, especially in older fish, but not in the muscle. Concentrations of zinc in fish liver and muscle were low despite high ambient concentrations.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司    京ICP备09084417号-23

京公网安备 11010802026262号