Aquatic non-scents: repercussions of water pollutants that mute smell.People complain about the way that fish smell. But it's the fish that should be doing the grumbling. In pristine waters, the animals smell quite well, thank you. Those tiny holes near fishes' mouths are, in fact, nostrils through which the animals draw in water to pump over olfactory nerves. By distinguishing scents, fish find food and mates and avoid predators. Studies decades ago, for instance, showed that mechanically plugging the nostrils of adult salmon prevented them from locating their natal streams when they attempted to return home to spawn. The fish as juveniles had recorded memories of smells as they went to sea. Without detecting the olfactory olfactory /ol·fac·to·ry/ (ol-fak´ter-e) pertaining to the sense of smell. ol·fac·to·ry adj. Of, relating to, or contributing to the sense of smell. signposts, the fish couldn't retrace their routes, says Nathaniel L. Scholz, a zoologist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle. In a series of studies over the past 6 years, his group has demonstrated that metals and pesticides--at concentrations commonly found in streams--can impair a salmon's sense of smell just as effectively as plugging the nostrils did. Meanwhile, other scientists have shown that such pollutants block the sense of smell in other organ "What we're finding," says Scholz, is that "even short-term exposure to many of these pollutants--on the order of hours--can interfere with olfaction" Researchers have reported that the impairment can disrupt the animals' normal behaviors in several ways. Fish use their keen sense of smell not only to navigate dark and cloudy waters but also to nose out scents indicating danger, such as chemicals from a predators' skin. The studies are establishing that aquatic animals exposed to pollutants miss chemical cues that have life-and-death consequences, says ecotoxicologist Gregory C. Pyle of Nipissing University in North Bay, Ontario North Bay (, time zone EST) is a city in Northeastern Ontario, Canada (2006 population 53,966). North Bay takes its name from its position on the shore of Lake Nipissing, and covers an area of 314.92 km² (121. . PESTICIDAL NOSE PLUGS North America's most widely used herbicide herbicide (hr`bəsīd'), chemical compound that kills plants or inhibits their normal growth. A herbicide in a particular formulation and application can be described as selective or nonselective. blunts a fish's sense of smell, according to work by Keith Tierney and his colleagues at Simon Frasier University in Burnaby, British Columbia “Burnaby” redirects here. For persons sharing this surname, see Burnaby (surname). Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, is the city immediately east of Vancouver. . The herbicide is sold under a number of trade names, including Roundup. A 30-minute exposure to a 1 parts per billion (ppb) concentration of atrazine atrazine a triazine herbicide; it is not poisonous at levels of intake likely to be encountered in agriculture. atrazine Toxicology A nonphytoestrogenic herbicide. See Phytoestrogen. reduced the activity of olfactory neurons in coho salmon Coho salmon oncorhynchuskisutch. (Oncorhynchus kisutch) by 11 percent, the researchers reported last November at the annual meeting of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC SETAC Society of Environmental Toxicology And Chemistry SETAC Systems Engineering & Technical Assistance Contract SETAC Shipboard Electronic Thermoacoustic Chiller SETAC Shipboard Electronics Thermo-Acoustic Cooler SETAC Shipboard Electronics Thermoacoustic Chiller ) in Montreal. The animals' neural responses to alarm odors dropped by 45 percent. Higher doses of the herbicide triggered greater losses in smell; 100 parts per million parts per million mg/kg or ml/l; see ppm. atrazine eliminated any response to a predator's scent. River concentrations up to 20 ppb can occur briefly near farms that apply it, says Tierney. Pure glyphosate glyphosate herbicide and desiccant for grains. Heavy doses to birds cause soft shells on their eggs. , the active ingredient in atrazine, caused similar changes in salmon olfaction, although only at far higher doses than were required of the commercial herbicide formulation. At the November SETAC meeting, these researchers presented data showing that atrazine was 100 times as powerful at blocking fishes' sense of smell as was an equal quantity of pure glyphosate. Atrazine contains a variety of ingredients added to glyphosate to increase the herbicide's adhesion to leaves and to retard its breakdown. Although these ingredients are listed as inert components on herbicide labels, Tierney's team concludes that they aren't inert as far as fish olfaction is concerned. "I'd like to find out what those inerts are," Tierney says, but he notes that pesticide manufacturers regard them as part of their proprietary recipes. Tierney isn't alone in his concern over supposedly inert ingredients. Some "4.1 billion pounds of inert [pesticide] ingredients are applied annually" to the U.S. environment, Christian E. Grue of the University of Washington in Seattle and his colleagues reported at the SETAC meeting. Because these compounds aren't lethal to untargeted organisms, they don't require identification on labels, the Seattle researchers note--even though the inerts may exert a subtle but substantial toxic effect on aquatic life. Grue argues that "a new regulatory strategy is needed," which would require toxicity analyses of any supposedly inert ingredients. Atrazine isn't the only chemical pesticide that can suppress a fish's ability to smell. Tierney's group showed that at exposures of about 10 ppb, the fungicidal fun·gi·cide n. A chemical substance that destroys or inhibits the growth of fungi. fun gi·cid wood-preservative known as IPB IPB Invision Power Board (forum)IPB International Peace Bureau IPB Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield IPB International Personal Banking IPB Illustrated Parts Breakdown IPB Institute of Plant Breeding turned off olfaction in coho salmon. The researchers described that finding in the August 2006 Aquatic Toxicology. They also reported in the October 2006 Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry that the insecticide endosulfan endosulfan an organochlorine insecticide. See chlorinated hydrocarbons. and the herbicides trifluralin trifluralin a dinitroaniline compound used as a weedicide. Excessive, accidental access causes diarrhea, anorexia, nervousness. trifluralin Parasitology A dinitroaniline herbicide, which at micromolar concentrations selectively inhibits the and 2,4-D can impair a fish's sense of smell. Scholz' group, too, has made contributions to the list of pesticides that affect fish olfaction. Six years ago, that team showed that diazinon diazinon an organophosphorus insecticide, used in ear tags for cattle and in flea collars and rinses for dogs. Called also dimpylate. See also organophosphorus compound. significantly impaired responses by Chinook salmon chinook salmon or king salmon Prized North Pacific food and sport fish (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) of the salmon family. The average weight is about 22 lbs (10 kg), but individuals of 50–80 lbs (22–36 kg) are not unusual. (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) to alarm scents and reduced their success in finding their natal pools. More recently, Scholz' team has shown that low concentrations of the insecticide chlorpyrifos can impair olfaction in coho salmon and that the insecticide esfenvalerate can trigger abnormal neural signals in response to food scents. COPPER MASKS Copper runs off agricultural lands, lawns, and urban streets. It's an active ingredient in many pesticides, and brake pads often shed copper as they wear down. Dissolved copper diminishes a fish's sense of smell, several researchers reported at the SETAC meeting. Scholz' team, for instance, reported that just 3 hours of exposure to waterborne copper reduced responses of juvenile coho salmon to a typical alarm odor, a scent that came from the skin of a wounded coho coho or silver salmon Species (Oncorhynchus kisutch) of salmon prized for food and sport that ranges from the Bering Sea to Japan and the Salinas River of Monterey Bay, Cal. It weighs about 10 lbs (4. . Such chemical alarms typically make young coho dive for cover. Juvenile salmon that had been kept in dean tanks reacted properly to the cue. They stopped swimming, ignored food, and sought refuge. Other juveniles, which had spent 3 hours in copper-tainted water, swam placidly and continued feeding after researchers spiked their water with an alarm scent. Scholz characterizes the copper-treated fish as "totally oblivions" to this whiff of danger. The scientists went further in establishing that copper impairs the sense of smell. From several fishes' nostrils, they recorded electrical signals carrying information to the brain from olfactory neurons. Compared with the untreated fish, copper-treated coho produced much weaker--or no--responses to the alarm scents. Scholz says that his group found "a very tight relationship" between the fishes' behavior and olfactory neuron signals. Reehan Mirza, Pyle, and their colleagues at Nipissing University have witnessed the same phenomenon in fish exposed to copper in the wild. These Canadian researchers worked with yellow perch (Percaflavescens) taken from Ontario lakes, some of which were contaminated by runoff from a copper mine. "Fish from the dean lakes responded to alarm cues," Mirza told Science News, "while perch from the contaminated lakes did not." Mirza's team exposed the fish to chemicals extracted from the skin of a wounded perch or the skin of a rainbow trout rainbow trout Species (Oncorhynchus mykiss) of fish in the salmon family (Salmonidae) noted for spectacular leaps and hard fighting when hooked. It has been introduced from western North America to many other countries. , a perch predator. Odor sensitivity in perch from lakes with less than 2 parts per billion (ppb) copper was 2.5 times that in fish from lakes containing at least 18 ppb copper. Dissolved copper also seems to prevent female fish from sizing up prospective mates. In seeking males that are fat and healthy, female fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) assess a Romeo's qualities "exclusively from chemical information," says Pyle. To test copper's effects on this aspect of smell, Pyle and his colleagues raised males for a month on either a low- or a high-calorie diet. The results were emaciated e·ma·ci·ate tr. & intr.v. e·ma·ci·at·ed, e·ma·ci·at·ing, e·ma·ci·ates To make or become extremely thin, especially as a result of starvation. , sickly looking males and specimens of minnow minnow, common name for the Cyprinidae, a large family of freshwater fish which includes the carp (Cyprinus carpio), and of which there are some 300 American species. The European minnow is Phoxinus phoxinus. machismo machismo Exaggerated pride in masculinity, perceived as power, often coupled with a minimal sense of responsibility and disregard of consequences. In machismo there is supreme valuation of characteristics culturally associated with the masculine and a denigration of . A male from each category was then placed at the end of each branch of a Y-shaped maze. Egg-swollen females placed at the start of the maze couldn't see their potential mates but could pick up the males' scents. In nearly every case where the female had come from a dean lake, she headed toward the larger male. Females from copper-tainted lakes, by contrast, showed no preference between the candidates. The researchers then built a glass cage in which the females could see but not smell potential mates. In this case, females from both the clean and copper-tainted lakes showed no preference for robust males. Pyle concludes that females can't compensate visually for their lack of smell. "This can have implications on the subsequent gene pool, he told Science News. "If you're not picking the optimal mate, there's an increasing probability that that next generation won't be as successful in their environment." BEYOND FISH Pyle and his colleagues have also shown effects of copper-mine runoff on leeches and water fleas. The team began investigating the metal's impact on leeches after hearing reports from anglers who observed that leeches, aquatic relatives of the earthworm earthworm, terrestrial, cylindrical segmented worm of the class Oligochaeta. There are 2,200 earthworm species, found all over the world except in arid and arctic regions and ranging in size from 1 in. (2.5 cm) to the 11-ft (330-cm) giant worms of the tropics. , appeared to inhabit only the lakes around Sudbury, Ontario, that weren't polluted by copper-mine wastes. Pyle explains that the local leech, Nephelopsis obscura, is "effectively blind--and therefore relies almost exclusively on chemical information [scents] to locate food? The researchers collected leeches from clean lakes and then put some in water with copper at concentrations of either 10 or 20 ppb. After 2 to 16 days of such exposure, each leech was placed in a cleanwater tank containing a Y-shaped maze. One arm of the maze was baited with beef liver. Copper-exposed leeches had trouble identifying the path to the food, and the longer they had been exposed to the metal the less likely they were to succeed. Leeches unexposed to copper invariably in·var·i·a·ble adj. Not changing or subject to change; constant. in·var i·a·bil found the meal unless the researchers laced the maze water with copper. Then, Pyle notes, these leeches, too, swam "randomly, no longer able to discriminate food scents." Even more telling, Pyle says, were tests in which his group placed a leech in a fishbowl of clean water along with a dead minnow. If the leech had been living in clean water, it immediately swam to the fish and began feeding. However, leeches that had spent a week in water with at least 5 ppb copper had trouble locating the minnow. Pyle says that some Sudbury-area lakes have up to 30 ppb copper concentrations--and no leeches. Unable to smell their next meal, the animals there may have all starved, he concludes. His team has also studied copper's effect on a tiny water flea (Daphniapulav)--a crustacean crustacean (krŭstā`shən), primarily aquatic arthropod of the subphylum Crustacea. Most of the 44,000 crustacean species are marine, but there are many freshwater forms. about 2.5 millimeters long--that serves as the bottom rung on many lake-animal food ladders. Larvac of an insect known as the phantom midge midge, name for any of numerous minute, fragile flies in several families. The family Chironomidae consists of about 2,000 species, most of which are widely distributed. The herbivorous larvae are found in all freshwaters; the larvae of some species live in saltwater. (Chaoborus americanus) are among Daphnia's predators. The larvae Larvae, in Roman religion Larvae: see lemures. release an odor when they feed on the water fleas. Young Daphnia that pick up the scent respond, over several days, by developing neck Spines that make the tiny animals too big for a larval larval 1. pertaining to larvae. 2. larvate. larval migrans see cutaneous and visceral larva migrans. midge's mouth. In lab tests, however, Daphnia housed in water containing as little as 5 ppb copper developed few if any protective neck spines in response to the midge scent. GROWING CONCERNS Pesticides typically reach streams via runoff when rains hit a recently treated farm, forest, or lawn. Roadways, storm drains, and paved and plowed land facilitate quick pollutant runoff into surface waters, Scholz says. His NOAA NOAA abbr. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. NOAA - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; team now simulates such intermittent pollutant exposures. In these circumstances, a pollutant-induced shutdown of fishes' sense of smell may last only a few hours. However, in some regions, pulses of polluted storm water "may come through so frequently that fish never effectively recover," Scholz says. Increasing runoff in areas of growing urban and rural development may explain why salmon are disappearing from streams throughout the West, he proposes. Pyle notes that pesticides and copper at concentrations similar to those in the environment knock out olfactory communications in every species tested to date--whether water fleas, leeches, or fish. He told Science News, "The apparent ubiquity of this phenomenon is, well, quite disturbing." |
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