Abstract

The acute and chronic toxicity of zinc to wild mottled sculpin (Cottus bairdi) was measured with 13-d and 30-d flow-through toxicity tests, respectively. Exposure water hardness was 48.6 mg/L as CaCO3 and 46.3 mg/L as CaCO3 in the acute and chronic tests, respectively; pH was slightly above neutral; and temperature near 12 degrees C. The median lethal concentration (LC50) after 96 h was 156 microg Zn/L, but decreased with exposure duration to a median incipient lethal level (ILL50) of 38 microg Zn/L after 9 d, the lowest zinc LC50 reported for any fish species. The 30-d chronic no-effect and lowest-effect concentrations were 16 microg Zn/L (no mortality) and 27 microg Zn/L (32% mortality), respectively. The ILL50 was 32 microg Zn/L. No sublethal growth differences were observed during the chronic test. Analysis of the results from these tests suggested that mottled sculpin may experience acute and chronic toxicity at zinc concentrations lower than any other fish species tested to date. Protection of aquatic communities in stream reaches contaminated by metals seem to require determination of zinc toxicity to lotic species other than trout and other species amenable to aquaculture.

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