Abstract

Chronic or repeated exposure to environmental contaminants may result in allostatic overload, a physiological situation in which the costs of coping affect long-term survival and reproductive output. Continuous measurements in Otra, the largest river in southern Norway, show the occurrence of repeated 24–48 h episodes of acidification. This work investigates the impact of repeated short acidification episodes on a unique land-locked population of normally anadromous Atlantic salmon (“Bleke”). This was done by recording physiological measures of stress and allostatic load in fish exposed for 7 days to continuous or repeated episodes of simulated environmental acidification or untreated Otra water (controls). A standardized acute stress test was performed after these different exposure regimes, with brain and blood samples taken before (baseline) or after the stress test. Treatment effects on stress coping ability were assessed by neuroendocrine indicators, including telencephalic serotonergic activity and plasma cortisol. Continuous exposure to acidification resulted in increased baseline plasma Cl− and Na+ and elevated baseline plasma cortisol compared to episodic exposed fish. However, both episodic and continuous acidification resulted in similar increase in gill Al, indicating similar impact on gill permeability of these two exposures. This suggests a lower impact on the electrolyte homeostasis in episodic compared to continuous exposure and that this effect is not directly related to the effects of Al complexes binding to the gills. Furthermore, there were no treatment induced differences on stress coping ability, suggesting that episodic exposure to the sublethal concentrations of Al in pH 5.5 in the present study do not result in higher allostatic load than in control or continuous exposed Bleke.

Highlights

  • Major reductions in sulfur and nitrogen depositions have resulted in considerably improved chemistry of previously acidified freshwater bodies in Europe (Garmo et al, 2014; Hesthagen et al, 2016; Tørseth et al, 2017)

  • Continuous exposure to acidification resulted in increased baseline plasma Cl− and Na+ and elevated baseline plasma cortisol compared to episodic exposed fish. Both episodic and continuous acidification resulted in similar increase in gill Al, indicating similar impact on gill permeability of these two exposures

  • This study shows that 7 days of continuous exposure to acidified Otra river's water supplemented with 50 μg Al l−1 had higher impact on plasma electrolyte homeostasis and resulted in higher baseline cortisol compared to episodic exposure to similar water chemistry

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Summary

Introduction

Major reductions in sulfur and nitrogen depositions have resulted in considerably improved chemistry of previously acidified freshwater bodies in Europe (Garmo et al, 2014; Hesthagen et al, 2016; Tørseth et al, 2017). A unique landlocked Atlantic salmon) population, “Bleke”, lives in Lake Byglandsfjorden in the watershed of the Otra river system This landlocked population faced near extinction due to a combination of acidification and hydropower expansion (Wright et al, 2017). The gill Al level in the latter study was less than gill Al values that have been reported to be associated with mortality in smolts from anadromous populations (for references, see; Kroglund et al, 2007) This made the authors suggest that Al ions in combinations with other stressors, such as gas supersaturation downstream powerplants, might underly this unexpected high mortality in Bleke (Barlaup, 2018). Considering that several 24 h episodes of acidification can be present under a week in the Otra system (Barlaup, 2018), additional stress of an unstable water chemistry might contribute to such unforeseen mortality

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