Abstract

Abstract 1. Bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus) were exposed to copper (0.77 mg/1) or zinc (2.35 mg/1) for 7 days after which they were challenged by being placed in a 250 mM NaCl solution. 2. Non-metal exposed controls started to die in the NaCl after 8 hr but those that had been exposed to copper survived at least 22 hr and some survived for at least 3 days. Zinc exposure also caused better survival in the hypertonic NaCl but not to the same extent. 3. Blood plasma osmolality, chloride, and protein, as well as the hematocrit, muscle and liver water, and gill Na-K-activated ATPase were determined in fish before and after 8 hr in the NaCl. 4. Metal exposure alone produced no significant effects on the variables measured except for a decline in plasma chloride in zinc-exposed fish. 5. Both copper- and zinc-exposed fish exhibited less of an increase in chloride upon being challenged with the NaCl than did controls. Osmolality showed a similar effect from copper but not from zinc exposure. Metal exposure produced no other differences. 6. All fish exhibited an elevated hematocrit but no change in plasma protein or tissue water when challenged. The elevated hematocrit is probably a non-specific stress response. The other data are consistent with the hypothesis that there was an influx of salt but little if any efflux of water while in the hypertonic NaCl. 7. The data suggest indirectly that copper, and to a much lesser extent zinc, seemed to reduce the permeability of the gills to an influx of chloride in this stenohaline species.

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