Abstract

Within the scope of the multidisciplinaryresearch project Valimar (1995–1999), thepresent study emphasizes the use ofhistopathological investigations to evaluatethe effects of the different chemical impactof two small streams on the general health andcondition of the two sentinel fish species,brown trout (Salmo trutta f.fario) and loach (Barbatula barbatula).Parasitological investigations were alsoincluded to assess a possible relationshipbetween toxicant exposure, parasitic load, andthe occurence of histopathological organchanges. According to the multitiered approachof the Valimar project, fish from the field,individuals exposed to stream water undersemi-field conditions, and fish fromlaboratory experiments were investigated.Under semi-field conditions, thehistopathological responses in brown troutproved to reflect the different levels ofcontamination of the two small streams moreclearly than those detected in loach. Whencaptured from the field, both fish speciesrevealed, in most cases, a higher degree ofhistopathological alterations than thoseindividuals exposed at the respective siteunder semi-field conditions. Simulation of thetoxic load of the more polluted stream in alaboratory experiment did not result in thesame kind of tissue lesions in brown trout asin the field and semi-field investigations.Whereas results from the laboratoryexperiments could be specified as“toxicant-induced”, the histopathologicalalterations in fish from both semi-field andfield studies represent stress responses whichintegrate the effects of various abiotic andbiotic stress factors including both toxicantsand parasitic diseases.

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