Abstract

The mining company Karelian Pellet in northwestern Russia extracts iron ore and processes it locally into pellets. The production operations affect the environment in the form of air pollution and wastewater emissions to lakes downstream from the factory. The toxic effects of the mining effluents on gills of perch ( Perca fluviatilis) and roach ( Rutilus rutilus) were studied. In lakes close to the factory, heavy metal concentrations in gills were not high, even though the metal content in sediment was elevated. In fish gills the relative proportion of phosphatidylcholine was elevated and cholesterol reduced, while the histological structure of the gills was changed. The number of mucus cells, as well as the sizes and the lengths of open areas in the chloride cells, had increased in spring and summer. The hypertrophy of chloride cells is possibly caused by the increased ambient concentrations of K + and Li +. Changes in gill cholesterol and phospholipid proportions increase the fluidity of membranes and possibly strengthen their protective qualities, counterbalancing the adverse changes in chloride cell structure. The bioavailability and toxic effects of metals on fish are reduced by the hardness and high pH of water discharged by the mining plant.

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