Literature DB >> 16786684

Ecosystemic effects of salmon farming increase mercury contamination in wild fish.

Adrian M H Debruyn1, Marc Trudel, Nicola Eyding, Joel Harding, Heather McNally, Robert Mountain, Craig Orr, Diane Urban, Sergei Verenitch, Asit Mazumder.   

Abstract

Net-pen salmon aquaculture has well-known effects on coastal ecosystems: farm waste increases sediment organic content and the incidence of sediment anoxia, supports increased production of deposit-feeding invertebrates, and attracts higher densities of demersal fish and other mobile carnivores. These impacts are widely considered to be localized and transitory, and are commonly managed by imposing a period of fallowing between cycles of production. The implications of these ecosystemic effects for contaminant cycling, however, have not previously been considered. We found elevated levels of mercury in demersal rockfishes near salmon farms in coastal British Columbia, Canada, attributable to a combination of higher rockfish trophic position and higher mercury levels in prey near farms. Mercury concentrations in long-lived species such as rockfishes change over a longer time scale than cycles of production and fallowing, and thus at least some important effects of fish farms may not be considered transitory.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16786684     DOI: 10.1021/es0520161

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  1 in total

1.  Spatial overlap of shark nursery areas and the salmon farming industry influences the trophic ecology of Squalus acanthias on the southern coast of Chile.

Authors:  Juan Diego Gaitán-Espitia; Daniela Gómez; Alistair J Hobday; Ross Daley; Julio Lamilla; Leyla Cárdenas
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2017-04-18       Impact factor: 2.912

  1 in total

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