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Thom Teears Department of Biology James Madison University
The Effects of pH, Alkalinity, and Water Hardness on the Development of Brook Trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) Eggs and Fry in an Aquaculture Setting Thom Teears Department of Biology James Madison University
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Anthropogenic impacts on Streams
Urbanization Sedimentation from agricultural land use Industrialization
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Aquaculture History (Wedemeyer, 2001) China 500 B.C. Egypt 4,000 B.C.
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Aquaculture today Demands Focus: Water Quality
Recreational and natural fisheries Commercial and Retail Global significance Focus: Water Quality
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Water Quality Temperature Dissolve Oxygen pH Alkalinity
Water Hardness (Calcium, Magnesium)
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Relationships pH, alkalinity, hardness (Wurts and Durborow, 1992)
pH (H+) Alkalinity (units: mg/l of CaCO3) CO2 +H2 O=H2 CO3 HCO3- CO32- Hardness (units: mg/l of CaCO3) Ca2+,Mg2+
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Acidification of natural streams
Fisheries decline (Mason, 1990; Sayer et. al., 1993) Deposition of acidic compounds (Drever, 1997) Combustion Smelting Mining (Sulfides)
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Stream resistance to acidification
Alkalinity=ANC: Acid Neutralizing Capacity (Drever, 1997) Geology governs water quality Limestone, calcite (CaCO3), and alkalinity High ANC in Limestone streams, resistant to acidification
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Shenandoah National Park
Bioassays (MacAvoy and Bulger, 1995) Higher ANC= increased survival
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Recruitment failure Brook trout can reproduce effectively
Recruitment failure caused by acidification (Brown et. al., 1988) Many studies focus on early life stage development
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Water hardness Ca2+,Mg2+ (Silva et. al. 2003, Wurts and Durborow, 1992) Osmotic regulation Loss of blood salts Affects heart, muscle, nerves, bone, scales, metabolic functions etc.. Ca2+ from gills (primary) and diet (secondary) (Hwang et. al., 1996; Hwang and Hirano, 1985) Mg2+ from diet (primary) and gills (secondary) (Bijvelds et. al., 1996)
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Metal toxicity Sources: industrial and urban waste runoff
Higher Ca2+ reduce toxicity to: Aluminum in brook trout (Ingersoll et. al., 1990) Manganese in brown trout eggs (Stubblefield et. al., 1997) Mercury in rainbow trout (Terzi and Verep, 2011) Cadmium in Teleosts, Ca2+ major contributor, not Mg2+ (Michibata et. al., 1986)
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(Ingersoll et. al., 1990)
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Alkalinity vs. Water Hardness
Difficult to isolate variables Calcium hardness protects rainbow trout against copper toxicity (Miller and Mackay, 1980) Alkalinity protects against copper toxicity in catfish (Wurts and Perschbacher, 1994)
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Methods Brook trout eggs: Marion Fish Hatchery
“Trout in the Classroom” protocols
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Treatments: endpoints
Montebello Fish Cultural Station Spring Water: Low hardness and alkalinity Marion Fish Hatchery Source Water: Moderate Ca2+, High Mg2+ High Ca2+ hardness, high alkalinity: 50 ppm CaCO3 High Mg2+ hardness, high alkalinity: 12 ppm MgCO3 High Ca2+ hardness, low alkalinity: 50 ppm CaSO4 High Mg2+ hardness, low alkalinity: 12 ppm MgSO4 Limit feed rates
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Parameters Survival % Growth rate Feed conversion Hatch time
Yolk-sac absorption Body condition Length/ weight Caloric content Mineral content?
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Engaging the community: “Trout in the Classroom” participation
Identify potential instructors in community Students researchers Perform directed treatment Gather data Survival Growth Feed conversion Body size Monitor chemistry
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South River deep springs:
Evaluate water quality for use in hatching and rearing of brook trout for VA Living Museum. Gas concentration- CO2, N2, or O2 Temperature Hardness , Alkalinity and pH Experiment hatching BKT in spring?
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Questions?
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