0000000000484867
AUTHOR
Jarmo Lappivaara
Confirmation of in situ exposure of fish to secondary treated bleached-kraft mill effluent using a laboratory simulation
To corroborate the responses in whitefish (Coregonus Iavaretus L.) exposed to elemental chlorine free (ECF) bleached-kraft pulp mill effluent (BKME) in situ, a 30-d laboratory exposure was carried out at concentrations simulating the field conditions. The flow-through exposures were conducted at four secondary (activated sludge) treated effluent (STE) concentrations: 1.3, 2.3, 3.5, and 7%. To evaluate the role of the secondary treatment, fish were also exposed to one concentration (3.5%) of pretreated effluent (PTE) from the mill. Compared to the control, whitefish liver 7-ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase (EROD) activity was twofold in fish exposed to 3.5% STE, which was similar to monooxygenas…
Effects of waterborne iron overload and simulated winter conditions on acute physiological stress response of whitefish, Coregonus lavaretus
Two-year-old whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) were exposed for 30 days to episodic iron overload in iron-rich humic water (5%) supplemented with inorganic iron (5 mg FeL(-1)). Two parallel laboratory exposures were performed, one under conditions simulating winter and the other under conditions simulating spring. After exposure, some of the fish were subjected to acute handling stress in the form of a short air challenge to reveal possible modification of the primary and secondary stress responses. In whitefish sampled without additional handling, iron accumulated in the liver (under spring conditions) and gills (under winter and spring conditions); plasma catecholamine and beta-estradiol (b…
Erratum to ‘‘Attenuated carbohydrate and gill Na+, K+-ATPase stress responses in whitefish caged near bleached kraft mill discharges’’[Ecotoxicol. Environ. Safety 51 (2002) 5–11]
Effects of primary- and secondary-treated bleached kraft mill effluents on the immune system and physiological parameters of roach.
The present study was designed to examine, whether, effluents from a modern pulp and paper mill using elemental chlorine-free/total chlorine-free (ECF/TCF) bleaching, exert effects on the immune system of fish and, in addition, to relate these findings to physiological parameters known to be affected by bleached kraft-mill effluents (BKME). Roach (Rutilus rutilus) were exposed in laboratory conditions to primary- or secondary-treated effluent from a pulp and paper mill. In order to study their capability to respond to foreign antigens they were immunised with bovine gamma-globulin (BGG) prior to exposure. The number of anti-BGG antibody-secreting cells (ASC) and the number of immunoglobulin…
Altered Challenge Response in Whitefish Subchronically Exposed in Areas Polluted by Bleached Kraft Mill Effluents
Exposure to impaired water quality, as in bleached kraft mill effluents (BKMEs), has recently been demonstrated to impair the ability of fish to elicit an acute stress response. Acute stress caused by catching is, in most field studies, an unavoidable incident that may markedly affect physiological functions. Consistently, dissimilar stress responses to catching procedures in exposed and reference animals may lead to altered results. In this study, juvenile whitefish (Coregonus levaretus) were caged for 30 days in two reference areas and three areas affected by different BKMEs, and the immediate effects of low-level handling on physiological functions in four periods within an hour of the s…