6533b872fe1ef96bd12d2cca

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Gill anomalies of perch and roach from four lakes differing in water quality

A. HaaparantaE. T. ValtonenRudolf W. Hoffmann

subject

GillPerchEcologyEosinophilic inclusionsZoologyAquatic ScienceBiologybiology.organism_classificationFreshwater fishParasite hostingEpithelial proliferationWater qualityRutilusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

This study examined gill anomalies of two common freshwater fish species, roach Rutilus rutilus and perch Perca fluviatilis, collected over five seasons in 1989–1990 from four lakes in central Finland. The lakes differed both in water quality and in fish parasite species composition. Particular attention was paid to the differences in chloride cell proliferation. Gill anomalies were generally more common and abundant in roach than in perch. Chloride cell proliferation was the most frequent histological change in roach but was that least often found in perch. Most of the changes were systemic and light in severity. In perch an unidentified lesion of noncellular eosinophilic inclusions in an enlarged epithelium was also recorded. There was a marked pattern in the severity of histological changes in perch when comparing those from the natural Lake Peurunka to those from three ‘altered’ lakes. Gills of perch from Lake Peurunka possessed more alterations in all the recorded parameters. In roach, a significant differences were detected in chloride cell and epithelial proliferation: these were greater in Lake Peurunka and ‘polluted’ Lake Vatia. In perch, all histological changes were significantly more frequent at the end of autumn 1989 when compared to other seasons. In roach, increased frequencies of all gill changes were noted in winter and spring samples. Tissue reactions to parasites were either only localized or absent. The systemic gill alterations in freshwater fish may reflect the soft nature and low winter temperature of Finnish fresh waters, in which chemical imbalances, such as acid peaks, may induce more dramatic changes in fish tissues than in harder waters.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-8649.1997.tb01951.x