Effects of Ammonia Exposure on Lost River Sucker Fish
Showing Off a Shortnose SuckerAs part of a 1999 water quality experiment, specimens of kidney, gill, liver, pancreatic tissue, and intestinal tract from four ammonia exposure treatment groups of juvenile Lost River Suckers were evaluated by light microscopy for abnormalities. Differential leukocyte counts were performed on blood smears from the same groups. The California - Nevada Fish Health Center assisted the principal investigator, Elaine Snyder-Conn (Contaminant Specialist, Klamath Basin Fish and Wildlife Office), in a 1999 cooperative study on the effects of chronic,sub-lethal ammonia exposure on juvenile Lost River Suckers. Adverse water quality in Klamath Lake has been identified as one of several factors affecting this endangered species.

Microscopy Image of Fish GillsTwo abnormalities, gill epithelium separation and hyaline droplets in kidney tubule cells, were observed in the study fish. No abnormalities were observed in liver, intestine, or pancreatic tissue from any treatment group specimen. Approximately 10 % of each treatment group showed mild inflammation of the intestine. We have observed such inflammatory changes in juvenile chinook during their smolt migration in warm water conditions and speculate that it is related to membrane damage. Separation of the gill lamellar epithelium was seen in 31 - 86 % of the various sample groups. There appeared to be an inverse relationship between ammonia concentration and severity of this gill lesion. The control (0.006 ppm ammonia) fish demonstrated both the highest prevalence and severity of all the sample groups followed by the low (0.115 ppm) group. In addition to epithelium separation, epithelial cell swelling was seen in 14 % of the affected control gills. Mucus discharge from goblet cells was commonly observed in gills from all the groups and may be a reaction to the initial contact with fixative.

Learn More by Reading the Full Report:Snyder-Conn, E., Holt, R., U of Wyoming Dept. of Zoology and Physiology, Effects of Ammonia Exposure on Lost River Sucker Fish, USFWS. Klamath Basin Refuges. 1999.

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