PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota

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PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota. / Grung, Merete; Petersen, Karina; Fjeld, Eirik; Allan, Ian; Christensen, Jan H.; Malmquist, Linus Mattias Valdemar; Meland, Sondre; Ranneklev, Sissel.

In: Science of the Total Environment, Vol. 566-567, 2016, p. 1309-1317.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Grung, M, Petersen, K, Fjeld, E, Allan, I, Christensen, JH, Malmquist, LMV, Meland, S & Ranneklev, S 2016, 'PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 566-567, pp. 1309-1317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.191

APA

Grung, M., Petersen, K., Fjeld, E., Allan, I., Christensen, J. H., Malmquist, L. M. V., Meland, S., & Ranneklev, S. (2016). PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota. Science of the Total Environment, 566-567, 1309-1317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.191

Vancouver

Grung M, Petersen K, Fjeld E, Allan I, Christensen JH, Malmquist LMV et al. PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota. Science of the Total Environment. 2016;566-567:1309-1317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.191

Author

Grung, Merete ; Petersen, Karina ; Fjeld, Eirik ; Allan, Ian ; Christensen, Jan H. ; Malmquist, Linus Mattias Valdemar ; Meland, Sondre ; Ranneklev, Sissel. / PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota. In: Science of the Total Environment. 2016 ; Vol. 566-567. pp. 1309-1317.

Bibtex

@article{f6ed2bafee82444c884c41033fecf296,
title = "PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota",
abstract = "Road runoff is an important source of pollution to the aquatic environment, and sedimentation ponds have been installed to mitigate effects on the aquatic environment. The purpose of this study was to investigate if a) fish from sedimentation ponds were affected by road pollution and; b) the transfer of PAHs from road runoff material to aquatic organisms was substantial. Minnow from a sedimentation pond (Skullerud) near Oslo (Norway) had higher levels of CYP1A enzyme and DNA stand breaks than minnow from the nearby river, but high concentrations of PAH-metabolites in bile revealed that both populations were highly exposed. Principal component analysis revealed that CYP1A and age of fish were correlated, while levels of PAH-metabolites were not correlated to CYP1A or DNA damage. Minnow from a lake un-affected by traffic had much lower levels of PAH-metabolites than the exposed fish, and also an improved condition. The latter results indicate that fish health was affected by road runoff. A closer investigation of PAH levels of the ecosystems of two sedimentation ponds (Skullerud and Vassum) and nearby environments were conducted. The concentration of the 16 EPA PAHs in sediments of the sedimentation ponds were high (1900-4200ngg(-1)), and even higher levels were observed in plants. Principal component analysis of selected ion chromatograms of PAHs showed a clear separation of plants vs. sediments. The plants preferentially accumulated the high molecular PAHs, both from sedimentation ponds with a petrogenic PAH isomer ratio in sediments; and from a lake with pyrogenic PAH isomer ratio in sediments.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Merete Grung and Karina Petersen and Eirik Fjeld and Ian Allan and Christensen, {Jan H.} and Malmquist, {Linus Mattias Valdemar} and Sondre Meland and Sissel Ranneklev",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.191",
language = "English",
volume = "566-567",
pages = "1309--1317",
journal = "Science of the Total Environment",
issn = "0048-9697",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - PAH related effects on fish in sedimentation ponds for road runoff and potential transfer of PAHs from sediment to biota

AU - Grung, Merete

AU - Petersen, Karina

AU - Fjeld, Eirik

AU - Allan, Ian

AU - Christensen, Jan H.

AU - Malmquist, Linus Mattias Valdemar

AU - Meland, Sondre

AU - Ranneklev, Sissel

N1 - Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Road runoff is an important source of pollution to the aquatic environment, and sedimentation ponds have been installed to mitigate effects on the aquatic environment. The purpose of this study was to investigate if a) fish from sedimentation ponds were affected by road pollution and; b) the transfer of PAHs from road runoff material to aquatic organisms was substantial. Minnow from a sedimentation pond (Skullerud) near Oslo (Norway) had higher levels of CYP1A enzyme and DNA stand breaks than minnow from the nearby river, but high concentrations of PAH-metabolites in bile revealed that both populations were highly exposed. Principal component analysis revealed that CYP1A and age of fish were correlated, while levels of PAH-metabolites were not correlated to CYP1A or DNA damage. Minnow from a lake un-affected by traffic had much lower levels of PAH-metabolites than the exposed fish, and also an improved condition. The latter results indicate that fish health was affected by road runoff. A closer investigation of PAH levels of the ecosystems of two sedimentation ponds (Skullerud and Vassum) and nearby environments were conducted. The concentration of the 16 EPA PAHs in sediments of the sedimentation ponds were high (1900-4200ngg(-1)), and even higher levels were observed in plants. Principal component analysis of selected ion chromatograms of PAHs showed a clear separation of plants vs. sediments. The plants preferentially accumulated the high molecular PAHs, both from sedimentation ponds with a petrogenic PAH isomer ratio in sediments; and from a lake with pyrogenic PAH isomer ratio in sediments.

AB - Road runoff is an important source of pollution to the aquatic environment, and sedimentation ponds have been installed to mitigate effects on the aquatic environment. The purpose of this study was to investigate if a) fish from sedimentation ponds were affected by road pollution and; b) the transfer of PAHs from road runoff material to aquatic organisms was substantial. Minnow from a sedimentation pond (Skullerud) near Oslo (Norway) had higher levels of CYP1A enzyme and DNA stand breaks than minnow from the nearby river, but high concentrations of PAH-metabolites in bile revealed that both populations were highly exposed. Principal component analysis revealed that CYP1A and age of fish were correlated, while levels of PAH-metabolites were not correlated to CYP1A or DNA damage. Minnow from a lake un-affected by traffic had much lower levels of PAH-metabolites than the exposed fish, and also an improved condition. The latter results indicate that fish health was affected by road runoff. A closer investigation of PAH levels of the ecosystems of two sedimentation ponds (Skullerud and Vassum) and nearby environments were conducted. The concentration of the 16 EPA PAHs in sediments of the sedimentation ponds were high (1900-4200ngg(-1)), and even higher levels were observed in plants. Principal component analysis of selected ion chromatograms of PAHs showed a clear separation of plants vs. sediments. The plants preferentially accumulated the high molecular PAHs, both from sedimentation ponds with a petrogenic PAH isomer ratio in sediments; and from a lake with pyrogenic PAH isomer ratio in sediments.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.191

DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.191

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27267726

VL - 566-567

SP - 1309

EP - 1317

JO - Science of the Total Environment

JF - Science of the Total Environment

SN - 0048-9697

ER -

ID: 169106319