Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6387756 | Marine Environmental Research | 2015 | 44 Pages |
Abstract
Alligator gar Atractosteus spatula acclimated to brackish water (9Â ppt) were exposed to water accommodated fraction oil loadings (surrogate to Macondo Deepwater Horizon, northern Gulf of Mexico) of 0.5 and 4.0 gm oil/L tank water for 48Â h. The surrogate oil was approximately 98% alkanes and alkynes and 2% petroleum aromatic hydrocarbons. The 2% petroleum aromatic hydrocarbons were predominately naphthalene. After 48Â h, naphthalene levels in fish liver exposed to 0.5 or 4 gm oil/L were 547.79 and 910.68Â ppb, while muscle levels were 214.11 and 253.84Â ppb. There was a significant decrease in peripheral blood lymphocyte numbers and a significant reduction of granulocytes in the kidney marrow of the same fish. Tissue changes included hepatocellular vacuolization and necrosis, necrotizing pancreatitis, renal eosinophilia, and splenic congestion. After 7 days recovery, liver naphthalene levels decreased to 43.59 and 43.20Â ppb, while muscle levels decreased to 9.74, and 16.78Â ppb for oil exposures of 0, 0.5 or 4Â g/L. In peripheral blood and kidney marrow, blood cell counts returned to normal. The severity of liver and kidney lesions lessened after 7 days recovery in non-oiled water, but splenic congestion remained in all gar.
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Authors
Ahmad Omar-Ali, Claudia Hohn, Peter J. Allen, Jose Rodriguez, Lora Petrie-Hanson,