Abstract-A Sediment Quality Triad study involving synoptic measures of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) contamination, toxicity, and resident community (benthic infauna, crab) alteration was conducted to assess impacts from an aluminum smelter discharge. No sediment toxicity was observed, despite extensive testing since 1988 on four test species. Evidence of effects on resident communities was minimal. Effects were not expected in areas Ͼ1 km from the smelter, because PAH concentrations have decreased with recent effluent improvements to below levels associated with effects in other studies. However, concentrations within 1 km of the smelter were high (maximum concentration was 10,000 mg/kg total PAH, although most were Ͻ150 mg/kg). Based on the literature, those concentrations should have had significant effects on toxicity test responses and benthic communities. Because they did not, we conclude that availability of sediment PAH was limited. Concentrations of parent PAH and metabolites in Dungeness crab (Cancer magister) were also low, supporting the hypothesis of limited bioavailability. Bioavailability may be limited because much of the PAH is present as pitch or coal particles. This study indicates that high contaminant concentrations may not be associated with effects, if availability is limited.
Resource partitioning among four species of darters (Percidae: Etheostoma) in an Ontario stream was investigated by determining diet and relative abundance in two habitats. The four species partitioned both food and habitat resources. E. caeruleum and E. flabellare dominated the riffles; the former took prey from rock surfaces, the latter took prey from between and beneath rocks. Etheostoma microperca and E. nigrum dominated the weed beds; the former feeding on prey on and around plants, the latter feeding on benthic prey. Diets were closely related to morphology, but habitat utilization was not. Determining the importance of habitat versus food partitioning is difficult, because microhabitat and foraging habitat may be nearly identical.
Patterns of covariation of life history traits of darters in the genus Etheostoma are reviewed. The primary pattern is associated with body size. Large darters grow faster, mature at a larger size, produce bigger clutches, and have longer reproductive and life spans, and shorter spawning seasons, than do small darters. When the effects of size are removed statistically, the dominant secondary pattern matched the r-K continuum from fast-growing, short-lived, primarily semelparous species with many small ova and a high reproductive effort (r-species) to slow-growing, long-lived, iteroparous species with few large ova and a low reproductive effort (K-species). Variation in life history traits is also influenced by reproductive behaviour, latitude, and rarity (as measured by geographic range). There are significant differences in the primary and secondary life history patterns among reproductive guilds. Latitude and rarity are not correlated with these primary and secondary patterns. Instead, they account for variation of tertiary patterns. Rare species may not match the reproductive performance of more common and widely distributed species. Future studies of life history traits in darters should focus on species whose reproductive behaviour differs from that of the species reviewed in this study, and on the demographic characteristics of rare or declining populations.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.