4.7 Article

Pesticide residues in juvenile Chinook salmon and prey items of the Sacramento River watershed, California-A comparison of riverine and floodplain habitats

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 303, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119102

Keywords

Chinook salmon; Pesticides; Floodplain; Trophic transfer; Bioavailability

Funding

  1. California Department of Fish and Wildlife Proposition 1 Restoration Grant Program [P1896015]
  2. Metropolitan Water District of Southern California [184802]

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Juvenile Chinook salmon in the Sacramento River system can be exposed to pesticides in riverine and floodplain environments. The study found that zooplankton, a primary food source for the salmon, had higher pesticide concentrations compared to macroinvertebrates. Additionally, floodplain rearing was associated with increased organochlorine exposure in the fish.
Juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) of the Sacramento River system encounter many anthropogenically-induced stressors while rearing and migrating to the Pacific Ocean. Located in a prominent agricultural region, the watershed serves as a source of notable contaminants including pesticides. Salmon rearing in riverine and floodplain areas are potentially exposed to these compounds via dietary exposure, which can vary based on selected food webs. Previous studies have suggested that juvenile Chinook salmon rearing in riverine and floodplain environments of the Sacramento River watershed are characterized by different dietary preferences, with potential for contrasting pesticide exposure between habitats. To examine the potential for pesticide exposure, juvenile Chinook salmon and known dietary items were collected in the mainstem Sacramento River and an adjacent floodplain, the Yolo Bypass, in 2019 and 2020, and analyzed for 33 pesticides, including degradates and isomers. Organochlorine pesticides including the DDX group (p,p'-DDT, p,p'-DDD and p,p'-DDE) were prevalent in all examined biota. There was a significantly greater number of total pesticide detections across all classes in zooplankton compared to macroinvertebrates, coupled with higher bifenthrin concentrations in zooplankton across regions and years, which may indicate different exposure potential depending on fish dietary preferences. Detection frequencies and concentrations of organochlorines were higher in prey items during flooding than in drought conditions, suggesting resuspension of legacy compounds. Significantly higher concentrations of organochlorines were recorded in floodplain rearing fish compared to the Sacramento River. These findings suggest that within these habitats, juvenile Chinook salmon feeding primarily on zooplankton within the water column may be exposed to a greater range of pesticides than those feeding on benthic macroinvertebrates, and that the benefits of floodplain rearing may come at a cost of increased organochlorine exposure.

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