Influence of prefreezing on heavy metal concentrations in Bluegill sunfish |
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Authors: | John J. Ney Mallory G. Martin |
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Affiliation: | Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24061, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Concern for possible changes in tissue metal concentrations due to freezing of fish specimens prior to analysis prompted this investigation. Bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) were collected from a Virginia stream and prepared for analysis of zinc, cadmium and lead concentrations either fresh or after 1, 7, and 70 days of freezing. Intact specimens as well as bone and liver tissue were then analyzed. Zinc concentrations displayed a statistically significant (P < 0.05) negative trend with duration of freezing in whole-body, liver and bone samples. Lead and cadmium concentrations showed no consistent pattern which could be related to length of the freezing period in any of the tissues analyzed. However, median concentrations of zinc, cadmium and lead were 10–30% lower in prefrozen sunfish (aggregated over freezing periods) than in sunfish which were analyzed fresh in seven of the eight tissue-metal combinations examined. These results indicate that freezing of sunfish prior to sample preparation can depress metal concentrations in both tissues and whole fish. Programs to monitor heavy metal contamination in sunfish and other fishes may incur bias unless specimens are prepared for analysis fresh or all samples experience equivalent freezing regimes. |
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Keywords: | freezing heavy metals sunfish tissues contamination biomonitoring zinc cadmium lead |
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