| |
|
A review and evaluation of study design considerations for
site-specifically assessing the health of fish populations
Kelly R. Munkittrick
Great Lakes Laboratory for Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences,
Department of Fisheries and Oceans, 867Lakeshore Road, P.O.
Box 5050, Burlington, Ontario, Canada L7R 4A6
|
Abstract
Since there are not any well developed procedures for
site-specifically evaluating the health of fish populations, most
field surveillance programs have been restricted to collecting information
on chemistry, toxicity, bioaccumulation, biochemical alterations
or in situ benthic community structure. Identification of the mechanism
and significance of contaminant effects on fish populations depends
on the ability to identify changes and to distinguish changes in
survival, food availability or food conversion efficiency, from
coincidental changes associated with alterations in habitat or natural
variability. Preliminary identification of the characteristics of
adult fish can be used to cost-effectively focus financial resources
on the alterations which are of relevance to interpretation of impacts
and identification of causal factors. Proper interpretation requires
that appropriate attention be given to monitoring level and strategy,
selection of species and timing of sampling, sample size requirements
and choice of reference site.
Keywords: fish population, growth, reproduction, assessment,
health
|