Publication Summary

Title

Mercury Concentrations in Edible Muscle of Lake Whatcom Fish

Month-Year PublishedApril 2001
Online Availability
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Short Description

Concentrations of total mercury were assessed in edible muscle (fillet) tissues of 273 fish collected from Lake Whatcom near Bellingham. Samples of six finfish species and signal crayfish were analyzed from each of the lake′s three major basins.

(Also see abstract below)
Publication Number01-03-012
Author(s)Serdar, D., J. Johnston, K. Mueller, and G. Patrick
Print Availability
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Number of pages 28 pp. + app (64 total)
Keywords basin, fish, lake, mercury, rule, SEPA, toxic, toxics, toxics monitoring, water, Whatcom
Subject Waterbodies
Lake Whatcom
map of Washington state showing locations of subject waterbodies
Related Publications TitleRelationship    
Total Mercury Concentrations among Fish and Crayfish Inhabiting Different Trophic Levels in Lake Whatcom, Washington. Article in Journal of Freshwater Ecology, Volume 71, Number 4, p. 621-633, December 2002.similar topic
Mercury in Edible Fish Tissue and Sediments from Selected Lakes and Rivers of Washington Statesimilar topic
Focus on Mercury in Fish: Study finds elevated levels in Washington fishsimilar topic
Frequently Asked Questions about Mercury in Basssimilar topic
Abstract Long Description

Concentrations of total mercury were assessed in edible muscle (fillet) tissues of 273 fish collected from Lake Whatcom near Bellingham, Washington. Samples of six finfish species and signal crayfish were analyzed from each of the lake′s three major basins.

Mercury concentrations were much higher in smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) compared to yellow perch (Perca flavescens), kokanee (Oncorhynchus nerka), pumpkinseed (Lepomis gibbosus), cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki), brown bullhead (Ameiurus nebulosus), and signal crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus). Concentrations were positively correlated with length and age in smallmouth bass, and to a lesser extent in yellow perch and Basin 2 signal crayfish, but no such relationship was seen in other species. The overall mercury concentration in smallmouth bass averaged 0.49 ug/g (wet weight), and the maximum concentration was 1.84 ug/g. Mean mercury concentrations in other species were generally 0.05 - 0.20 ug/g. All species from the southern Basin 3 had more mercury on average compared to their counterparts from the northern Basins 1 and 2, regardless of average size or age. However, there was no consistent direction in mercury concentrations between samples from Basin 1 and Basin 2.

The Washington State Department of Health will use these data to develop a health risk assessment for Lake Whatcom, as a separate document. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife will assess the potential impact of mercury on fish health, also as a separate document. Since 13 of the samples exceeded the EPA National Toxics Rule human health criterion of 0.825 ug/g, the Washington State Department of Ecology should add Lake Whatcom to the Section 303(d) list for mercury in tissue. Other recommendations are to investigate possible mercury sources to Lake Whatcom and determine if lake or watershed characteristics promote enhanced mercury uptake and accumulation by fish.

Link to EIM data for User Study ID DSER0007


This page last updated March 10, 2008