Browse > Article

Effects of Turbid Water on Fish Ecology in Streams and Dam Reservoirs  

Seo, Jin-Won (Korea Institute of Water and Environment, Korea Water Resources Corporation)
Lee, Jong-Eun (Department of Biological Science, Andong National University)
Publication Information
Abstract
Turbid water or suspended sediment is associated with negative effects on aquatic organisms; fish, aquatic invertebrate, and periphyton. Effects of turbid water on fish differ depending on their developmental stage and a level of turbidity. Low turbid water may cause feeding and predation rates, reaction distance, and avoidance in fish, and it could make fish to die under high turbidity and long period. Therefore, it is very important to find out how turbid water or suspended sediment can affect fish in domestic watersheds. The objectives of this study were 1) to introduce international case studies and their standards to deal with suspended sediment, 2) to determine acute toxicity in 4 major freshwater fishes, and 3) to determine in relation to adverse effect of macroinvertebrates and fish. Impacts of turbid water on fish can be categorized into direct and indirect effects, and some factors such as duration and frequency of exposure, toxicity, temperature, life stage of fish, size of particle, time of occurrence, availability of and access to refugia, etc, play important role to decide magnitude of effect. A review of turbidity standard in USA, Canada, and Europe indicated that each standard varied with natural condition, and Alaska allowed liberal increase of turbidity over natural conditions in streams. Even though acute toxicity with four different species did not show any fatal effect, it should be considered to conduct a chronic test (long-term) for more detailed assessment. Compared to the control, dominance index of macroinvertebrates was greater in the turbid site, whereas biotic index, species diversity index, species richness index, and ecological score were smaller in the turbid site. According to histopathological analysis with gills of macroinvertebrate and fishes, morphological and physiological modification of gills due to suspended sediments can cause disturbance of respiration, excretion and secretion. In conclusion, in order to maintain good and healthy aquatic ecosystem, it is the best to minimize or prevent impact by occurrence of turbid water in stream and reservoir. We must make every effort to maintain and manage healthy aquatic ecosystem with additional investigation using various assessment tools and periodic biomonitoring of fish.
Keywords
turbid water; suspended sediment; fish; environmental impact assessment; biomonitoring;
Citations & Related Records
Times Cited By KSCI : 3  (Citation Analysis)
연도 인용수 순위
1 Brown, G.W. 1972. Forestry and Water Quality. Corvallis, OR: Oregon State University Press
2 Gammon, J.R. 1970. The effect of inorganic sediment on stream biota. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Water Pollution Control Research Series 18050 DWC 12/70. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C
3 KOWACO. 1994. Report for the origin investigation of turbidity increase in Imha Reservoir. Imha Dam Office
4 Lloyd, D.S., J.P. Koenings and J.D. LaPerriere. 1987. Effects of turbidity in fresh waters of Alaska. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 7: 18-33   DOI
5 McNaughton, S.J. 1967. Relationship among functional properties of California Grassland. Nature 216: 168-169
6 Newcombe, C.P. and D.D. MacDonald. 1991. Effects of suspended sediments on aquatic ecosystems. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 11: 72-82   DOI
7 Pielou, E.C. 1969. An Introduction to Mathematical Ecology. Wiley - Interscience, New York
8 Pimentel, D., C. Harvey, P. Resosudarmo, K. Sinclair, D. Kurz, M. McNair, S. Crist, L. Shpritz, L. Fitton, R. Saffouri and R. Blair. 1995. Environmental and economic costs of soil erosion and conservation benefits. Science 267: 1117-1123   DOI   ScienceOn
9 Rosenberg, D.M. and N.B. Snow. 1977. A design for environmental impact studies with special reference to sedimentation in aquatic systems of the Mackenzie and Porcupine River drainages. Pages 65-78 in Proceedings of the Circumpolar Conference on Northern Ecology. National Research Council, Ottawa
10 Rosenberg, D.M. and A.P. Wiens. 1978. Effects of sedimentation on macrobenthic invertebrates in a northern Canadian river. Water Research 12: 753-763   DOI   ScienceOn
11 Sigler, J.W., T.C. Bjornn and F.H. Everest. 1984. Effects of chronic turbidity on density and growth of steelheads and coho salmon. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 113: 142-150   DOI
12 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). 1983. Turbidity. Pages 180.1.1-1.4 in Methods for chemical analysis of water and waste. USEPA. Office of Research and Development, EPA-600/4-79-020, Cincinnati, Ohio
13 Richter, B.D., D.P. Braun, M.A. Mendelson and L.L. Master. 1997. Threats to imperiled freshwater fauna. Cons. Biol. 11: 1081-1093   DOI   ScienceOn
14 Alabaster, J.S. and R. Lloyd. 1982. Finely divided solids. Pages 1-20 in Water quality criteria for freshwater fish, J.S. Alabaster and R. Lloyd editors, 2nd edition, Butterworth, London
15 Margalef, R. 1958. Information theory. Ecology 7: 36-71
16 Yi, H-S, J. Kim and S.U. Lee. 2008. Development of turbid water prediction model for the Imha Dam watershed using HSPF. Journal of Korean Society of Environment Engineering 30: 760-767
17 Boyd, C.E. and C.S. Tucker. 1998. Pond Aquaculture Water Quality Management. Kluwer Academic Publisher, Massachusetts
18 Newcomb, T.W. and T.A. Flagg. 1983. Some effects of Mt. St. Helens volcanic ash on juvenile salmon smolts. Marine Fisheries Review 45: 8-12
19 Newcombe, C.P. and J.O.T. Jensen. 1996. Channel suspended sediment and fisheries: a synthesis for quantitative assessment of risk and impact. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 16: 693-727   DOI
20 Lloyd, D.S. 1987. Turbidity as a water quality standard for Salmonid habitats in Alaska. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 7: 34-45   DOI
21 McCabe, G.D. and W.J. O'Brian. 1983. The effects of suspended silt on the feeding and reproduction of Daphnia pulex. American Midland Naturalist 110: 324-337   DOI   ScienceOn
22 Ryan, P.A. 1991. Environmental effects of sediment on New Zealand streams: a review. New Zeal. J. Mar. Freshwat. Res. 25: 207-221   DOI
23 European Inland Fisheries Advisory Commission (EIFAC). 1965. Working Party on Water Quality Criteria for European Freshwater Fish. Water quality criteria for European freshwater fish. Report on finely divided solids and inland fisheries (EIFAC Technical Paper No. 1). Air and Water Pollution 9: 151-168
24 Lee, S., J. Kim, J. Noh and I.H. Ko. 2007. Assessment of selective withdrawal facility in the Imha Reservoir using CE-QUAL-W2 model. Journal of Korean Society on Water Quality 23: 228-235
25 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). 2002. Methods for measuring the acute toxicity of effluents and receiving waters to freshwater and marine organisms. 5th edition. EPA-821-R-02-012, Washington, D.C
26 Bash, J., C. Berman and S. Bolton. 2001. Effects of turbidity and suspended solids on Salmonids. Center for Streamside Studies, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, Washington
27 Kirk, J.T.O. 1985. Effects of suspensoids (turbidity) on penetration of solar radiation in aquatic ecosystems. Hydrobiologia 125: 195-208   DOI
28 Reed, J.P., J.M. Miller, D.F. Pence and B. Schaich. 1983. The effects of low level turbidity on fish and their habitat. Report No. 190., Dept. of Zoology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina
29 Noggle, C.C. 1978. Behavioral, physiological and lethal effects of suspended sediment on juvenile salmonids. Master's thesis. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
30 Berkman, H.E. and C.F. Rabeni. 1987. Effect of siltation on stream fish communities. Environ. Biol. Fishes 18: 285-294   DOI
31 Reid, L.M. 1998. Forest roads, chronic turbidity, and salmon. EOS, Transactions American Geophysical Union 79: F285
32 Hoetzel, G. and R. Croome. 1994. Long-term phytoplankton monitoring of the Darling River at Burtundy, New South Wales: incidence and significance of cyanobacterial blooms. Aust. J. Mar. Freshwater Res. 45: 747-759   DOI
33 Wagener, S.M. and J.D. LaPerriere. 1985. Effects of placer mining on the invertebrate communities of interior Alaska streams. Freshwater Invertebrates Biology 4: 208-214   DOI   ScienceOn
34 American Petroleum Institute (API). 1980. Guide to water quality standards of the United States. API, Environmental Affairs Department, Publication 4321, Washington, D.C
35 Yeom, D.H., J. Seo and S.K. Lee. 2005. Use of Chinese bleak, Aphyocypris chinensis, in embryo and sac-fry stages toxicity test. J. Environ. Toxicol. 20: 359-363   과학기술학회마을
36 Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). 1998. Guideline for testing of chemicals: fish, short-term toxicity test on embryo and sac-fry stages. OECD 212. Paris
37 Cairns, J. 1990. Disturbed ecosystems as opportunities for research in restoration ecology. Pages 307- 320 in Restoration Ecology: A Synthetic Approach to Ecological Research. W.R. Jordan, M.E. Gipin and J.D. Abers Eds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
38 Clark, E.H. 1985. The off-site costs of soil erosion. J. Soil Water Conserv. 40: 19-22
39 Steinman, A.D. and C.D. McIntire. 1990. Recovery of lotic periphyton communities after disturbance. Environ. Manage. 14: 598-604
40 Henley, W.F, M.A. Patterson, R.J. Neves and A.D. Lemly. 2000. Effects of sedimentation and turbidity on lotic food webs: a concise review for natural resource managers. Reviews in Fisheries Science 8: 125-139   DOI   ScienceOn
41 Herbert, D.W.M. and J.C. Merkens. 1961. The effect of suspended mineral solids on the survival of trout. Int. J. Air Water Pollut. 5: 46-55
42 Fairchild, J.F., T. Boyle, W.R. English and C. Rabeni. 1987. Effects of sediment and contaminated sediment on structural and functional components of experimental stream ecosystems. Water, Air, and Soil Pollution 36: 271-293   DOI
43 Judy, R.D. Jr., P.N. Seeley, T.M. Murray, S.C. Svirsky, M.R. Whitworth and L.S. Ischinger. 1984. 1982 national fisheries survey. Volume I. Technical report: initial findings. Report No. FWS/OBS- 84/06, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service