Store-bought Freshwater Fish Contain Elevated Levels Of Mercury, Arsenic And Selenium 
US Source: Underwatertimes 11/7/2007

White bass wild-caught and sold commercially contained significantly higher levels of mercury, arsenic and selenium than fish caught near former industrial areas. The University of Pittsburgh study, abstract number 161184, is being presented at a special session on “Contaminants in Freshwater Fish: Toxicity, Sources and Risk Communication,” at 8:30 a.m., Wednesday, Nov. 7, at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association in Washington, D.C.

According to study results, mercury levels were 2.2 to 4.8 times higher in fish caught in the Canadian Lake Erie and available commercially than in fish caught near former iron and steel mills on the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers in Pittsburgh. While several of these mills have been closed for many years, the nearby rivers continue to contain high levels of pollution from sewer overflows and active industrial operations.
 

For the study, researchers used local anglers to catch 45 white bass at two locations in Pittsburgh and bought 10 white bass locally that were caught in the Canadian Lake Erie. They analyzed the fish for levels of mercury, arsenic and selenium. In addition to higher levels of mercury, the store-bought fish had levels that were 1.7 times higher for arsenic and 1.9 times higher for selenium.

“We were surprised by our results since we had hypothesized that levels of contaminants in fish would be higher in specimens caught near once heavily polluted sites,” said Conrad D. Volz, Dr.P.H., M.P.H., principal investigator, department of environmental and occupational health, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health. “These results indicate to us that purchasing fish from a local market cannot guarantee food safety. We recommend a more rigorous testing program for commercial freshwater fish with particular attention to fish entering the U.S. from other countries.”

According to Dr. Volz, the results also may indicate that sediments in Lake Erie remain contaminated because of only relatively recent reductions in industrial pollution and active coal-fired power plant air emissions from facilities located around and to the southwest of Lake Erie, as well as wastewater from plants located on the lake. Mercury, arsenic and selenium are markers for coal-burning pollution through air emissions and water pollution and from fly ash piles that are absorbed into surrounding soil. Fly ash is the residue left after coal burning that is often stored at the plant site.

 
Lake Erie Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1751Group of fishermen beat record for largest alligator gar caught in Lake Corpus Christikristv2023-03-30US
1752China to release 200,000 rare fish into Yangtze Riverchina.org2023-03-26CN
1753Чукотская рыбалкаohotniki2023-04-05RU
1754Much of Oregon faces ‘devastating’ salmon fishing banoregonlive2023-03-25US
1755Temporary shutdown of Monticello nuclear power plant causes fish killkion5462023-03-28US
1756Rye fisherman Keper Connell hooks consumer wave with his Gulf of Maine tinned tunaPortsmouth Herald2023-03-31UK
1757Deepest ever fish caught on camera off JapanBBC News2023-04-01JP
1758Near 700-pound bluefin tuna caught offshore TX Gulf Coastlmtonline2023-03-27US
1759Minnesota fisherman's northern pike ties with state's 2-year catch-and-release recordfoxnews2023-04-04US
1760Canadian minister admires closed-containment salmon farmthefishsite2023-04-07CA
1761Environmental Groups Withdraw Lawsuit Over Last Maine SalmonAssociated Press2023-04-03US
1762California Seeks Federal Help for Salmon Fishers Facing BanAssociated Press2023-04-06US
1763Threatened Fish Gets 524 Miles of Habitat in MississippiAssociated Press2023-04-07US
1764Whirling Disease Detected at New Mexico Fish HatcheryAssociated Press2023-04-08US
1765Report by Feds, Anglers Cites Offshore Wind Impacts on FishAssociated Press2023-03-31US
1766Они сражались с сазанамиohotniki2023-04-01RU
176723 вида рыб нежелательных (и даже опасных) к употреблениюtelegra2023-04-05RU
1768Scientists break new record after finding world's deepest fishuwa2023-04-03AU
1769Patrick Campeau Marks 17 Years as National Fishing Week Ambassadorkeepcanadafishing2022-11-28CA
1770New fish species found in urban mega city of Hangzhoucgtn2023-03-18CN
1771Saving the planet by eating one venomous lionfish at a timeFox News2023-03-19US
1772Is it safe to eat? Bangladesh fish exposed to hormones, antibiotics and toxic wastemongabay2023-03-21BD
1773Ruskin scientists help protect Bay Area’s multi-million dollar tropical fish industryFox News2023-03-22US
1774Chemists address a water sanitation chemical that is harmful to aquarium fishabc2023-03-17US
1775Angler comes face to face with giant bull shark, but what he does next wins praisemeaww2023-03-24AU

214 215 216 70 of [217 - pages.]