Assessing inputs of contaminants in the upper Ottawa River near the town of Témiscaming, Québec 
By Arbour, Camilla CA Source: library.utoronto 4/1/2020

The upper part of the Ottawa River Watershed has long been a part of the lives of Indigenous Peoples, and early settlers. Defining the border between Ontario and Québec, the river has been impacted by human activities including forestry, agriculture, mining, and ore and timber processing. Environmental quality was surveyed through inventories of aquatic invertebrates and assessment of general environmental metrics, including dissolved oxygen, pH, conductivity and temperature, followed by more targeted assessment of contaminants in water and sediment. Water quality was generally within acceptable limits in terms of the concentrations of known toxic substances, except for aluminum, copper, iron, pH and total suspended solids which exceeded federal and provincial guidelines established for the protection of aquatic life.
 

The sediment was seriously contaminated in lac aux Brochets on Gordon Creek, and offshore from the pulp and paper (P&P) industrial landfills and nearby train tracks, with arsenic, chromium, copper, iron, nickel, total phosphorus, lead and zinc all exceeding the interim and established Provincial and Federal guidelines for the lowest level for the protection of aquatic life. Manganese exceeded (Quebec) Provincial guidelines for severe level effects, showing significant pulses offshore train tracks and industrial landfills. Further downriver, leachate from a municipal landfill, and excess nutrients from forestry activities upstream in Fournier Creek affected water and sediment quality. General metrics of the physico-chemical environment were reliable predictors of areas showing elevated metal contamination in sediment and water; surveys of aquatic invertebrates were less reliable. Suggestions are offered regarding the control of contaminant releases from landfill wastes, and procedures that could reduce current and future industrial discharges.

 
Fournier Creek Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4676To Work With Six Identified Nations To Address Illegal, Unreported, And Unregulated FishingUnderwatertimes2009-01-13US
4677Fish Poop Helps Balance Ocean's Acid Levels; 'A Long-standing Puzzle Facing Marine Chemists'Underwatertimes2009-01-15UK
46782 Billion Tons: Researcher Gives First-ever Estimate Of Worldwide Fish Biomass And Impact On Climate ChangeUnderwatertimes2009-01-15CA
4679Gift Of Caviar May Be Product Of Endangered Species' Illegal HarvestUnderwatertimes2009-01-23US
4680NOAA: Restrictions Recommended As Three Common Pesticides Found To Harm SalmonUnderwatertimes2008-11-18US
4681Trout continues over fish plantingsfgate2011-12-08US
4682Fish Without the Catch: Seafood Alternatives Are on the Risesentientmedia2021-01-28CA
4683Lack of Vitamin B1 Killing Great Lakes Fishusgs2014-07-07US
4684Something was killing baby salmon. Scientists traced it to a food-web mysterylatimes2021-01-26US
4685Nine fishermen convicted of poachingAFP2008-11-05SW
4686Genes Hold Secret Of A 'Whole Range Of Biological Functions' In Survival Of Antarctic 'antifreeze Fish'Underwatertimes2008-10-16US
4687Rare wild salmon turns up in RhineUPI2008-10-15SZ
4688NOAA Charges 'Unscrupulous' Charter Operators With Illegal Fishing For Striped BassUnderwatertimes2008-11-14US
4689Atlantic Wolffish: Fearsome Fish That Deserve Protection? 'Rapidly Headed Toward Extinction'Underwatertimes2008-10-02US
4690Pictured: The incredible Siamese twin fish conjoined at the stomachdailymail2008-10-03UK
4691Dutch make hole in the dyke to allow migrating fish throughDutchNews2021-01-26DK
4692Doctors In Colombia Remove 18cm Fish From Man's Throatladbible2021-01-21CO
4693Investigation into River Sheppey pollution that killed 8,000 fish still ongoing after 18 monthssomersetlive2021-01-27UK
4694The Warrior Society rises: how a mercury spill in Canada inspired a movementtheguardian2018-10-16CA
4695For Grassy Narrows families, mercury is an intergenerational trauma. For political parties, it’s a federal election issuetheglobeandmail2019-10-09CA
46961976: Fishing for fun and death at Grassy Narrowscbc1976-03-23CA
4697Return to Grassy Narrowsreviewcanada2009-01-01CA
4698The interwoven history of mercury poisoning in Ontario and JapanCMAJ2017-02-06CA
4699Why the people of Grassy Narrows are still eating the fishtvo2018-12-17CA
4700Dozens charged in October for illegal night fishing on Rice Lake south of Peterboroughglobalnews2020-11-06CA

218 219 220 187 of [221 - pages.]