SUMMARY
In rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), following chronic (42 day)exposure to both 384 μg Ni l–1 and 2034 μg Ni l–1, Ni accumulation was greatest in the gill, kidney and plasma, with the plasma as the main sink for Ni. Indeed, trapped plasma analysis revealed that extensive loading of Ni in the plasma accounted for substantial percentages of accumulated Ni in several tissues including the liver and heart. Accumulated Ni in the gill and kidney was less dependent on plasma Ni concentration, suggesting a more intracellular accumulation of Ni in these tissues.
We present evidence for a clear, persistent cost of acclimation to chronic,sublethal Ni exposure. Chronic (40–99 day) exposure to sublethal waterborne Ni (243–394 μg Ni l–1; ∼1% of the 96 h LC50) impaired the exercise physiology, but not the resting physiology, of rainbow trout. Ni acted as a limiting stressor, decreasing maximal rates of oxygen consumption(
Chronic impairment of such a dynamically active and critical organ as the gill may depress the overall fitness of a fish by impairing predator avoidance, prey capture and migration success with obvious environmental implications.