ABSTRACT: Fish tissue metals and
zooplankton assemblages of Northeastern U.S. lakes.
Temperature, chlorophyll
a, proportion of forest cover on the watershed, and fish tissue
Pb, and Hg concentrations were the primary gradients that
best explained the patterns of distribution of zooplankton
assemblages in 38 northeastern U. S. lakes. Different zooplankton
assemblages were associated with lakes that contained trout
or cool-water species of minnows and systems dominated by
a variety of warmwater fish species. Heavy metals in fish
varied widely with geographic location and proximity to urban
areas. Regression models indicated that Zn and Hg in fish
were significantly and positively associated with chain length
of the zooplankton web. In contrast, these metals and As showed
a significant negative correlation with the number of feeding
links between species. Structurally complex pelagic webs,
comprising many lateral links, may significantly attenuate
the transfer of heavy metals to higher trophic levels. Stepwise
regression models that included structural variables significantly
improved the amount of explainable variance in the fish metal
concentrations over those with only physiochemical and land
use variables. This study suggests that the high variability
of metals in fish observed between adjacent lakes and across
the region is explained in part by the structural features
of the zooplankton web.
Stemberger RS, Chen CY. Fish tissue metals
and zooplankton assemblages of Northeastern U.S. lakes. Can.
J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 55:339-352, 1998.