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Bifurcation of gill filaments in winter flounder (Pleuronectes americanus Walbaum) from Long Island Sound
Authors:J J Pereira  E J Lewis  Jr†  R L Spallone  C Sword  §
Institution:NOAA, National Marine Fisheries Service, Milford Laboratory, 212 Rogers Avenue, Milford, CT06460, U.S.A.;NOAA, National Marine Fisheries Service, Oxford Laboratory, 904 South Morris Street, Oxford, MD 21654, U.S.A.;Bunnell High School, 1 Bulldog Boulevard, Stratford, CT06497, U.S.A.
Abstract:Morphological and histological examinations of gills excised from adult winter flounder, Pleuronectes americanus Walbaum, collected at clean and contaminated areas of Long Island Sound were undertaken to assess possible biological consequences of contamination. On the basis of previous studies, three collection sites were chosen: Shoreham, New York, a relatively clean, unindustrialized area, and New Haven Harbor, Connecticut and Hempstead Harbor, New York, both industrialized and heavily populated.
Gill samples were taken monthly at all three sites for light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) examination. Results from both techniques suggest a relationship between contamination of the sediments and the prevalence of bifurcated gill filaments, the condition being most severe at New Haven Harbor. The bifurcations were not consistently associated with any parasitological or pathological conditions when examined by light microscopy.
Gill samples were subsequently taken from juvenile winter flounder caught in New Haven Harbor to determine how early in the life cycle gill bifurcations develop. The data show that the majority of these anomalies begin in juvenile flounder rather than in embryos, larvae, or adults. Gill bifurcations were found in 27% of the 2-year-old flounder, compared to 12% of the 1-year-old fish and 15% of the adults from the same area.
Keywords:Plewonectes americanus            gills  bifurcations  contamination  age
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