Oil Pollution: 1999
Publications
Author: Marty,
G.D., Okihiro, M.S., Brown, E.D., Hanes, D., and Hinton, D.E.
Title: Histopathology of adult Pacific herring in
Prince William Sound, Alaska, after the Exxon Valdez oil
spill.
Publication: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and
Aquatic Sciences 56(3): 419-426, 1999.
© National Research Council Canada
Notes : Pacific herring
(Clupea pallasi) sampled from oiled sites in Prince William
Sound, Alaska, U.S.A., 3 weeks after the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil
spill had multifocal hepatic necrosis and significantly increased
tissue concentrations of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH).
By comparison, Pacific herring from reference sites in 1989 and
from all sites in 1990 and 1991 did not have hepatic necrosis or
increased PAH concentrations. Adult Pacific herring were sampled
for histopathology of liver, spleen, and kidney from oiled and
reference sites in April (1989 and 1991) and October (1990 and
1991). Increased scores for macrophage aggregates contributed to
significant differences in 1990, but these differences probably
resulted from sampling older fish from the oiled site.
Naphthalenes were the predominant PAH in all tissue samples. The
development of hepatic necrosis and the predominance of
naphthalenes in samples from 1989 is consistent with a recent
laboratory study in which crude oil exposure resulted in
dose-dependent expression of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus
(VHSV). We conclude that Pacific herring were exposed to Exxon
Valdez oil in 1989 and that development of hepatic necrosis in
exposed fish probably was a result of VHSV expression.
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