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U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Perch population assessment in lakes reclaimed using oil-sands derived material

Conference ·
OSTI ID:452072
;  [1];  [2]; ; ;  [3]
  1. Univ. of Waterloo, Ontario (Canada)
  2. Univ. of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba (Canada)
  3. Syncrude Canada, Fort McMurray, Alberta (Canada)

The mining and extraction of petroleum products from oil-sands involves large areas of land and produces enormous volumes of tailings. One possible land reclamation option is to incorporate fine-tailings material into the bottoms of constructed lakes capped with natural surface water. The wet landscape method represents potential risk to aquatic biota-naphthenic acids and PAHs elute from pore water contained in the fine-tailings substrate. In spring 1995 yellow perch were stocked into a large-scale (5ha) experimental pond that consisted of fine-tailings capped with natural water as well as into two other reclaimed ponds that were constructed with oil-sands overburden material. Prior to stocking of perch, ponds had colonized with cyprinids, macrophytes and benthic invertebrates over a two year period. Perch were sampled in fall 1995 for age, condition factor, liver size, gonad size, fecundity, stomach contents, liver mixed-function oxygenase activity (MFO), bile PAH metabolites and plasma steroid hormones. When compared to the source lake, perch in the DP did not show reduced reproductive potential. Perch in all of the reclaimed ponds demonstrated exposure to organic compounds as indicated by marginally induced MFO activity and increased liver size. Exposure to naphthenates and PAHs in water as well as ecological environmental factors will be discussed.

OSTI ID:
452072
Report Number(s):
CONF-961149--
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English