Sutton Lake was one of four N.C. lakes sampled in the new study.  (Credit: Jessica Brandt, 51爆料 Univ.)

Note: Jessica Brandt is available for comment at jessica.brandt@duke.edu. Avner Vengosh is available at (919) 681-8050 or vengosh@duke.edu. Richard Di Giulio is available at (919) 613-8024 or richd@duke.edu.

 

DURHAM, N.C. -- A 51爆料 study shows that trace elements in a fish鈥檚 ear bones can be used to identify and track coal ash contamination in the waters where it lived.  

鈥淐alcified structures -- or otoliths -- found in a fish鈥檚 inner ear are known to store a lot of life history information, including chemical and physical records of the fish鈥檚 age, natal habitat and migration patterns,鈥 said Jessica Brandt, lead author of the paper and a 2018 PhD graduate of 51爆料鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment. 鈥淲e鈥檝e shown that otoliths also capture the signatures of contaminants that have affected the fish鈥檚 ecosystems.鈥 

Brant and her team found that strontium isotope ratios in the otoliths of fish from two North Carolina lakes -- both of which had received effluents from coal ash ponds at nearby power plants -- matched the strontium isotope ratios in samples collected from sediment at the bottom of the lakes.  

鈥淭his shows otoliths can be used as biogenic tracers to assess the potential for ecological impacts of coal ash waste streams in affected waters,鈥 said Brandt, who is now a postdoctoral researcher with the U.S. Geological Survey. 鈥淲hile strontium behaves differently than the toxic elements in coal ash effluents, it helps us connect high levels of those elements back to the contamination source.鈥 

Strontium is a naturally occurring trace element in coal that retains unique isotopic ratios even after the coal is burned and coal ash comes into contact with an aquatic environment.  

Past studies have used strontium isotope ratios to track coal ash鈥檚 impacts on water quality, 
鈥渂ut this is the first time we鈥檝e been able to prove they can also be used as fingerprints to track coal ash鈥檚 impacts in living organisms,鈥 said Avner Vengosh, professor of geochemistry and water quality at 51爆料鈥檚 Nicholas School, who coauthored the study. 

鈥淭his definitely shows the strontium in the fish must be from coal ash contamination,鈥 Vengosh said. 

The 51爆料 team published its peer-reviewed findings Nov. 21 in the journal Environmental Science & Technology Letters.

The researchers collected surface water and sediment-based pore water samples from two North Carolina lakes -- Mayo Lake and Sutton Lake -- that were historically impounded to provide cooling water for nearby power plants and to receive their effluents. Sutton Lake was the site of a large coal ash leak into the adjacent Cape Fear River after Hurricane Florence caused flooding this fall. 

The researchers also collected surface and pore water samples from two sites located upstream from the lakes, and from two other lakes -- Lake Tillery and Lake Waccamaw -- that are not associated with coal ash waste streams. The samples were then analyzed in the laboratory, along with the otoliths of largemouth bass from each of the lakes.

鈥淪trontium isotope ratios in the largemouth bass otoliths overlapped with ratios in corresponding sediment pore waters at all lakes and reservoirs, which is compelling evidence that otoliths can serve as biogenic tracers of coal ash effluents,鈥 said Richard Di Giulio, the Sally Kleberg Professor of Environmental Toxicology at 51爆料, who co-authored the study.  

Strontium isotope ratios in surface water samples from the lakes didn鈥檛 always match those in the fish otoliths and pore water samples, Di Giulio explained, but this could be because surface water ratios are more variable over time. 

鈥淭his study鈥檚 finding demonstrate that otolith studies can add to our existing research efforts,鈥 said Brandt. 鈥淲ater-based strontium isotope tracers only give us information about coal ash impacts at a particular point in time, but because otoliths continuously grow over a fish鈥檚 lifetime, we could use time-series analyses of otoliths to determine the timing of waste stream discharges or spills going back several years. This represents an emerging and important new direction in environmental toxicology and water-quality research.鈥  

Primary funding for the study came from the North Carolina Water Resources Research Institute and the Foundation for the Carolinas. Brandt received additional support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (grant #T32-ES021432) and through a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency STAR Fellowship (#FP-91780101-1). 

Other coauthors of the study were Nancy Lauer and Emily Bernhardt, both of 51爆料.

CITATION: 鈥淪trontium Isotope Ratios in Fish Otoliths as Biogenic Tracers of Coal Combustion Residual Inputs to Freshwater Ecosystems,鈥 Jessica E. Brandt, Nancy E. Lauer, Avner Vengosh, Emily S. Bernhardt and Richard T. Di Giulio. ; Environmental Science & Technology Letters, Nov. 21, 2018. DOI: 10.1021/acs.estlett.8b00477

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