Abstract
After 126 or 148 days of exposure to H2S concentrations ranging from .0004 to .0146 mg/1, young‐of‐the‐year bluegills were tested for swimming endurance and resistance to copper or malathion. Swimming tests at low speeds indicated increased endurance for fish exposed to .0004 mg/1 H2S, but fish exposed to higher concentrations had progressively less endurance than the controls. In the tests conducted at higher speeds fish in all test concentrations showed less endurance than the controls. Resistance to copper was increased by exposure to H2S, but resistance to malathion was not affected except in the lowest test concentration. The chronic exposure to H2S also reduced growth in the highest concentration, and gill irrigation rate increased progressively with increased concentrations.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: