Chronic Toxicity of Ammonia to Fathead Minnows

Abstract
Chronic effects of ammonia on the fathead minnow Pimephales promelas were studied in the laboratory in two flow‐through tests, each test lasting approximately 1 year. Fish were exposed to five test concentrations over the range 0.07–0.96 mg/L un‐ionized ammonia (NH3); the mean pH of the test water was 8.0, and the mean temperature was 24.2°C. The tests started with 3‐ to 5‐d‐old larvae that were reared to sexual maturity; progeny of these fish (F1 were reared until they were 60 d old. The 5% probability level was chosen to indicate significance. No effects were observed on growth or survival of parental fish at 0.44 mg/L NH3, or on egg production or viability at 0.37 mg/L, but effects on all of these were observed at 0.91 mg/L. Growth and survival of F1 larvae were not affected at 0.36 mg/L NH3, which was the highest concentration at which these were tested. Egg hatching success was not affected at 0.19 mg/L NH3, but was at 0.37 mg/L. Brain lesions were common in parental fish at all stages of development at exposure concentrations of 0.21 mg/L NH3 and higher, but not at 0.11 mg/L; no other histopathologic effects were observed at any of the test concentrations. The chronic‐effects threshold concentration, based on survival, growth, and reproductive success, is estimated to be 0.27 mg/L NH3 for the conditions of these tests. Based on histological damage, however, this concentration is estimated to be 0.15 mg/L NH3.

This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit: