Exposure to crude oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill impairs oil avoidance behavior without affecting olfactory physiology in juvenile mahi-mahi (Coryphaena hippurus)
2019
The understanding of the detection threshold and behavioral response of fishes in response to crude oil is critical to predicting the effects of oil spills on wild fish populations. The Deepwater Horizon oil spill released approximately 4.9 million barrels of crude oil into the northern Gulf of Mexico in 2010, overlapping spatially and temporally with the habitat of many pelagic fish species. Yet, it is unknown whether highly migratory species, such as mahi-mahi (Coryphaena hippurus), might detect and avoid oil contaminated waters. We tested the ability of control and oil-exposed juvenile mahi-mahi (15–45 mm) to avoid two dilutions of crude oil in a two-channel flume. Control fish avoided the higher concentration (27.1 μg/L Σ50PAH), while oil-exposed (24 h, 18.0 μg/L Σ50PAH) conspecifics did not. Electro-olfactogram (EOG) data demonstrated that both control and oil-exposed (24 h, 14.5 μg/L Σ50PAH) juvenile mahi-mahi (27–85 mm) could detect crude oil as an olfactory cue and that oil-exposure did not affect...
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