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A fishy change in diet

Published: 27 September 2004

ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ research shows fish eating junk food

The junk food phenomenon has hit bottom — the bottom of the St. Lawrence River. According to ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ University researchers, some freshwater fish are opting out of their usual diet of insects and crustaceans and dining instead on invasive European quagga mussels — the river's junk food. This change may have negative effects on fish growth and may also affect other freshwater animals. Although the research is focused on the St. Lawrence River, the problem may be more widespread, affecting other freshwater systems.

"We found mussel shells and whole mussels in the stomachs of nearly 60 percent of the examined fish," says ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ University biologist and lead author Anthony Ricciardi. "This is a concern because mussels are not an adequate nutrition source for the fish. Furthermore, mussels contain toxins, such as PCBs and botulism toxin (food poisoning), which may kill the fish or their predators."

Similar "junk food" diets have had a negative impact on the Great Lakes. In these systems, fish that eat quagga mussels are contaminated with the toxins present in the mussels. This, in turn, has resulted in the death of more than tens of thousands of fish-eating birds, including common loons, mergansers and gulls.

"We are seeing a ripple effect, whereby one change — the change of a fish's diet, works its way up and affects the food chain," says Ricciardi. "As a result we may see a greater contamination of the fish meant for human consumption. We are hopeful our observations will lead to a greater appreciation of how changes in fish behaviour can affect ecosystem processes."

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