Avoidance of copper (Cu) by rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) was evaluated using a Y-maze exposure system, with data collected over a 1-h exposure period using a digital camcorder. In exposures to five measured concentrations of dissolved copper (<0.3, 1.2, 9.8, 48.3, and 98.6 µg Cu/L), plus control, significant avoidance behavior (p < 0.05) relative to the control was observed at ≥9.8 µg Cu/L, but not at 1.2 µg Cu/L. The chronic value (i.e., geometric mean of these concentrations) was 3.43 µg Cu/L. Estimates of EC50 values for avoidance of Cu ranged from 4.81 to 9.15 µg Cu/L over four 15-min time intervals of exposure to the metal. Based on water quality characterization of the control/diluent water, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) water hardness- and biotic ligand model (BLM)-based chronic criteria for dissolved Cu were 8.03 and 2.26 µg Cu/L, respectively. This study suggested that enforcement of the BLM-based criterion would provide a higher level of protection of trout for this sensitive response than the hardness-based criterion.
It has been assumed that the considerable dispersal ability of many marine species would prevent genetic divergence in the absence of geographic isolation. However, recent work has shown that many marine species often develop differentiation among areas within their known dispersal range. This 'paradox' of marine divergence is particularly important among marine mammal species where behavior can restrict gene flow. To
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