2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023424
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Landscape Ecotoxicology of Coho Salmon Spawner Mortality in Urban Streams

Abstract: In the Pacific Northwest of the United States, adult coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) returning from the ocean to spawn in urban basins of the Puget Sound region have been prematurely dying at high rates (up to 90% of the total runs) for more than a decade. The current weight of evidence indicates that coho deaths are caused by toxic chemical contaminants in land-based runoff to urban streams during the fall spawning season. Non-point source pollution in urban landscapes typically originates from discrete ur… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…This extension of the Clean Water Act to set standards for urban runoff prompted widespread experimentation with landscape-based methods for detaining runoff and filtering pollutants, significantly expanding the technical role of urban environmental planners. Together, these two Federal laws led to significant changes in urban infrastructure design and urban environmental planning since the 1990s, particularly in regions that discharge urban runoff to ecosystems with high biodiversity, such as the Puget Sound in the Pacific Northwest (Feist, Buhle, Arnold, Davis, & Scholz, 2011;Simenstad et al, 2005), and the Chesapeake Bay in the mid-Atlantic region.…”
Section: Urban Environmental Planning and Biodiversity: The Us Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This extension of the Clean Water Act to set standards for urban runoff prompted widespread experimentation with landscape-based methods for detaining runoff and filtering pollutants, significantly expanding the technical role of urban environmental planners. Together, these two Federal laws led to significant changes in urban infrastructure design and urban environmental planning since the 1990s, particularly in regions that discharge urban runoff to ecosystems with high biodiversity, such as the Puget Sound in the Pacific Northwest (Feist, Buhle, Arnold, Davis, & Scholz, 2011;Simenstad et al, 2005), and the Chesapeake Bay in the mid-Atlantic region.…”
Section: Urban Environmental Planning and Biodiversity: The Us Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the factors implicated in these population declines is inhibition of olfactory processes associated with exposures to waterborne pollutants, including metals (Brown et al, 1994; Domagalski, 1996; Sandahl et al, 2007; Baldwin et al, 2009; Feist et al, 2011; Scholz et al, 2011). The olfactory sensory epithelium is in direct contact with the water column, making it highly sensitive to metal uptake and metal-induced olfactory injury (Julliard et al, 1996; Beyers et al, 2001; Moore et al, 2001; Baldwin et al, 2003; Scott et al, 2003; Carreau et al, 2005; Kalmakov et al, 2009).…”
Section: 0 Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is clear, however, that rapidly increasing human populations and related urbanization of landscapes is a threat to Pacific trout (Feist et al 2011;Hughes et al 2014). Distributions of people and Pacific trout increasingly overlap, particularly in coastal areas.…”
Section: Land and Water Use Activitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%