abstract
- To manage defoliation from insect outbreaks, about half of the forested land in New Brunswick, Canada, was treated with dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) between 1952 and 1968. Aerial applications of DDT have thus likely increased the risk of chronic effects in aquatic ecosystems from this legacy insecticide given its high persistence in soil and sediments and its bioaccumulation potential within the food web. We investigated DDT and its metabolites (total ΣDDTs = ∑ DDT + ∑ DDD + ∑ DDE) in Brook Trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) associated with geospatial data of historical applications to lake watersheds and sedimentary measures of DDT and its metabolites from five "impact" and two "reference" study lakes. Total ΣDDTs in recent lake sediments were significantly correlated with cumulative DDT applied aerially to the lake's watershed. Brook Trout muscle tissue showed total ΣDDTs that were significantly higher from impact lakes than reference lakes. On average, total ΣDDTs in Brook Trout from impact lakes exceeded ecological guidelines for consumers of aquatic biota by about ten times. Most legacy DDT in Brook Trout and lake sediments were the metabolites ΣDDE and ΣDDD, which suggests the importance of environmental conditions and transport of weathered sources of this organochlorine insecticide to biota. Stable isotopes from fish and common invertebrate prey also suggested that Brook Trout were at a similar trophic position among all study lakes and thus storage pools of legacy DDT likely explain contamination levels within biota. Our findings clearly demonstrate that chronic effects of historical DDT applications likely persist throughout aquatic environments in north-central New Brunswick.