Abstract:
Kelani River receives complex mixtures of pollutants from diverse sources which
include waste from industries, agriculture, domestic and municipal sources.
However, scientifically based evidences on biological impacts associated with the
Kelani River water are limited. Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) is a practically
feasible aquatic model for toxicological assessments under tropical conditions. The
present study assessed erythrocytic nuclear abnormalities (ENA), hepatic
ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD) and hepatic glutathione S-transferase (GSTs)
activities of Nile tilapia following exposure to selected surface water samples
collected from the Kelani River and its tributaries in order to assess the potential
biological impacts. Fingerlings of fish were exposed to surface water samples from
an industrial effluent receiving canal (Menikagara ela; Site B), canal confluent (Site
M), downstream of Kelani river at Sedawatta (contaminated with oil installation
complex effluents and house hold waste; Site S) and up stream of Kelani river at
Ruwanwella (reference site; Site R) and aged tap water (as controls) for 10 days
under static renewal conditions. Physico-chemical parameters of exposed water were
measured using standard analytical methods. Blood and liver samples of the exposed
fish were collected from each treatment after 5 and 10 days of exposure, and ENA
and EROD and GST tests were performed using standard methods. Water quality
parameters indicated high levels of chemical oxygen demand, biochemical oxygen
demand, total dissolved solid, salinity and conductivity and elevated levels of total
phosphate content, nitrate content, heavy metal Cr, Cu and Pb levels in the water
collected from the Sites B, M and S compared to tap water (P <0.05). Frequencies of
total ENA were significantly higher in the fish exposed to water from the sites B, M
and S compared those of the fish exposed to the tap water for 5 and 10 days. Blebbed
and notched nuclei contributed mainly to the induction of total ENA than micronuclei
and nuclear buds. Total number of nuclear abnormalities was elevated by the 10th day
of exposure. Hepatic EROD and GST activities of the fish exposed to polluted water
were not significantly different (P >0.05) from those of the fish exposed to tap water,
but the enzyme activities were increased in each treatment at 10th day of exposure.
Comparison of nuclear abnormalities and hepatic EROD & GST activities of O.
niloticus together with physico-chemical analysis revealed that Sites B, M and S of
Kelani River are contaminated with organic and inorganic xenobiotics, which may
pose harmful cyto-genotoxic impacts on the feral fish populations.