Even brief exposures of the eggs of Atlantic haddock to low concentrations of
dispersed1 crude oil can cause severe and usually deadly deformities in developing fish, an international research team has found. The findings indicate that oil spills at high
latitudes2 could have serious impacts on some of the world's most important fisheries, including those for haddock,
cod3 and pollock.
The research published today in Scientific Reports by a team of scientists from Norway and NOAA Fisheries' Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle show that crude oil compounds disrupt the development of key organs in
embryonic4 fish. The study was funded by the Research Council of Norway, the
VISTA5 Foundation and Norway's Institute of
Marine6 Research to assess the risks of oil spills in remote northern Norway, in the heart of Atlantic haddock's range.
The international
collaboration7 will provide information to inform environmental risk
assessments8 of proposed oil drilling in northern oceans.
Earlier research showed that the polycyclic
aromatic9 hydrocarbons10 (PAHs) in crude oil
interfere11 with heart development in fish, causing defects that compromise their later survival. The new research indicates crude oil also lead to extreme craniofacial deformities in embryonic haddock. Other research in the related species Atlantic cod suggests this may be a common response of fish in the cod family, which also includes Pacific cod and pollock.
The earlier the exposure, the more severe the deformities.