Toronto Star

Lac-Mégantic disaster linked to huge spike in fish deformitie­s

Oil that spilled into river after 2013 train derailment affected entire ecosystem, report finds

- ALLAN WOODS QUEBEC BUREAU

MONTREAL— Scientists have recorded an “unpreceden­ted” spike in fish deformitie­s in the wake of the deadly 2013 train derailment and oil spill in Lac-Mégantic, Que., according to a provincial government report.

The report into the effects of the disaster on the 185-km-long Chaudière River, which begins in Lac Mégantic, found that in some parts of the river as many as 47 per cent of the fish they collected had an external deformity.

The rate of deformitie­s greatly surpassed that recorded in a similar fish population study in 1994. The study also found a “marked drop” in the river’s fish biomass, or total weight.

“There is no hypothesis other than the oil spill of July 6, 2013, that can explain these results,” says the report, which got little attention when it was released last November. It was brought to wider attention Wednesday when resurrecte­d by Montreal’s Le Devoir newspaper.

“The weak biomass observed in 2014 is difficult to attribute to anything other than the oil spill.” REPORT ON EFFECTS OF THE LAC-MEGANTIC DISASTER

The derailment and ensuing explosion, in which 47 people were killed, decimated the picturesqu­e small town in eastern Quebec and turned its downtown strip and waterfront into an oil-soaked wasteland.

The 72-car train was carrying nearly 8 million litres of highly combustibl­e crude oil that was bound for a refinery in New Brunswick. An engine fire that occurred when the train was left unattended on the main tracks about 11 kilometre from Lac-Mégantic resulted in the air brakes failing and the unattended train hurtling into town. It derailed near a popular bar, the site where most of the dead were found.

About 100,000 litres of crude oil is estimated to have washed into the Chaudière River and settled as contaminat­ed sediment on the riverbed. The expert committee’s report said there are some encouragin­g signs that the worst contaminat­ion is limited to the first 10 km of the river, whereas traces were found some 80 km away in testing conducted right after the incident.

But a whole ecosystem has been affected. The insects, worms and other organisms that live on the sediment and upon which fish feed were affected by the oil spill, but are showing signs of recovery after testing conducted in 2014.

Crude oil coming to rest on the riverbed can prevent fish from accessing food and can result in the death of fish eggs or embryos. The population drop could also be attributab­le to other factors such as more active predators or lower reproducti­on rates, the report noted.

But the contaminat­ed sediment is the most likely explanatio­n for the alarmingly high rate of external deformitie­s recorded among the sample of 900 fish collected for study. The most common problems were lesions and infection-induced breakdown of the fins, which can occur when a fish comes into direct contact with the sediment, leaving it vulner- able to bacteria, fungus and parasites that eat away at the tissue.

The widely held standard is that if more than 5 per cent of fish in the sample show signs of external deformitie­s, the habitat is considered to be contaminat­ed by toxic substances.

Perhaps as a result, fish population­s are estimated to be 66 per cent smaller and the biomass — the total weight of the fish stock — is down 48 per cent.

“The weak biomass observed in 2014 is difficult to attribute to anything other than the oil spill,” the report concluded.

Scientists have now set their sights on a longer-term monitoring plan and a fish-population survey they hope to carry out in 2016. One of the things they will be looking for are skeletal malformati­ons — a widely recognized consequenc­e of exposure to petroleum hydrocarbo­ns.

Their interest in this stems from a laboratory study in which the eggs of two types of fish — the fathead minnow and the brown trout — were exposed to contaminat­ed sediment from the oil spill.

The exposure had no effect on mortality rates or the time it took for the eggs to hatch. But the eggs of the brown trout that were exposed to the most contaminat­ed sediment showed a higher rate of scoliosis, an abnormal lateral curvature of the spinal column.

 ?? STEVE DUGUAY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? A worker tests water near LacMéganti­c after the massive explosion caused by a runaway train in 2013.
STEVE DUGUAY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO A worker tests water near LacMéganti­c after the massive explosion caused by a runaway train in 2013.
 ??  ?? In an experiment using the most contaminat­ed sediment from the Chaudière River, there was an elevated number of brown trout that hatched with scoliosis, an abnormal lateral curvature of the spinal column, top right. The brown trout top left is a normal fish. At right, the brown trout has lordosis, an excessive inward curvature of the spine.
In an experiment using the most contaminat­ed sediment from the Chaudière River, there was an elevated number of brown trout that hatched with scoliosis, an abnormal lateral curvature of the spinal column, top right. The brown trout top left is a normal fish. At right, the brown trout has lordosis, an excessive inward curvature of the spine.
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 ?? QUEBEC ENVIRONMEN­T MINISTRY ??
QUEBEC ENVIRONMEN­T MINISTRY

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