Ld. Corkum et al., THE DISTRIBUTION AND CONTAMINANT BURDENS OF ADULTS OF THE BURROWING MAYFLY, HEXAGENIA, IN LAKE ERIE, Journal of Great Lakes research, 23(4), 1997, pp. 383-390
Hexagenia populations, eradicated in the 1950s by anoxia, are recoveri
ng in the western basin of Lake Erie. Water from the Detroit River, wh
ich provides the largest contaminant loan into the lake, flows west-to
-east through the center of the western basin. We hypothesized that bo
dy burdens of Hexagenia would reflect a gradient of decreasing contami
nation from west to east across the basin, and from the central axis t
oward shorelines. In summer 1994, we used light traps or mane use of l
akeside dock lights to collect subimagos (females and males) and imago
s (females)for 2 h pr sunset at three locations on the Detroit Rivet a
nd at 22 locations throughout Lake Ei ie. Imagos were found throughout
the western basin, but at only three locations in other areas of Lake
Erie. Mayflies were analyzed for 59 organochlorine compounds includin
g 42 congeners of PCBs by electron-capture detector gas chromatography
. Results were analyzed using principal component analysis to reduce a
utocorrelations among contaminants. There was a I:I correspondence for
PCB concentrations between subimago and imago stages, indicating no c
hange in body burdens between moults. The highest contaminant burdens
of adults at Monroe, Michigan (an Area of Concern) reflects local sour
ces of contaminated sediments. There are high concentrations in mayfly
body burdens at Middle Sister and East Sister islands and lower conce
ntrations near both northern and southern shorelines of the basin. Hex
agenia are confirmed as effective and efficient monitors of organochlo
rines.