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TRIBAL PROGRAM NEWS Tribal Members Get Details About Fish Toxicity and Tribal Health by Ryan French, Tom Downey, and Sherri Groh The Siletz Tribal Natural Resources Department recently received a grant from the Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS) under Oregon’s SHINE Program (Superfund Health Investigation and Education) to conduct two staff trainings on the impact of fish toxicity on tribal health. The training sessions took place on March 15 at Chemawa Indian School in Salem, Ore. Tom Downey, environmental protection specialist, facilitated and Sherri Groh, environmental planner, helped organize the meeting. The majority of the Siletz Tribes’ distribution fish (Chinook) comes from the Clackamas, Santiam, and McKenzie River fish hatcheries, all major tributaries to the Willamette River. They spend at least some portion of their life history in the Portland Harbor as out- migrating juveniles and returning adults. Chip Humphrey of the Environ mental Protection Agency (EPA) and remedial project manager for the Portland Harbor Superfund site gave a presentation on contaminant levels found in fish tissue from the Willamette River. He discussed current actions to clean up the Portland Harbor and outlined future studies to document health concerns associated with consumption of sturgeon, lamprey, and salmon from the Willamette River. Fish that tend to exhibit higher levels of contaminants include larger older fish that are high in fat and live year-round in polluted waters and fish at the top of the food chain (bioaccumulation). The way bioaccumulation works is that pollutants get into the sediment, where they’re ingested by small organ isms, such as plankton and bacteria, who are then eaten by small juvenile fish. Larger predatory fish, in turn, eat the smaller fish and begin to accumulate large amounts of these toxins in fatty tissue. Fish species in the Portland Harbor that have the greatest concentrations of contaminants are resident fish such as carp, bass, and northern pikeminnow. Sturgeon are somewhat migratory and can have contamination levels that range from low to high depending on size, age, and the amount of time spent in polluted waters. Salmon and steelhead usually have lower contamination levels because of 10 □ Siletz News □ the relatively short time they spend in fresh water on their way to and from the ocean. Lamprey haven’t been suffi ciently studied and little is known about the amount of time they may spend in the Portland Harbor during the larval and juvenile life-stages. Dr. Pamela Bridgen and Valerie Lee, with Environmental International Ltd. (EI), provided an overview of tribal fish consumption and the associated health risks from fish contamination in the Columbia Basin. EI is consulting for six tribes that make up the trustee group for the Portland Harbor Superfund Site. Their presentation included a brief overview of the risk assessment; the relationship between fish consumption and risk; recent studies in the Columbia River basin, specifically the tribal risk associated with these studies; and how the Portland Harbor work relates to contamination in fish. In the Willamette Portland Harbor Superfund Site study, the Lower Willamette Group (LWG), which are the potential responsible parties, have collected limited fish tissue samples. To date, not enough fish tissue information exists to conduct a comprehensive risk assessment in the Willamette Basin. Government agencies use thresholds to determine how much contaminated fish is safe to consume. Without tribal specific information, the government is currently proposing to base the fish consumption rate on the amount of fish consumed by the “average American,” which may result in the wrong estimation of risk to tribal members. According to EPA, the “average American” consumes only 7.5 grams of fish per day, which is only a “-ounce portion or roughly the size of your pinky fingernail per day. The Columbia Basin study indicated that the average tribal child there consumed 24.8 grams per day and the average adult consumed 63.2 grams per day. Those who ate the most fish con sumed 162 grams per day for children and 389 grams per day for adults. Dr. Dave Stone, public health toxicologist for ODHS, discussed the health benefits of consuming fish, the risks associated with consuming fish from polluted water, what fish tend to have the highest concentration of May 2004 chemicals, and ways to reduce exposure imposed new restrictions on the uses, to these chemicals by properly cleaning storage, and disposal of these compounds. and cooking your catch. State agencies and the federal The contaminants of concern government continue to evaluate and include mercury, PCBs, pesticides, and clean up known contaminated sites. dioxins, which at high doses have been Mercury concentrations also are a shown to affect mental, physical, and major concern in many Oregon lakes reproductive developmental capacity as and advisories have been posted in certain well as cause cancer and other illnesses. lakes, primarily throughout Douglas One way to reduce exposure to County and in Eastern Oregon. These pesticides, PCBs, and dioxin in fish is advisories can be found in the Oregon to remove the skin before cooking; trim Department of Fish and Wildlife 2004 off the fatty areas along the side, back, Angling Regulations (page 10), by calling and belly; and cook the fish by broiling, ODHS at 503-731-4012, or by visiting baking, grilling, or smoking so the fats www.healthoregon.org/fishadv . The Web site also contains guidelines on fish and oils can drip off it. EPA studies have shown that just cleaning and consumption. Currently, ODHS has placed an advi removing the skin can reduce toxin levels by 50 percent and following these sory on the consumption of resident fish cooking methods can dramatically species from the Willamette River and reduce contaminant levels. At the Coast Fork Willamette to Cottage meeting, Ryan French, Siletz Tribal Grove Reservoir for high mercury and fisheries biologist, demonstrated the PCB levels. Children under age 6 should proper tebhnique for removing the skin eat no more than one 4-ounce meal and fat off a salmon fillet prior to every two months. Women of childbearing age should cooking to reduce exposure to toxins. Mercury, however, cannot be eat no more than one 8-ounce meal eveiy removed from fish through proper month. Healthy adults should eat no more cleaning and cooking because it binds than one 8-ounce meal every two weeks. All persons should reduce or avoid to muscle tissue (fillet.) According to ODHS, mercury in Oregon’s waterways eating fatty parts of fish. Removing the is believed to come from a combination skin and all fat, eggs, and internal organs can reduce exposure. The Lower of natural volcanic sources in the Columbia River, the mainstem of the headwater streams and from a number Willamette River, the Columbia Slough, of man-made sources along the river. and areas above Bonneville Dam have Some of the PCBs, dioxins, and advisories that include consumption of chlorinated pesticide residues may come freshwater clams and crayfish. from widely distributed natural sources It should be noted that fish not from and some are from human activities that the Columbia or Willamette basins also occur throughout the Willamette River and the Columbia River watersheds. In See Fish Toxicity on page 11. recent years, the U.S. government has