Small Fish for a Large Task
David Hinton Takes His Medaka West to Monitor California's
Drinking Water
By Monte Basgall
David
Hinton, the Nicholas Professor of Environmental Quality,
is sending some of his Nicholas School-bred medaka to urbanized
Orange County in Southern California. There the guppy-like
Japanese fish will be evaluated for becoming living sentinels.
Their apparent health may provide evidence that Orange’s
drinking water is safe. Alternatively, any signs of lesions
on or in their diminutive bodies may hint of unseen toxic
agents.
Measuring only 1 to 2 inches long in adulthood and available
in both standard and transparent forms, medaka have joined
the ranks of model animals that scientists are evaluating
as biomonitors of toxic dangers. Because fish eat, drink,
breathe and live continuously in water, they bioaccumulate
water-borne contaminants. Their use mimics roles live canaries
once played in sensing for poisonous coal mine gases.
“These fish will be telling us whether their
continuous residence in that water is interfering with their
reproduction and normal development or is associated with
cancer formation,” Hinton says in an interview in his Nicholas
School office and laboratory.
In what he predicts may be an emerging trend
elsewhere in the United States, Orange County—which includes
cities like Anaheim, Santa Ana, Fullerton and Newport Beach—
reclaims about 75 percent of its drinking water by treating
previously used wastewater. Recycling is necessary in places
where “it doesn’t rain from April until October or November,”
he says. The tug of war over who gets the water is a constant
refrain there, which Hinton observed first-hand during previous
years as a University of California- Davis aquatic toxicologist.
Hinton now teaches a course that evaluates “lessons
from California’s watershed management” for students in the
Nicholas School’s master of environmental management program.
In his interview, he describes how southern California depends
on winter mountain snowpacks for much of the water it will
need over the following year.
That journey to Orange County’s spigots begins
when the snow melts and collects in massive reservoirs. From
there much of the runoff flows down to the San Joaquin Delta
and then the Sacramento River, where huge pumps push it south
towards waiting and thirsty cities and towns. But before it
reaches those pumps, agricultural interests in California’s
Central Valley lie in wait to tap a substantial portion of
the flow.
“There are real competing interests,” Hinton
says from experience. “There are farmers who want to continue
to get their portion of the water. There are industries. Then
there are water treatment plants positioned at the cities
that have to clean up the water before their constituencies
can drink it.”
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