- Kefas, M.*, Gaude, J. J., Adukonu, J. D. & Ezekiel, B.
- *Department of Fisheries, Modibbo Adama University, Yola, P.M.B 2076, Adamawa State, Nigeria
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20056617
This study assessed the 96-hours acute toxicity of
paraquat herbicide on juvenile African catfish (Clarias gariepinus). A static
bioassay was conducted using a completely randomized design with six
concentrations of paraquat (0.00, 0.80, 1.10, 1.40, 1.70, and 2.00 mg/L). A
total of 180 juveniles were acclimatized for 14 days and exposed to the test
solutions, with ten fish per treatment in triplicate. Mortality, survival, and
behavioral responses were monitored at regular intervals. Exposed fish
exhibited concentration-dependent behavioural abnormalities, including frequent
air gulping, weakness, agitated swimming, vertical positioning, excessive mucus
secretion, and loss of equilibrium, indicating respiratory distress and
neurotoxicity. Mortality increased with both concentration and exposure
duration, ranging from 20% at 0.80 mg/L to 90% at 2.00 mg/L, while no mortality
was observed in the control group. Probit analysis revealed a 96-hours median
lethal concentration (LC50) of 1.41 mg/L, confirming the high
toxicity of paraquat to juvenile C.
gariepinus. The findings demonstrate that paraquat poses a significant
threat to freshwater fish and may adversely affect aquatic ecosystems,
highlighting the need for strict regulation of its use near water bodies.

