Skip to main content

Fish and Crab Toxics Monitoring

King County tracks toxic contaminants in the tissues of marine fish and crabs in Elliott Bay and in the Main Basin of the Puget Sound. We share that information with King County leadership, partners, decision makers, and local fishers to support efforts to reduce pollution and its impacts on ecosystems and human health.
Diagram showing the species sampled for King County’s marine tissue monitoring program and how they are exposed to contaminants through food, sediments, and water. Dungeness crab, red rock crab, and English sole live both on and in the sediment, while rockfish are associated with the bottom but do not burrow into sediments (bentho-pelagic). Squid reside in surface waters not associated with the bottom (pelagic). Each species has a different life span and position in the food web. For example, squid live for half a year while rockfish can live for 7 to 100 years.

Many types of toxic contaminants, such as industrial chemicals, legacy pollutants (for example PCBs), metals, and pesticides, enter Puget Sound waters through multiple pathways, including stormwater runoff, wastewater, industrial inputs, and even from the air. These contaminants get into fish and other aquatic life through their food and by exposure from the water and sediments they live in. Certain chemicals, like heavy metals and legacy pollutants, can bioaccumulate and biomagnify in animals. Both processes can lead to high levels of these contaminants in the muscle, fat, and organs of fish and other aquatic animals. The levels of toxic contaminants in their tissues can negatively affect the health of aquatic life and pose a risk to the animals and people who eat them

Our marine tissue monitoring program focuses on fish and crab. We have several goals aimed at protecting humans and wildlife from harmful contaminants and tracking progress toward reducing pollution in King County:

  • Human health goal: Understand the type and concentrations of contaminants in fish and crabs that could be consumed by people fishing in our county.

  • Wildlife goal: Understand how chemical exposures impact the health of fish and crab in King County marine waters.

  • Tracking pollution goal: Track how contaminant concentrations in fish and crab change over time as we work to better treat stormwater, control combined sewer overflows, and clean up contaminated sediments

We also monitor for toxic contaminants in freshwater fish from King County lakes and streams! Please contact wlrtoxicology@kingcounty.gov for questions regarding our tissue monitoring data

expand_less