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1.
Water Res ; 260: 121903, 2024 Jun 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38875860

RESUMO

Ongoing global climate change will shift nature towards Anthropocene's unprecedented conditions by increasing average temperatures and the frequency and severity of extreme events, such as heatwaves. While such climatic changes pose an increased threat for freshwater ecosystems, other stressors like pesticides may interact with warming and lead to unpredictable effects. Studies that examine the underpinned mechanisms of multiple stressor effects are scarce and often lack environmental realism. Here, we conducted a multiple stressors experiment using outdoor freshwater mesocosms with natural assemblages of macroinvertebrates, zooplankton, phytoplankton, macrophytes, and microbes. The effects of the neonicotinoid insecticide imidacloprid (1 µg/L) were investigated in combination with three temperature scenarios representing ambient, elevated temperatures (+4 °C), and heatwaves (+0 to 8 °C), the latter two having similar energy input. We found similar imidacloprid dissipation patterns for all temperature treatments with lowest average dissipation half-lives under both warming scenarios (DT50: 3 days) and highest under ambient temperatures (DT50: 4 days) throughout the experiment. Amongst all communities, only the zooplankton community was significantly affected by the combined treatments. This community demonstrated low chemical sensitivity with lagged and significant negative imidacloprid effects only for cyclopoids. Heatwaves caused early and long-lasting significant effects on the zooplankton community as compared to elevated temperatures, with Polyarthra, Daphnia longispina, Lecanidae, and cyclopoids being the most negatively affected taxa, whereas Ceriodaphnia and nauplii showed positive responses to temperature. Community recovery from imidacloprid stress was slower under heatwaves, suggesting temperature-enhanced toxicity. Finally, microbial and macrofauna litter degradation were significantly enhanced by temperature, whereas the latter was also negatively affected by imidacloprid. A structural equation model depicted cascading food web effects of both stressors with stronger relationships and significant negative stressor effects at higher than at lower trophic levels. Our study highlights the threat of a series of heatwaves compared to elevated temperatures for imidacloprid-stressed freshwaters.

2.
Aquat Toxicol ; 268: 106866, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38382184

RESUMO

Per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) have raised international concerns due to their widespread use, environmental persistence and potential bioaccumulative and ecotoxicological effects. Therefore, the chemical industry has been dedicated to develop new generation fluorosurfactants which are aimed to replace the most concerning PFAS. Here we investigated the fate and effects of cyclic C6O4 (cC6O4), a compound used as alternative to long-chain perfluorocarboxylic acids, in freshwater mesocosms located in the Mediterranean region (Spain) over a period of 90 days. cC6O4 was applied as ammonium salt once at the following nominal concentrations: 0 µg/L (control), 1 µg/L, 20 µg/L, 400 µg/L, and 8,000 µg/L. The study shows that cC6O4 is relatively persistent in water (dissipation: 34-37 % after 90 days), has very low sorption capacity to sediments (sediment-water partition coefficient: 0.18-0.32 L/kg) and very limited bioconcentration (BCF: 0.09-0.94), bioaccumulation (BAF: 0.09-4.06) and biomagnification (BMF: 0.05-0.28) potential. cC6O4 did not result in significant adverse effects on aquatic populations and communities of phytoplankton and zooplankton at the tested concentrations. As for the macroinvertebrate community, the ephemeropteran Cloeon sp. showed a population decline at the highest test concentration on day 60 onwards, and a significant effect on the macroinvertebrate community was identified on the last sampling day at the same exposure level. Therefore, the calculated NOEC for cC6O4 in freshwater mesocosms exposed over a period of 90 days was 400 µg/L, which corresponded to a time weighted average concentration of 611 µg/L, given the water evaporation in the test systems. This concentration is about an order of magnitude higher than the highest exposure concentration monitored in freshwater ecosystems. Therefore, it can be concluded that cC6O4 poses insignificant ecological risks for freshwater plankton and macroinvertebrate communities given the current environmental exposure levels.


Assuntos
Fluorocarbonos , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Animais , Ecossistema , Poluentes Químicos da Água/toxicidade , Zooplâncton , Água Doce/química , Água/farmacologia
3.
Aquat Toxicol ; 267: 106828, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38176168

RESUMO

This paper investigates the effects of the fungicide azoxystrobin, a compound widely used in rice farming, on aquatic communities representative of two habitats characteristic of Mediterranean wetland ecosystems: water springs and eutrophic lake waters. The long-term effects of azoxystrobin were evaluated on several structural (phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrate populations and communities) and functional (microbial decomposition, macrophyte and periphyton growth) parameters making use of freshwater mesocosms. Azoxystrobin was applied in two pulses of 2, 20, 200 µg/L separated by 14 d using the commercial product ORTIVA (23 % azoxystrobin w/w). The results show that these two habitats responded differently to the fungicide application due to their distinct physico-chemical, functional, and structural characteristics. Although overall sensitivity was found to be similar between the two (lowest NOEC < 2 µg/L), the taxa and processes that were affected differed substantially. In general, the most sensitive species to the fungicide were found in the water spring mesocosms, with some species of phytoplankton (Nitzschia sp.) or macrocrustaceans (Echinogammarus sp. and Dugastella valentina) being significantly affected at 2 µg/L. In the eutrophic lake mesocosms, effects were found on phytoplankton taxa (Desmodesmus sp. and Coelastrum sp.), on numerous zooplankton taxa, on chironomids and on the beetle Colymbetes fuscus, although at higher concentrations. The hemipteran Micronecta scholtzi was affected in both treatments. In addition, functional parameters such as organic matter decomposition or macrophyte growth were also affected at relatively low concentrations (NOEC 2 µg/L). Structural Equation Modelling was used to shed light on the indirect effects caused by azoxystrobin on the ecosystem. These results show that azoxystrobin is likely to pose structural and functional effects on Mediterranean wetland ecosystems at environmentally relevant concentrations. Moreover, it highlights the need to consider habitat-specific features when conducting ecotoxicological research at the population and community levels.


Assuntos
Fungicidas Industriais , Pirimidinas , Estrobilurinas , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Animais , Ecossistema , Fungicidas Industriais/toxicidade , Áreas Alagadas , Poluentes Químicos da Água/toxicidade , Fitoplâncton , Zooplâncton , Lagos , Água/farmacologia
4.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 30(40): 93014-93029, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37501028

RESUMO

The urban lagoons receive strong anthropic pressures and the tensions often coexist between the "urban" and the "natural," and this consequently generates pollution and risks to the environment and human health. Our main objective was to study the water quality and to assess the bacteriological and eutrophication risks in the temperate shallow urban lagoon of the Parque Unzué (Gualeguaychú, Argentina), and to predict these risks in climate change scenarios considering the temperature and the rains as indicators. This urban shallow lagoon is in a recreative multiuse park (Gualeguaychú city), in the floodplain of the Gualeguaychú river in the Center-East of Argentina (Neotropical region). Twenty-seven sampling in 3 sampling points (n = 81) were carried out during 2015-2019, and physicochemical and bacteriological parameters were measured. Phosphorus, organic matter, chlorophyll-a (Chl-a), and total coliforms (TC) frequently had a moderate and very high contamination factor (CF), and the pollution load index (PLI) indicated contamination with a frequency of 74.1 %. Moreover, the index (WQI) indicated poor (66.7 %) and good (33.3 %) water quality. Bacteriological and eutrophication predictive risk models showed an increase of the TC and the Chl-a concentration generating a current and future high risk of contamination of the lagoon under climate change scenarios that could generate ecosystemic function losses in the short-term.


Assuntos
Monitoramento Ambiental , Qualidade da Água , Humanos , Argentina , Eutrofização , Fósforo/análise , Medição de Risco
5.
Ecology ; 104(2): e3951, 2023 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36484732

RESUMO

Untangling the relationship between network complexity and ecological stability under climate change is an arduous challenge for theoretical and empirical ecology. Even more so, when considering extreme climatic events. Here, we studied the effects of extreme climatic events (heatwaves) on the complexity of realistic freshwater ecosystems using topological and quantitative trophic network metrics. Next, we linked changes in network complexity with the investigation of four stability components (temporal stability, resistance, resilience, and recovery) of community's functional, compositional, and energy flux stability. We found reduction in topological network complexity to be correlated with reduction of functional and compositional resistance. However, temperature-driven increase in link-weighted network complexity increased functional and energy flux recovery and resilience, but at the cost of increased compositional instability. Overall, we propose an overarching approach to elucidate the effects of climate change on multidimensional stability through the lens of network complexity, providing helpful insights for preserving ecosystems stability under climate change.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Água Doce , Mudança Climática , Temperatura
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(17): e2117364119, 2022 04 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35439049

RESUMO

Ecological communities are constantly exposed to multiple natural and anthropogenic disturbances. Multivariate composition (if recovered) has been found to need significantly more time to be regained after pulsed disturbance compared to univariate diversity metrics and functional endpoints. However, the mechanisms driving the different recovery times of communities to single and multiple disturbances remain unexplored. Here, we apply quantitative ecological network analyses to try to elucidate the mechanisms driving long-term community-composition dissimilarity and late-stage disturbance interactions at the community level. For this, we evaluate the effects of two pesticides, nutrient enrichment, and their interactions in outdoor mesocosms containing a complex freshwater community. We found changes in interactions strength to be strongly related to compositional changes and identified postdisturbance interaction-strength rewiring to be responsible for most of the observed compositional changes. Additionally, we found pesticide interactions to be significant in the long term only when both interaction strength and food-web architecture are reshaped by the disturbances. We suggest that quantitative network analysis has the potential to unveil ecological processes that prevent long-term community recovery.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Cadeia Alimentar
7.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 27(35): 44427-44439, 2020 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32767213

RESUMO

Microcystis is a frequent cyanobacterium bloom-forming with cosmopolitan distribution which can produce a hepatotoxin group called microcystins (MCs). These MCs are resistant to the traditional processes employed in the water treatment plants and they are often detected after conventional treatments. Because of this, the bio-removal studies have obtained a great interest in the last decades. In this work, a bacterial strain namely LG1 with the ability to remove microcystin-LR (MC-LR) under laboratory conditions was isolated from Rio de la Plata River and it was identified as Achromobacter spp. This ubiquitous bacterium was able to remove 79.5% MC-LR in 7 days with average removal time of 3.33 ± 0.08, 3.06 ± 0.05, and 2.77 ± 0.05 days at 28, 32, and 36 ± 1 °C, being higher at high temperature (36 °C) with an activation energy = 16.79 ± 1.99 kJ mol-1. LG1 grew better at higher temperature (from 28 to 36 ± 1 °C) increasing the specific growth rate (µ) and reducing 2-fold the lag phase duration (LPD) without significant differences (p > 0.05) between maximum population density (MPD). In addition, LG1 showed a lysis activity on two M. aeruginosa native strains in 7 days measured as chlorophyll a (Chl-a) concentration. The lysis activity increased around 2-fold when increasing the temperature from 28 to 36 ± 1 °C. This is the first report of an indigenous bacterium belonging to the genus Achromobacter spp. isolated from the Rio de la Plata River with the capacity to remove MC-LR and lysis activity on M. aeruginosa.


Assuntos
Achromobacter , Cianobactérias , Microcystis , Clorofila A , Toxinas Marinhas , Microcistinas , Temperatura
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