Department of Biological Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849-5407, USA.
J Chem Ecol. 2010 Jan;36(1):46-58. doi: 10.1007/s10886-009-9730-5. Epub 2010 Jan 28.
Heavy metals are an important class of pollutants with both lethal and sublethal effects on organisms. The latter are receiving increased attention, as these may have harmful ecological outcomes. For example, recent explorations of heavy metals in freshwater habitats reveal that they can modify chemical communication between individuals, resulting in "info-disruption" that can impact ecological relationships within and between species. Info-disruption can affect animal behavior and social structure, which in turn can modify both intraspecies and interspecies interactions. In terrestrial habitats, info-disruption by metals is not well studied, but recent demonstrations of chemical signaling between plants via both roots and volatile organic molecules provide potential opportunities for info-disruption. Metals in terrestrial habitats also can form elemental plant defenses, in which they can defend a plant against natural enemies. For example, hyperaccumulation of metals by terrestrial plants has been shown to provide defensive benefits, although in almost all known cases the metals are not anthropogenic pollutants but are naturally present in soils inhabited by these plants. Info-disruption among microbes is another arena in which metal pollutants may have ecological effects, as recent discoveries regarding quorum sensing in bacteria provide an avenue for metals to affect interactions among bacteria or between bacteria and other organisms. Metal pollutants also may influence immune responses of organisms, and thus affect pathogen/host relationships. Immunomodulation (modification of immune system function) has been tied to some metal pollutants, although specific metals may boost or reduce immune system function depending on dose. Finally, the study of metal pollutants is complicated by their frequent occurrence as mixtures, either with other metals or with organic pollutants. Most studies of metal pollutants focus on single metals and therefore oversimplify complex field conditions. Study of pollutant impacts on chemical ecology also are difficult due to the necessity of studying effects at varying ecological scales: "dynamic scaling" of chemical ecology studies is rarely done completely. It is clear that much remains to be learned about how heavy metal pollution impacts organisms, and that exciting new research frontiers are available for experimental exploration.
重金属是一类重要的污染物,对生物具有致死和亚致死效应。后者越来越受到关注,因为它们可能产生有害的生态后果。例如,最近对淡水生境中重金属的研究表明,它们可以改变个体之间的化学通讯,导致“信息中断”,从而影响物种内和物种间的生态关系。信息中断会影响动物的行为和社会结构,进而改变种内和种间的相互作用。在陆地生境中,金属引起的信息中断尚未得到很好的研究,但最近通过植物的根和挥发性有机分子进行化学信号传递的研究表明,存在信息中断的潜在机会。陆地生境中的金属也可以形成元素植物防御,通过这种防御,植物可以抵御天敌。例如,已经表明陆地植物对金属的超积累为植物提供了防御益处,尽管在几乎所有已知情况下,这些金属不是人为污染物,而是这些植物所居住的土壤中天然存在的。金属污染物也可能对微生物之间的信息中断产生生态影响,因为最近关于细菌群体感应的发现为金属影响细菌之间或细菌与其他生物之间的相互作用提供了途径。金属污染物还可能影响生物的免疫反应,从而影响病原体/宿主关系。免疫调节(免疫系统功能的改变)与一些金属污染物有关,尽管具体的金属可能会根据剂量增强或降低免疫系统的功能。最后,由于金属污染物经常以混合物的形式存在,无论是与其他金属还是与有机污染物混合,因此金属污染物的研究变得复杂。大多数金属污染物的研究都集中在单一金属上,因此过于简化了复杂的现场条件。由于需要在不同的生态尺度上研究效应,因此研究污染物对化学生态学的影响也很困难:化学生态学研究的“动态尺度”很少完全完成。显然,关于重金属污染如何影响生物,还有很多需要了解的地方,并且为实验探索提供了令人兴奋的新研究前沿。