Baudy Patrick, Zubrod Jochen P, Konschak Marco, Weil Mirco, Schulz Ralf, Bundschuh Mirco
Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Koblenz-Landau, Fortstraße 7, 76829 Landau/Palatinate, Germany.
Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Koblenz-Landau, Fortstraße 7, 76829 Landau/Palatinate, Germany.
Environ Pollut. 2017 Mar;222:458-464. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2016.11.079. Epub 2016 Dec 21.
Leaf-shredding amphipods play a critical role in the ecosystem function of leaf litter breakdown, a key process in many low order streams. Fungicides, however, may adversely influence shredders' behavior and the functions they provide, while there is only limited knowledge concerning effects on their reproductive performance. To assess the latter, a semi-static 56-day partial life-cycle bioassay using the model shredder Hyalella azteca (n = 30) was performed applying two environmentally relevant concentrations of a model fungicide mixture (i.e., 5 and 25 μg/L) composed of five fungicides with different modes of toxic action. Variables related to the food processing (leaf consumption and feces production), growth (body length and dry weight), energy reserves (lipid content), and reproduction (amplexus pairs, number and length of offspring) were determined to understand potential implications in the organisms' energy budget. While the fungicides did not affect leaf consumption, both fungicide treatments significantly reduced amphipods' feces production (∼20%) compared to the control. This observation suggests an increased food utilization to counteract the elevated and stress-related energy demand: although growth as well as energy reserves were unaffected, amplexus pairs were less frequently observed in both fungicide treatments (∼50-100%) suggesting a tradeoff regarding energy allocation favoring the maintenance of fundamental functions at the organism level over reproduction. As a result, the time to release of first offspring was delayed in both fungicide treatments (7 and 14 days) and the median number of offspring was significantly lower in the 25-μg/L treatment (100%), whereas offspring length remained unaffected. The results of this study thus indicate that chronic fungicide exposures can negatively impact shredders' reproductive performance. This may translate into lower abundances and thus a reduced contribution to leaf litter breakdown in fungicide-impacted streams with potentially far-reaching consequences for detritus-based food webs.
碎叶型双足类动物在落叶分解的生态系统功能中起着关键作用,而落叶分解是许多低阶溪流中的一个关键过程。然而,杀菌剂可能会对碎叶型双足类动物的行为及其发挥的功能产生不利影响,而关于其对生殖性能影响的了解却十分有限。为了评估后者,我们使用模式碎叶型双足类动物阿氏透明摇蚊(n = 30)进行了一项为期56天的半静态部分生命周期生物测定,应用了两种与环境相关浓度的由五种具有不同毒性作用模式的杀菌剂组成的模式杀菌剂混合物(即5和25μg/L)。测定了与食物处理(叶片消耗和粪便产生)、生长(体长和干重)、能量储备(脂质含量)和繁殖(抱对、后代数量和长度)相关的变量,以了解对生物体能量预算的潜在影响。虽然杀菌剂没有影响叶片消耗,但与对照相比,两种杀菌剂处理均显著降低了双足类动物的粪便产生量(约20%)。这一观察结果表明,为了抵消因压力增加而导致的能量需求升高,食物利用率有所提高:尽管生长和能量储备未受影响,但在两种杀菌剂处理中观察到的抱对频率较低(约50 - 100%),这表明在能量分配方面存在权衡,即更倾向于在生物体水平维持基本功能而非繁殖。结果,两种杀菌剂处理中首次产仔的时间均延迟(7天和14天),并且在25μg/L处理中后代的中位数显著更低(100%),而后代长度未受影响。因此,本研究结果表明,长期接触杀菌剂会对碎叶型双足类动物的生殖性能产生负面影响。这可能会导致丰度降低,从而减少对受杀菌剂影响溪流中落叶分解的贡献,对基于碎屑的食物网可能产生深远影响。