Coldsnow Kayla D, Mattes Brian M, Hintz William D, Relyea Rick A
Department of Biological Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 110 8th St., Troy, NY 12180, USA.
Environ Pollut. 2017 Mar;222:367-373. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2016.12.024. Epub 2017 Jan 6.
Organisms around the globe are experiencing novel environments created by human activities. One such disturbance of growing concern is the salinization of freshwater habitats from the application of road deicing salts, which creates salinity levels not experienced within the recent evolutionary history of most freshwater organisms. Moreover, salinization can induce trophic cascades and alter the structure of freshwater communities, but knowledge is still scarce about the ability of freshwater organisms to adapt to elevated salinity. We examined if a common zooplankton of freshwater lakes (Daphnia pulex) could evolve a tolerance to the most commonly used road deicing salt (sodium chloride, NaCl). Using a mesocosm experiment, we exposed freshwater communities containing Daphnia to five levels of NaCl (15, 100, 200, 500, and 1000 mg Cl L). After 2.5 months, we collected Daphnia from each mesocosm and raised them in the lab for three generations under low salt conditions (15 mg Cl L). We then conducted a time-to-death experiment with varying concentrations of NaCl (30, 1300, 1500, 1700, 1900 mg Cl L) to test for evolved tolerance. All Daphnia populations exhibited high survival when subsequently exposed to the lowest salt concentration (30 mg Cl L). At the intermediate concentration (1300 mg Cl L), however, populations previously exposed to elevated concentrations (i.e.100-1000 mg Cl L) had higher survival than populations previously exposed to natural background levels (15 mg Cl L). All populations survived poorly when subsequently exposed to the highest concentrations (1500, 1700, and 1900 mg Cl L). Our results show that the evolution of tolerance to moderate levels of salt can occur within 2.5 months, or 5-10 generations, in Daphnia. Given the importance of Daphnia in freshwater food webs, such evolved tolerance might allow Daphnia to buffer food webs from the impacts of freshwater salinization.
全球的生物都在经历着由人类活动创造的新环境。一个日益受到关注的干扰因素是道路除冰盐的使用导致淡水栖息地盐化,这使得大多数淡水生物在最近的进化历史中未曾经历过这样的盐度水平。此外,盐化会引发营养级联反应并改变淡水群落的结构,但对于淡水生物适应盐度升高的能力,我们仍然知之甚少。我们研究了淡水湖泊中常见的浮游动物(大型溞)是否能够进化出对最常用的道路除冰盐(氯化钠,NaCl)的耐受性。通过中宇宙实验,我们将含有大型溞的淡水群落暴露于五个NaCl水平(15、100、200、500和1000毫克氯/升)。2.5个月后,我们从每个中宇宙收集大型溞,并在低盐条件(15毫克氯/升)下在实验室中饲养三代。然后,我们用不同浓度的NaCl(30、1300、1500、1700、1900毫克氯/升)进行了致死时间实验,以测试进化出的耐受性。当随后暴露于最低盐浓度(30毫克氯/升)时,所有大型溞种群都表现出高存活率。然而,在中等浓度(1300毫克氯/升)下,先前暴露于较高浓度(即100 - 1000毫克氯/升)的种群比先前暴露于自然背景水平(15毫克氯/升)的种群具有更高的存活率。当随后暴露于最高浓度(1500、1700和1900毫克氯/升)时,所有种群的存活率都很低。我们的结果表明,大型溞对中等盐度水平的耐受性进化可以在2.5个月内,即5 - 10代内发生。鉴于大型溞在淡水食物网中的重要性,这种进化出的耐受性可能使大型溞缓冲食物网免受淡水盐化的影响。