Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, Aiken, South Carolina, USA.
Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Environ Toxicol Chem. 2018 Oct;37(10):2660-2669. doi: 10.1002/etc.4228. Epub 2018 Aug 23.
Species with complex life cycles are susceptible to environmental stressors across life stages, but the carryover and latent effects between stages remain understudied. For species with biphasic life histories, such as pond-breeding amphibians, delayed effects of aquatic conditions can influence terrestrial juveniles and adults directly or indirectly, usually mediated through fitness correlates such as body size. We collected adult southern toads (Anaxyrus terrestris) from 2 source populations-a natural reference wetland and a metal-contaminated industrial wetland-and exposed their offspring to 2 aquatic stressors (a metal contaminant, copper [Cu], and a dragonfly predator cue) in outdoor mesocosms (n = 24). We then reared metamorphs in terraria for 5 mo to examine delayed effects of early life stage environmental conditions on juvenile performance, growth, and survival. Larval exposure to Cu, as well as having parents from a contaminated wetland, resulted in smaller size at metamorphosis-a response later negated by compensatory growth. Although Cu exposure and parental source did not affect larval survival, we observed latent effects of these stressors on juvenile survival, with elevated Cu conditions and metal-contaminated parents reducing postmetamorphic survival. Parental source and larval Cu exposure affected performance at metamorphosis through carryover effects on body size but, 1 mo later, latent effects of parental source and larval predator exposure directly (i.e., not via body size) influenced performance. The carryover and latent effects of parental source population and aquatic Cu level on postmetamorphic survival and juvenile performance highlight the importance of conducting studies across life stages and generations. Environ Toxicol Chem 2018;37:2660-2669. © 2018 SETAC.
具有复杂生活史的物种在各个生命阶段都容易受到环境胁迫的影响,但阶段之间的传递和潜在效应仍研究不足。对于具有双相生活史的物种,如池塘繁殖的两栖动物,水生条件的延迟效应可以直接或间接地影响陆地幼体和成虫,通常通过与健康相关的因素(如体型)来介导。我们从 2 个来源种群(一个自然参考湿地和一个受金属污染的工业湿地)收集了成年南方蟾蜍(Anaxyrus terrestris),并将其后代暴露于 2 种水生胁迫源(金属污染物铜[Cu]和蜻蜓捕食者线索)在户外中培养箱(n=24)。然后,我们将变态后的个体在 terraria 中饲养 5 个月,以研究早期生命阶段环境条件对幼体性能、生长和存活的延迟影响。幼虫暴露于 Cu 以及来自污染湿地的父母会导致变形时体型较小——这种反应后来被补偿性生长所抵消。尽管 Cu 暴露和父母来源并未影响幼虫的存活率,但我们观察到这些胁迫源对幼体存活率的潜在影响,高 Cu 条件和受金属污染的父母会降低变态后的存活率。父母来源和幼虫 Cu 暴露通过对体型的传递效应影响变形时的性能,但 1 个月后,父母来源和幼虫捕食者暴露的潜在效应直接(即不通过体型)影响性能。亲代种群和水生 Cu 水平对变态后存活和幼体性能的传递和潜在效应强调了在整个生命阶段和世代中进行研究的重要性。环境毒理化学 2018;37:2660-2669。©2018 SETAC。