Institute of Agricultural and Forest Environment, Polish Academy of Sciences, Bukowska 19, PL-60-809, Poznań, Poland.
Department of Ecology, Biogeochemistry and Environmental Protection, Faculty of Biological Science, University of Wrocław, Kanonia 6/8, PL-50-328, Wrocław, Poland.
Environ Pollut. 2020 Jul;262:114064. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114064. Epub 2020 Mar 13.
Stoichiometric, trophic and ecotoxicological data have traditionally been acquired from patterns of variation in elemental traits of whole invertebrate bodies, whereas the critical issue of the extracellular origin of some portion of elements, such as those present in ingested food and internal organs, has been ignored. Here we investigated an unexplored, yet crucial, question relating to whether, and to what degree, metals from two major body fractions: exoskeleton (elytra) and internal (body organs with gut material present in abdomens), are correlated with each other in wild populations of the largest European saproxylic insect, the Stag Beetle Lucanus cervus, and how metals from these two fractions vary with insect size and local habitat conditions. We examined the continent-wide variation in the concentrations of 12 chemical elements (Ca, Mg, K, Na, Mn, Fe, Zn, Cu, As, Cd, Pb and Ni) measured in the elytra and abdomen of specimens from 28 populations inhabiting an urban-woodland habitat gradient across the species' entire distributional range from Spain to Russia. Across populations, elemental concentrations (except Ni and Pb) were 2-13 times higher in abdominal samples than in elytra, and the magnitude of these differences was related to both insect size and local habitat conditions. Smaller individuals from both woodland and urban habitat tended to have higher concentrations of trace elements (Zn, As, Cd, Pb and Ni). The concentration of only six elements (Mg, K, Na, Mn, Cd and Ni) was correlated in the elytra and abdomen at the individual and population levels, implying a limitation to the broader applicability of elytra as a surrogate for internal elemental pools. We highlight that in non-feeding adult saproxylic beetles, minerals, acquired during the larval stage, may be concentrated in the large quantities of residual body fat.
传统上,化学计量学、营养和生态毒理学数据是通过研究整个无脊椎动物体元素特征的变化模式获得的,而对于某些元素(如摄入的食物和内部器官中的元素)的细胞外来源这一关键问题则被忽视了。在这里,我们研究了一个尚未被探索但至关重要的问题,即来自两个主要身体部位的金属(外骨骼(鞘翅)和内部(带有肠道物质的身体器官))在野生欧洲最大的腐木昆虫——鹿角大兜虫种群中彼此之间是否以及在何种程度上相关,以及这些两个部位的金属如何随昆虫体型和当地栖息地条件而变化。我们研究了 28 个种群的样本中 12 种化学元素(Ca、Mg、K、Na、Mn、Fe、Zn、Cu、As、Cd、Pb 和 Ni)浓度的大陆范围变化,这些种群栖息在从西班牙到俄罗斯的物种分布范围内的城市-林地生境梯度上。在种群间,腹部样本中的元素浓度(除了 Ni 和 Pb)比鞘翅中的浓度高 2-13 倍,而且这些差异的幅度与昆虫体型和当地栖息地条件有关。来自林地和城市生境的较小个体往往具有更高的痕量元素(Zn、As、Cd、Pb 和 Ni)浓度。只有 6 种元素(Mg、K、Na、Mn、Cd 和 Ni)在个体和种群水平上在鞘翅和腹部之间呈相关性,这意味着鞘翅作为内部元素池的替代物的广泛适用性受到限制。我们强调,在非摄食的成年腐木甲虫中,幼虫阶段获得的矿物质可能会集中在大量残留的体脂肪中。