Center for the Environmental Implications of NanoTechnology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, United States.
Center for Reservoir and Aquatic Systems Research (CRASR), Baylor University, Waco, Texas 76798, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2020 Aug 18;54(16):10170-10180. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.0c02197. Epub 2020 Jul 30.
Freshwater ecosystems are exposed to engineered nanoparticles through municipal and industrial wastewater-effluent discharges and agricultural nonpoint source runoff. Because previous work has shown that engineered nanoparticles from these sources can accumulate in freshwater algal assemblages, we hypothesized that nanoparticles may affect the biology of primary consumers by altering the processing of two critical nutrients associated with growth and survivorship, nitrogen and phosphorus. We tested this hypothesis by measuring the excretion rates of nitrogen and phosphorus of , a ubiquitous pulmonate snail that grazes heavily on periphyton, exposed to either copper or gold engineered nanoparticles for 6 months in an outdoor wetland mesocosm experiment. Chronic nanoparticle exposure doubled nutrient excretion when compared to the control. Gold nanoparticles increased nitrogen and phosphorus excretion rates more than copper nanoparticles, but overall, both nanoparticles led to higher consumer excretion, despite contrasting particle stability and physiochemical properties. Snails in mesocosms enriched with nitrogen and phosphorus had overall higher excretion rates than ones in ambient (no nutrients added) mesocosms. Stimulation patterns were different between nitrogen and phosphorus excretion, which could have implications for the resulting nutrient ratio in the water column. These results suggest that low concentrations of engineered nanoparticles could alter the metabolism of consumers and increase consumer-mediated nutrient recycling rates, potentially intensifying eutrophication in aquatic systems, for example, the increased persistence of algal blooms as observed in our mesocosm experiment.
淡水生态系统通过城市和工业废水排放以及农业非点源径流暴露于工程纳米粒子中。因为之前的工作表明,这些来源的工程纳米粒子可以在淡水藻类组合中积累,所以我们假设纳米粒子可能通过改变与生长和生存相关的两种关键营养素(氮和磷)的处理来影响初级消费者的生物学。我们通过测量暴露于户外湿地中 6 个月的铜或金工程纳米粒子的一种普遍存在的肺螺类蜗牛的氮和磷排泄率来测试这一假设,该蜗牛大量摄食周丛生物。与对照组相比,慢性纳米颗粒暴露使营养物排泄增加了一倍。金纳米粒子比铜纳米粒子更能提高氮和磷的排泄率,但总的来说,两种纳米粒子都导致了更高的消费者排泄率,尽管颗粒稳定性和物理化学性质不同。富氮和磷的中培养箱中的蜗牛的总排泄率高于中培养箱中(未添加养分)的蜗牛。氮和磷排泄之间的刺激模式不同,这可能对水柱中营养物的比例产生影响。这些结果表明,低浓度的工程纳米粒子可能会改变消费者的新陈代谢并增加消费者介导的营养物质再循环率,从而加剧水生系统的富营养化,例如,我们的中培养箱实验中观察到的藻类大量繁殖的持续时间延长。