Literature DB >> 34288209

Widespread agrochemicals differentially affect zooplankton biomass and community structure.

Marie-Pier Hébert1,2,3, Vincent Fugère1,2,3,4,5, Beatrix E Beisner2,3,4, Naíla Barbosa da Costa2,6, Rowan D H Barrett1,2,4,7, Graham Bell1,4, B Jesse Shapiro2,6,8, Viviane Yargeau9, Andrew Gonzalez1,4, Gregor F Fussmann1,2,4.   

Abstract

Anthropogenic environmental change is causing habitat deterioration at unprecedented rates in freshwater ecosystems. Despite increasing more rapidly than other agents of global change, synthetic chemical pollution -including agrochemicals such as pesticides- has received relatively little attention in freshwater community and ecosystem ecology. Determining the combined effects of multiple agrochemicals on complex biological properties remains a major challenge, requiring a cross-field integration of ecology and ecotoxicology. Using a large-scale array of experimental ponds, we investigated the response of zooplankton community properties (biomass, composition, and diversity metrics) to the individual and joint presence of three globally widespread agrochemicals: the herbicide glyphosate, the neonicotinoid insecticide imidacloprid, and nutrient fertilizers. We tracked temporal variation in zooplankton biomass and community structure (i.e., composition and diversity) along single and combined pesticide gradients (each spanning eight levels), under low (mesotrophic) and high (eutrophic) nutrient-enriched conditions, and quantified (i) response threshold concentrations, (ii) agrochemical interactions, and (iii) community resistance and recovery. We found that the biomass of major zooplankton groups differed in their sensitivity to pesticides: ≥0.3 mg/L glyphosate elicited long-lasting declines in rotifer communities, both pesticides impaired copepods (≥3 µg/L imidacloprid and ≥5.5 mg/L glyphosate), whereas some cladocerans were highly tolerant to pesticide contamination. Strong interactive effects of pesticides were only recorded in ponds treated with the combination of the highest doses. Overall, glyphosate was the most influential driver of aggregate community properties of zooplankton, with biomass and community structure responding rapidly but recovering unequally over time. Total community biomass showed little resistance when first exposed to glyphosate, but rapidly recovered and even increased with glyphosate concentration over time; in contrast, taxon richness decreased in more contaminated ponds but failed to recover. Our results indicate that the biomass of tolerant taxa compensated for the loss of sensitive species after the first exposure, conferring greater community resistance upon a subsequent contamination event; a case of pollution-induced community tolerance in freshwater animals. These findings suggest that zooplankton biomass may be more resilient to agrochemical pollution than community structure; yet all community properties measured in this study were affected at glyphosate concentrations below common water quality guidelines in North America. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  agricultural pollution; ecological stability; freshwater ecosystems; herbicide glyphosate; multiple stressors; neonicotinoid insecticide imidacloprid; pollution-induced community tolerance; resistance and recovery; synthetic pesticides; water quality guidelines

Year:  2021        PMID: 34288209     DOI: 10.1002/eap.2423

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Appl        ISSN: 1051-0761            Impact factor:   4.657


  2 in total

1.  Warming winters in lakes: Later ice onset promotes consumer overwintering and shapes springtime planktonic food webs.

Authors:  Marie-Pier Hébert; Beatrix E Beisner; Milla Rautio; Gregor F Fussmann
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-11-30       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  A Glyphosate-Based Herbicide Cross-Selects for Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Bacterioplankton Communities.

Authors:  Naíla Barbosa da Costa; Marie-Pier Hébert; Vincent Fugère; Yves Terrat; Gregor F Fussmann; Andrew Gonzalez; B Jesse Shapiro
Journal:  mSystems       Date:  2022-03-10       Impact factor: 7.324

  2 in total

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