Transgenerational exposure to warming reduces the sensitivity to a pesticide under warming

Despite the increased attention for temporal aspects of stressor interactions and for effects of warming in ecotoxicological studies, we lack knowledge on how different exposure durations to warming may affect pesticide sensitivity. We tested how three types of exposure duration to 4 °C warming (acu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental pollution (1987) 2021-09, Vol.284, p.117217, Article 117217
Hauptverfasser: Meng, Shandong, Tran, Tam T., Delnat, Vienna, Stoks, Robby
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite the increased attention for temporal aspects of stressor interactions and for effects of warming in ecotoxicological studies, we lack knowledge on how different exposure durations to warming may affect pesticide sensitivity. We tested how three types of exposure duration to 4 °C warming (acute, developmental and transgenerational exposure to 24 °C vs 20 °C) shape the effect of the pesticide chlorpyrifos on two ecologically relevant fitness-related traits of mosquito larvae: heat tolerance and antipredator behaviour. Transgenerational (from the parental generation) and developmental (from the egg stage) warming appeared energetically more stressful than acute warming (from the final instar), because (i) only the latter resulted in an adaptive increase of heat tolerance, and (ii) especially developmental and transgenerational warming reduced the diving responsiveness and diving time. Exposure to chlorpyrifos decreased the heat tolerance, diving responsiveness and diving time. The impact of chlorpyrifos was lower at 24 °C than at 20 °C indicating that the expected increase in toxicity at 24 °C was overruled by the observed increase in pesticide degradation. Notably, although our results suggest that transgenerational warming was energetically more stressful, it did reduce the chlorpyrifos-induced negative effects at 24 °C on heat tolerance and the alarm escape response compared to acute warming. Our results provide important evidence that the exposure duration to warming may determine the impact of a pesticide under warming, thereby identifying a novel temporal aspect of stressor interactions in risk assessment. [Display omitted] •Chlorpyrifos decreased the heat tolerance, diving responsiveness and diving time.•The impact of chlorpyrifos was lower at 24 °C than at 20 °C because more degradation.•Transgenerational warming was energetically more stressful than acute warming.•Transgenerational warming reduced the pesticide impact compared to acute warming.•Our results highlight the importance of temporal aspects of stressor interactions. Under transgenerational exposure to warming the negative impact of chlorpyrifos was smaller than under acute warming.
ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117217