Data from: Detecting copper toxicity in sediments: from the sub-individual level to the population level
1.Sediments accumulate chemicals that can be toxic to biota and often contribute to aquatic ecosystem decline. Measuring mortality in laboratory-bred organisms is a common way to assess sediment toxicity. However, mortality-based responses of resilient laboratory organisms may not reflect indigenous...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1.Sediments accumulate chemicals that can be toxic to biota and often
contribute to aquatic ecosystem decline. Measuring mortality in
laboratory-bred organisms is a common way to assess sediment toxicity.
However, mortality-based responses of resilient laboratory organisms may
not reflect indigenous macroinvertebrate responses, which can be
relatively more sensitive to sediment toxicants. A possible solution is to
also measure responses at the sub-individual level. 2.Several organism
responses to sediment copper toxicity were assessed in a field-based
microcosm. Responses of laboratory-bred chironomids and snails deployed in
microcosms were compared at sub-individual (metabolomic and gene
expression), individual (survival and dry weight) and population
(reproduction) levels, and contrasted to the abundance of colonizing
macroinvertebrates in the microcosms. 3.Colonizing macroinvertebrate
abundance showed a range of sensitivities based on EC50 (effect dose 50%
change). Chironomidae made up 94.5% of the microcosm macroinvertebrates,
with Paratanytarsus the most sensitive genus (EC50: 89 mg/kg copper) and
Procladius the least sensitive (EC50: 681 mg/kg). 4.Survival of
laboratory-bred organisms was the least sensitive response, comparable to
decreased abundance of the least sensitive macroinvertebrate. Juvenile
production in the snail, Potamopyrgus antipodarum, was the most sensitive
population level response (EC50: 121 mg/kg), in contrast the snail
Physella acuta was relatively more tolerant (EC50: 298 mg/kg). 5.Changes
in sub-individual responses (gene expression and metabolite abundance) in
laboratory-bred chironomid, Chironomus tepperi, were evident at 60 mg/kg.
These changes likely reflect the direct effects of copper exposure and
represent metal-specific responses. 6.Synthesis and applications. We
showed that copper toxicity in sediments could be readily detected through
changes in gene expression and metabolites in laboratory-bred chironomids
exposed in field-based microcosms. These responses were more sensitive
than mortality, and detected copper levels that caused microcosm
chironomid populations to decline. These novel approaches will provide
managers with new tools to better assess sediment toxicity. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.3kf74 |