Experimental evidence of contamination driven shrimp population dynamics: Susceptibility of populations to spatial isolation

Contamination is likely to affect the composition of an ecological landscape, leading to the rupture of ecological connectivity among habitats (ecological fragmentation), which may impact on the distribution, persistence and abundance of populations. In the current study, different scenarios within...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-05, Vol.820, p.153225-153225, Article 153225
Hauptverfasser: Salvatierra, David, Rodríguez-Ruiz, Ángela, Cordero, Andrea, López-Doval, Julio, Baldó, Francisco, Blasco, Julián, Araújo, Cristiano V.M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Contamination is likely to affect the composition of an ecological landscape, leading to the rupture of ecological connectivity among habitats (ecological fragmentation), which may impact on the distribution, persistence and abundance of populations. In the current study, different scenarios within a spatially heterogeneous landscape were simulated in the Heterogeneous Multi-Habitat Assay System (HeMHAS) to evaluate the potential effect that contamination (copper at 0.5 and 25 μg/L) might have on habitat selection by the estuarine shrimp Palaemon varians in combination with two other ecological factors: predator presence and food availability. As a result, P. varians detected and avoided copper; however, in the presence of the predation signal, shrimps shifted their response by moving to previously avoided regions, even if this resulted in a higher exposure to contamination. When encouraged to move towards environments with a high availability of food, a lower connectivity among the shrimp populations isolated by both contamination and predation risk simultaneously was evidenced, when compared to populations isolated only by the risk of predation. These results indicate that contamination might: (i) trigger avoidance in shrimps, (ii) prevent colonization of attractive foraging areas, (iii) enhance populations' isolation and (iv), make populations more susceptible to local extinction. [Display omitted] •Contamination showed to be a population distribution driver at the landscape scale.•Anti-predator and foraging behaviors were influenced by contamination.•Contamination makes it more difficult to colonize new attractive areas.•The HeMHAS versatile version #2 is suitable to test chemically heterogeneous areas.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153225