RESUMO
Freshwaters are highly threatened ecosystems that are vulnerable to chemical pollution and climate change. Freshwater taxa vary in their sensitivity to chemicals and changes in species composition can potentially affect the sensitivity of assemblages to chemical exposure. Here we explore the potential consequences of future climate change on the composition and sensitivity of freshwater macroinvertebrate assemblages to chemical stressors using the UK as a case study. Macroinvertebrate assemblages under end of century (2080-2100) and baseline (1980-2000) climate conditions were predicted for 608 UK sites for four climate scenarios corresponding to mean temperature changes of 1.28 to 3.78°C. Freshwater macroinvertebrate toxicity data were collated for 19 chemicals and the hierarchical species sensitivity distribution model was used to predict the sensitivity of untested taxa using relatedness within a Bayesian approach. All four future climate scenarios shifted assemblage compositions, increasing the prevalence of Mollusca, Crustacea and Oligochaeta species, and the insect taxa of Odonata, Chironomidae, and Baetidae species. Contrastingly, decreases were projected for Plecoptera, Ephemeroptera (except for Baetidae) and Coleoptera species. Shifts in taxonomic composition were associated with changes in the percentage of species at risk from chemical exposure. For the 3.78°C climate scenario, 76% of all assemblages became more sensitive to chemicals and for 18 of the 19 chemicals, the percentage of species at risk increased. Climate warming-induced increases in sensitivity were greatest for assemblages exposed to metals and were dependent on baseline assemblage composition, which varied spatially. Climate warming is predicted to result in changes in the use, environmental exposure and toxicity of chemicals. Here we show that, even in the absence of these climate-chemical interactions, shifts in species composition due to climate warming will increase chemical risk and that the impact of chemical pollution on freshwater macroinvertebrate biodiversity may double or quadruple by the end of the 21st century.
Assuntos
Ecossistema , Poluentes Ambientais , Animais , Teorema de Bayes , Biodiversidade , Poluição Ambiental , Invertebrados , RiosRESUMO
Ecological risk assessments tend to focus on contaminant effects on single species in isolation. However, additional effects from interactions between species (e.g., predator-prey interactions) may also occur in natural systems. The present study investigated the consequences of sublethal contaminant effects in prey on predator-prey interactions, particularly the interaction between prey behavioral changes and predation by predators with different hunting strategies. Ambush (Ischnura elegans Vander Linden [Insecta, Odonata]) and active (Notonecta glauca Linnaeus [Insecta, Heteroptera]) predator species were used in conjunction with three prey species (Asellus aquaticus Linnaeus [Crustacea, Isopoda], Cloion dipterum Linnaeus [Insecta, Ephemeroptera], and Chironomus riparius Meigen [Insecta, Diptera]). Immobilized prey demonstrated the importance of prey behavior for determining predation rates for both single- and multiple-prey species. Chironomus riparius was less responsive following exposure to cadmium, becoming more vulnerableto attack by the active but not the ambush predator. Some evidence was also observed for reduced general activity in C. dipterum following cadmium exposure. Sublethal exposure of prey did not affect the prey choice of active predators, possibly because of prey behavioral changes being insufficient to influence their relative availabilities. However, cadmium exposure of prey did alter their susceptibility to ambush predators. There was a reduced proportion of C. dipterum and an increased proportion of A. aquaticus in the diet of ambush predators, possibly because of reduced activity in C. dipterum affecting their relative encounter rates with predators. Sublethal exposures can therefore result in reduced prey survival that would not be predicted by single-species toxicity tests.
Assuntos
Cádmio/toxicidade , Monitoramento Ambiental , Insetos/metabolismo , Comportamento Predatório , Testes de Toxicidade , Animais , Ecologia , Medição de RiscoRESUMO
Hydrophobic contaminants accumulate within aquatic sediments, hence pelagic predators may have limited direct contact with such compounds, but can be exposed via their benthic prey (i.e., via dietary exposure). Here we examine the importance of feeding behaviors of both prey (sediment ingesters or noningesters) and predators (piercers or engulfers) in determining the extent of dietary exposure and toxic effects. A freshwater macroinvertebrate system was used, consisting of two predator species, a piercer (Notonecta glauca) and an engulfer (Ischnura elegans), and three prey species, a sediment noningester (Cloëon dipterum) and two sediment ingesters (Asellus aquaticus, Chironomus riparius). Predators were fed prey previously exposed to artificial sediment dosed with 30 microg/g of 14C benzophenone. The piercer predator accumulated more benzophenone from sediment ingester compared to sediment noningester prey, whereas the engulfer predator accumulated a similar concentration for all three prey species. Toxic effects, in terms of reduced feeding rate, were only observed with the engulfer feeding on sediment noningesters, probably due to the interaction between the narcotic mode of action of benzophenone and predator hunting strategy. The importance of dietary exposure in risk assessments may therefore depend on exposure pathways of prey, feeding behaviors of predators, and the contaminant's toxic mode of action.