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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Risk assessment of pesticides has been based on direct toxic effects on aquatic organisms. Indirect effects
data are taken into account but with limitations, as it is frequently difficult to predict their real impacts
in the ecosystems. In this context the main aim of this work was to assess how the exposure to the
herbicide pendimethalin (Prowl®), under environmentally relevant concentrations, may compromise the
nutritional composition of food for a relevant group of primary consumers of freshwater food webs—the
daphnids, thus affecting their reproduction performance and subsequently the long-term sustainability
of active populations of this grazer. Therefore, Daphnia magna individuals were chronically exposed in a
clean medium to a control diet (NCF – i.e., non-contaminated green algae Raphidocelis subcapitata) and to a
contaminated diet (CF – i.e., the same monoalgal culture grown in a medium enriched with pendimethalin
in a concentration equivalent to the EC20 for growth inhibition of algae), during which reproductive
endpoints were assessed. The algae were analysed for protein, carbohydrate and fatty acid content. The
chemical composition of R. subcapitata in the CF revealed a slight decrease on total fatty acid levels, with
a particular decrease of essential !9 monounsaturated fatty acids. In contrast, the protein content was
high in the CF. D. magna exposed to CF experienced a 16% reduction in reproduction, measured as the
total number of offspring produced per female. Additionally, an internal pendimethalin body burden of
4.226 "g g−1 was accumulated by daphnids fed with CF. Hence, although it is difficult to discriminate the
contribution of the pesticide (as a toxic agent transferred through the food web) from that of the food with
a poor quality—compromised by the same pesticide, there are no doubts that, under environmentally
relevant concentrations of pesticides, both pathways may compromise the populations of freshwater
grazers in the long term, with consequences in the control of the primary productivity of these systems.
Description
Keywords
Pendimethalin Raphidocelis subcapitata Nutritional quality Freshwater trophic relations
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier