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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Multiple stressors in Mediterranean coastal wetland ecosystems : Influence of salinity and an insecticide on zooplankton communities under different temperature conditions
Marco VighiAndreu RicoPaul J. Van Den BrinkSusana RomoAlba Arenas-sánchezRoberto Júnio Pedroso DiasJéssica Andrade Vilas-boassubject
Mediterranean climateEnvironmental Risk AssessmentInsecticidesSalinityAquatic Ecology and Water Quality ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringSoil salinityHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesis0208 environmental biotechnologyBiodiversity02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesZooplanktonZooplanktonEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsClimate changeEcosystemPesticidesMultiple stressorsEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWIMEKbiologyEcologyfungiSalinizationPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthTemperatureQ Science (General)General MedicineGeneral ChemistryAquatische Ecologie en Waterkwaliteitsbeheerbiology.organism_classificationPollution020801 environmental engineeringSalinityCladoceraWetlandsCoastal lagoonsEnvironmental scienceMicrocosmdescription
Temperature increase, salinity intrusion and pesticide pollution have been suggested to be among the main stressors affecting the biodiversity of coastal wetland ecosystems. Here we assessed the single and combined effects of these stressors on zooplankton communities collected from a Mediterranean coastal lagoon. An indoor microcosm experiment was designed with temperature variation (20 °C and 30 °C), salinity (no addition, 2.5 g/L NaCl) and the insecticide chlorpyrifos (no addition, 1 μg/L) as treatments. The impact of these stressors was evaluated on water quality variables and on the zooplankton comunity (structure, diversity, abundance and taxa responses) for 28 days. This study shows that temperature is the main driver for zooplankton community change, followed by salinity and chlorpyrifos. The three stressors contributed to a decrease on zooplankton diversity. The increase of temperature contributed to an increase of zooplankton abundance. Salinity generally affected Cladocera, which resulted in a Copepoda increase at 20 °C, and a reduction in the abundance of all major zooplankton groups at 30 °C. The insecticide chlorpyrifos affected primarily Cladocera, altough the magnitude and duration of the direct and indirect effects caused by the insecticide substantially differed between the two temperature scenarios. Chlorpyrifos and salinity resulted in antagonistic effects on sensitive taxa (Cladocera) at 20 °C and 30 °C. This study shows that temperature can influence the direct and indirect effects of salinity and pesticides on zooplankton communities in Mediterranean coastal wetlands, and highlights vulnerable taxa and ecological responses that are expected to dominate under future global change scenarios.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-01-01 |