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Ecotoxicol Environ Saf


Title:Infodisruptions in predator-prey interactions: xenobiotics alter microcrustaceans responses to fish infochemicals
Author(s):Gutierrez MF; Paggi JC; Gagneten AM;
Address:"Instituto Nacional de Limnologia, CONICET-UNL, Ciudad Universitaria, 3000 Santa Fe, Argentina. fgutierrez@inali.unl.edu.ar"
Journal Title:Ecotoxicol Environ Saf
Year:2012
Volume:20120430
Issue:
Page Number:11 - 16
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2012.04.001
ISSN/ISBN:1090-2414 (Electronic) 0147-6513 (Linking)
Abstract:"Chemical communication is one of the most important ecological phenomena promoting the maintenance of ecosystem dynamics. In predator-prey interactions, mediation signals allow prey to detect their predators and can be crucial in the process of avoiding them. Since organisms in many natural waterbodies are often subjected to anthropogenic stressors, it is hypothesised that low concentrations of xenobiotic compounds can disturb this chemical communication, acting as infodisruptors. This study analyzes whether two anthropogenic pollutants (chromium and an insecticide) interfere in two freshwater predator-prey interactions, by altering the behavioural responses of a cladoceran and a copepod species to a fish chemical cue. The concentrations tested were lower than those considered innocuous under international water quality guidelines, and two types of behaviour were analysed: escape ability and depth selection in an artificial water column. Both species tested demonstrated a higher escape ability when exposed to the cue than when they were not exposed. Xenobiotics modified the responses of the copepod in opposite ways: chromium inhibited this behaviour and the insecticide prompted a higher than expected level of escape ability. The depth selection patterns were different between N. conifer and C. dubia. Fish kairomones did not modify them, however chromium and the insecticide caused important alterations in both cases. Such disruptions would be detrimental to the organisms' life cycle trajectories, which, in natural systems, would cause longterm damage in trophic structure and in evolutionary processes"
Keywords:"Animals Aquatic Organisms/drug effects Behavior, Animal/*drug effects Biological Evolution Copepoda Ecology Ecosystem Fishes Food Chain Fresh Water Insecticides/*toxicity Pheromones/pharmacology Water Pollutants, Chemical/*toxicity Xenobiotics/*toxicity;"
Notes:"MedlineGutierrez, Maria Florencia Paggi, Juan Cesar Gagneten, Ana Maria eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Netherlands 2012/05/04 Ecotoxicol Environ Saf. 2012 Jul; 81:11-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2012.04.001. Epub 2012 Apr 30"

 
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