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Sci Rep


Title:Defective defence in Daphnia daughters: silver nanoparticles inhibit anti-predator defence in offspring but not in maternal Daphnia magna
Author(s):Hartmann S; Beasley A; Mozhayeva D; Engelhard C; Witte K;
Address:"Research Group of Ecology and Behavioural Biology, Institute of Biology, Department of Chemistry-Biology, University of Siegen, Adolf-Reichwein-Strasse 2, Siegen, 57076, Germany. Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, United Kingdom. Department of Chemistry-Biology, University of Siegen, Adolf-Reichwein-Strasse 2, Siegen, 57076, Germany. Research Group of Ecology and Behavioural Biology, Institute of Biology, Department of Chemistry-Biology, University of Siegen, Adolf-Reichwein-Strasse 2, Siegen, 57076, Germany. witte@biologie.uni-siegen.de"
Journal Title:Sci Rep
Year:2020
Volume:20200515
Issue:1
Page Number:8021 -
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-64652-7
ISSN/ISBN:2045-2322 (Electronic) 2045-2322 (Linking)
Abstract:"One major environmental problem of our time are emerging contaminants in the aquatic environment. While nanoparticles exhibit attractive features such as antimicrobial properties in the case of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs), earlier studies suggest that NPs are not completely filtered out at wastewater treatment plants and may therefore be continuously introduced into the aquatic environment. Although adverse effects of AgNPs on aquatic organisms have been extensively studied, there is still a lack of knowledge on how this chemical stressor interacts with natural cues on the maternal and subsequent generation of aquatic organisms. We tested whether AgNPs (NM-300K, 14.9 +/- 2.4 nm, concentration range: 2.5 microg/L - 20 microg/L) affect the kairomone-induced adaptive anti-predator defence mechanism in maternal Daphnia and their offspring. While maternal Daphnia developed typical anti-predator defence mechanisms when exposed to kairomones and AgNPs, their offspring could not develop such adaptive defensive traits. The lack of this defence mechanism in offspring could have dramatic negative consequences (e.g. reduced Daphnia population) for the entire complex food web in the aquatic ecosystem. For a realistic risk assessment, it is extremely important to test combinations of chemical stressors because aquatic organisms are exposed to several natural and artificial chemical stressors at the same time"
Keywords:Animals Daphnia/*drug effects/*physiology Environmental Exposure/adverse effects Metal Nanoparticles/*adverse effects/chemistry Pheromones *Predatory Behavior *Silver/adverse effects/chemistry;
Notes:"MedlineHartmann, Sarah Beasley, Anna Mozhayeva, Darya Engelhard, Carsten Witte, Klaudia eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't England 2020/05/18 Sci Rep. 2020 May 15; 10(1):8021. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-64652-7"

 
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