학술논문

Cyanobacterial effects on an aquatic keystone grazer are reshaped by presence of the herbicide atrazine.
Document Type
Article
Source
Freshwater Biology. Feb2024, Vol. 69 Issue 2, p212-225. 14p.
Subject
*ATRAZINE
*HERBICIDES
*AGRICULTURAL pollution
*DAPHNIA
*CYANOBACTERIAL blooms
*ENVIRONMENTAL management
Language
ISSN
0046-5070
Abstract
As cyanobacterial blooms and herbicide pollution, which are often detected in eutrophic waters, can separately jeopardise zooplankton populations, there is an urgent and on‐going need to understand the strength and direction of their interactive effects. This is a crucial step toward realistic risk‐evaluation of agricultural pollution in eutrophic waterbodies.In this study, we evaluated how the herbicide, atrazine (ATZ), alters the effects of cyanobacterial food on the zooplankter, Daphnia magna.We found survival time of Daphnia decreased with increasing amounts of Microcystis in their diets, and the magnitude of this cyanobacterial effect was independent of ATZ. In contrast, ATZ exposure triggered faster growth and larger body size in Daphnia fed diets containing Microcystis compared to those fed the good‐food diet. Although toxic Microcystis reduced the overall reproductive output of Daphnia, the presence of ATZ, regardless of the type of food treatment, exhibited a masking effect by further significantly decreasing Daphnia's overall reproductive output, resulting in a low level of reproduction. Finally, we found an expression trade‐off at the molecular scale between growth and reproduction genes on one side, and antioxidation gene on the other, which could account in part for ATZ's influence on Microcystis toxicity to Daphnia at maturation stage.These results demonstrated that ATZ can reshape Daphnia's responses to Microcystis, predominantly with effects on growth and reproductive traits. These trait‐dependent responses were found to be closely linked to the regulation of key metabolic pathways.Collectively, our study enhances current knowledge regarding the potential interaction between fundamental trophic levels in cyanobacteria‐dominated lakes around farmlands, and is helpful to achieve more realistic environmental risk management of agricultural pollution in eutrophic waterbodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]