Modelling the impact of the environmental scenario on population recovery from chemical stress exposure: A case study using Daphnia magna
Authored by Thomas G Preuss, Faten Gabsi
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2014.09.002
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Recovery of organisms is an important attribute for evaluating the
acceptability of chemicals' effects in ecological risk assessment in
Europe. Recovery in the field does not depend on the chemical's
properties and type of exposure only, but it is strongly linked to
important environmental variables and biological interactions as well.
Yet, these remain only marginally considered in the European risk
assessment of chemicals. Here, we use individual-based modelling to
investigate how the environmental scenario affects Daphnia magna
population recovery from chemical exposure. Simulation experiments were
performed for chemicals with lethality levels ranging from 40\% to 90\%
at different food and temperature conditions. The same toxicity levels
were then tested in combination with biological interactions including
predation or competition. Results show that for the same chemical effect
strength, populations often exhibited different recovery times in a
different environmental context. The interactions between the chemical
and the environmental variables were the strongest determinants of
population recovery. Most important, biotic interactions even induced
opposite effects on recovery at low and at high mortality levels.
Results of this study infer that no specific role can be attributed to
any abiotic or biotic variable in isolation. We conclude that unless the
complex interactive mechanisms between the different factors
constituting the full environmental scenario are taken into account in
risk assessment, we cannot achieve a complete understanding of recovery
processes from chemical effects. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
Tags
Dynamics
Predation
Community
insecticide
Risk-assessment
Life-history
Competition delays recovery
Chaoborus-crystallinus
Natural stressors
Food limitation