A plea for the use of copepods in freshwater ecotoxicology
Authored by Udo Hommen, Thomas G Preuss, Devdutt Kulkarni, Andre Gergs, Hans Toni Ratte
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-012-1117-4
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Standard species used in ecological risk assessment are chosen based on
their sensitivity to various toxicants and the ease of rearing them for
laboratory experiments. However, this mostly overlooks the fact that
species in the field that may employ variable life-history strategies, which may have consequences concerning the vulnerability of such species
to exposure with contaminants. We aimed to highlight the importance of
copepods in ecology and to underline the need to include freshwater
copepods in ecotoxicology. We carried out a literature search on
copepods and Daphnia in ecology and ecotoxicology to compare the
recognition given to these two taxa in these respective fields. We also
conducted a detailed analysis of the literature on copepods and their
current role in ecotoxicology to characterize the scale and depth of the
studies and the ecotoxicological information therein. The literature on
the ecology of copepods outweighed that in ecotoxicology when compared
with daphnids. Copepods, like other zooplankton, were found to be
sensitive to toxicants and important organisms in aquatic ecosystems.
The few studies that were conducted on the ecotoxicology of copepods
mainly focused on marine copepods. However, very little is known about
the ecotoxicology of freshwater copepods. To enable a more realistic
risk higher tier environmental risk assessment, we recommend considering
freshwater copepods as part of the hazard assessment process. This could
include the establishment of laboratory experiments to analyse the
effects of toxicants on copepods and the development of individual-based
models to extrapolate effects across species and scenarios.
Tags
Daphnia-magna
Ecological risk-assessment
Food limitation
Cyclopoid copepods
Aquatic invertebrates
Life-history strategies
Species sensitivity
distributions
Mesocyclops-leuckarti
Fungicide azoxystrobin
Groundwater copepods