Studying stress: The importance of organism-level responses
Authored by L Maltby
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.2307/2641131
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Abstract
The importance of studying the effects of stress on individual organisms
is addressed by considering the use of individual-level information to:
(1) elucidate the mechanistic bases of interpopulation variation; (2)
predict population-level effects; and (3) monitor stress in natural
communities. Examples discussed include interpopulation variation in the
sensitivity of freshwater shrimps to zinc stress; the use of
individual-based models to predict the effects of copper stress on
earthworm populations; the use of single-species in situ assays to
monitor pollution. It is contended that knowledge of organism-level
responses is essential for understanding how stressors cause adverse
biological effects and the strategies adopted by organisms to tolerate
stress. It is also contended that the effects of stressors on
populations can be predicted from a knowledge of the effects of
stressors on individual energy budgets. Organism-level responses can be
used to monitor stress in natural environments. In situ assays, based on
the physiological energetics of ecologically relevant species, can
provide sensitive and general stress indicators that are correlated with
community-level responses.
Tags
Drosophila-melanogaster
Insecticide resistance
Mussels mytilus-edulis
Gammarus-pulex l
Orchesella-cincta collembola
Isopod porcellio-scaber
Fresh-water amphipod
Physiological energetics
Respiratory
impairment
Different salinities