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Effects of food limitation and pharmaceutical compounds on the larval development and morphology of Palaemon serratus. / González-Ortegón, Enrique; Giménez, Luis; Blasco, Julian et al.
In: Science of the Total Environment, Vol. 503-504, 15.01.2015, p. 171-178.

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González-Ortegón E, Giménez L, Blasco J, Le Vay L. Effects of food limitation and pharmaceutical compounds on the larval development and morphology of Palaemon serratus. Science of the Total Environment. 2015 Jan 15;503-504:171-178. Epub 2014 Sept 18. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.08.118

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González-Ortegón, Enrique ; Giménez, Luis ; Blasco, Julian et al. / Effects of food limitation and pharmaceutical compounds on the larval development and morphology of Palaemon serratus. In: Science of the Total Environment. 2015 ; Vol. 503-504. pp. 171-178.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of food limitation and pharmaceutical compounds on the larval development and morphology of Palaemon serratus

AU - González-Ortegón, Enrique

AU - Giménez, Luis

AU - Blasco, Julian

AU - Le Vay, Lewis

PY - 2015/1/15

Y1 - 2015/1/15

N2 - Few ecotoxicological studies consider the roles of maternal influences and suboptimal environmental conditions when assessing the impact of pollutants on organisms. We studied the combined effects of pharmaceutical compounds, food condition and maternal body size on growth, development, body mass and morphology of larvae of the marine shrimp Palaemon serratus. Limited food availability is considered a factor leading to reduced survival and growth in marine crustacean larvae. It is known that P. serratus responses to food limitation vary among larvae hatched from females of different body length. The pharmaceuticals tested were the anti-inflammatory and analgesic diclofenac sodium (DS: at 77 μg L-1 and 720 μg L-1) the lipid regulator clofibric acid (CA: at 42 μg L-1 and 394 μg L-1) and the fungicide clotrimazole (CLZ: at 0.07 μg L-1 and 3.16 μg L-1). We observed morphological abnormalities in larvae exposed to CLZ. In addition, effects of this compound were stronger under food limitation leading to (1) reduced survival by 30%, (2) reduced juvenile body mass (22%) and (3) reduction in the number of molt stages (from 13 to 9) during larval development. This latter effect may indicate that CLZ reduced the larval capacity to respond to food limitation because development through a longer route, with additional stages, is considered an adaptive response to prioritize maintenance over morphogenesis. CA and DS affected developmental rate under food limitation but not growth or body mass. The toxic effects of CLZ, at lower concentrations than CA and DS, were stronger in larvae with higher body mass, hatched from the largest females. This suggests that maternal influences and suboptimal environmental conditions should be further studied to inform modeling of the effects of emergent compounds on larvae of marine coastal species

AB - Few ecotoxicological studies consider the roles of maternal influences and suboptimal environmental conditions when assessing the impact of pollutants on organisms. We studied the combined effects of pharmaceutical compounds, food condition and maternal body size on growth, development, body mass and morphology of larvae of the marine shrimp Palaemon serratus. Limited food availability is considered a factor leading to reduced survival and growth in marine crustacean larvae. It is known that P. serratus responses to food limitation vary among larvae hatched from females of different body length. The pharmaceuticals tested were the anti-inflammatory and analgesic diclofenac sodium (DS: at 77 μg L-1 and 720 μg L-1) the lipid regulator clofibric acid (CA: at 42 μg L-1 and 394 μg L-1) and the fungicide clotrimazole (CLZ: at 0.07 μg L-1 and 3.16 μg L-1). We observed morphological abnormalities in larvae exposed to CLZ. In addition, effects of this compound were stronger under food limitation leading to (1) reduced survival by 30%, (2) reduced juvenile body mass (22%) and (3) reduction in the number of molt stages (from 13 to 9) during larval development. This latter effect may indicate that CLZ reduced the larval capacity to respond to food limitation because development through a longer route, with additional stages, is considered an adaptive response to prioritize maintenance over morphogenesis. CA and DS affected developmental rate under food limitation but not growth or body mass. The toxic effects of CLZ, at lower concentrations than CA and DS, were stronger in larvae with higher body mass, hatched from the largest females. This suggests that maternal influences and suboptimal environmental conditions should be further studied to inform modeling of the effects of emergent compounds on larvae of marine coastal species

U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.08.118

DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.08.118

M3 - Article

VL - 503-504

SP - 171

EP - 178

JO - Science of the Total Environment

JF - Science of the Total Environment

SN - 0048-9697

ER -