Thresholds and interactive effects of BPA-gradient and temperature on life history traits of Daphnia magna
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/93377Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Álvarez, M. Fernanda; Villar Argáiz, Manuel; Vela Soria, Fernando; Fernández Zambrano, Alejandra; Medina Sánchez, Juan Manuel; Carrillo Lechuga, PresentaciónMateria
Trophic transfer Fluctuating temperature Climate change
Date
2024Referencia bibliográfica
Environmental Pollution 355 (2024) 124186
Patrocinador
Funding for open access charge: Universidad de Granada / CBUARésumé
Bisphenol A (BPA), a synthetic organic compound widely used in the production of plastics, is recognized as an emerging contaminant because of its toxicity and the potential risks associated with bioaccumulation in organisms. Despite potential environmental hazards, there is a lack of studies examining BPA toxicity mechanisms and its potential impact on various trophic levels, with even fewer exploring whether global stressors such as temperature can affect the toxicity of BPA in organisms. Our aim was to assess the combined impact of BPA and varying temperature regimes on life-history traits in Daphnia magna. Our results revealed a significant impact of BPA on the growth, reproduction, and accumulated moulting of D. magna, with adverse effects primarily associated with the assimilation of BPA in algae rather than the BPA present in the medium, pointing to a trophic transfer mechanism. The interactive effect between BPA and temperature demonstrated a slight stimulatory effect of low BPA level on D. magna growth rate under warming constant conditions, but an inhibitory under warming fluctuating temperatures. Additionally, a BPA threshold was identified, below which growth became temperature-dependent. This study emphasizes the crucial role of considering temperature in predicting how toxins may affect Daphnia within aquatic food webs.