INVESTIGADORES
PAOLUCCI Esteban Marcelo
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Biomonitoring the impact of agricultural pesticides in freshwater habitats using the invasive clam Corbicula largillierti
Autor/es:
LOZANO, VERONICA; PAOLUCCI, ESTEBAN; MUÑOZ, CAMILA; MORAÑA, LILIENA; LIQUIN, FLORENCIA; SYLVESTER F
Lugar:
Oostende
Reunión:
Conferencia; 22nd International Conference on Aquatic Invasive Species; 2022
Resumen:
Pesticide contamination is a major stressor to nature in agricultural landscapes worldwide, although its impacts on aquatic ecosystems are little understood. Due to their high abundances across large areas, invasive bivalves provide an opportunity to assess those impacts. The herbicide glyphosate and the insecticide neonicotinoid imidacloprid are two of the most widely used pesticides globally, and are commonly found in freshwater systems in Argentina, a preeminently agricultural country. Using introduced Corbicula largillierti clams from an irrigation channel in the location of Coronel Moldes, an agricultural area in northern Argentina, we conducted 48-h exposure experiments to two concentrations of imidacloprid (20 and 200 µg L-1 a.i.), wo concentrations of glyphosate (0.3 and 3 mg L-1 a.i.), and two combinations of both pesticides (imidacloprid and glyphosate at low and high concentrations, respectively). We assessed the impact on clam metabolic rates using respiration rate as proxy. All single pesticide treatments produced mild, although non-significant, decreases of respiration rates values, and only the exposure to the high imidacloprid concentration significantly reduced oxygen consumption. However, when a combined treatment of glyphosate and insecticide was applied, both high and low concentrations of pesticides significantly reduced respiration rates in C. largillierti. Results suggest additive effects on aquatic organisms likely representing a common scenario in agroecosystems. Physiological endpoints allow the spotting of chemical contamination effects well before more obvious morphological changes or population declines appear. These effects possibly pinpoint more general ecosystem effects and highlight the role of invasive bivalves as potential biomarkers to monitor aquatic habitat degradation. While according to the present results chemical pollution might impose limits to the spread of freshwater invasive bivalves in some situations, it can also enhance their success due to being better adapted than native counterparts tohuman-altered habitats.