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Seasonal changes in the sensitivity of river microalgae to atrazine and isoproturon along a contamination gradient.
Sci Total Environ. 2004 Jan 05; 318(1-3):101-14.ST

Abstract

A study was undertaken to investigate the environmental impact of herbicides on natural communities of freshwater periphyton and phytoplankton in the river Ozanne and in related nearby water reservoirs, including both pristine and pesticide- (atrazine and isoproturon) contaminated stations. The microalgal toxicity of both herbicides was investigated by short-term studies, using the in vivo fluorescence pattern to perform dose-effect experiments. The taxonomic composition of the communities sampled was assessed by microscopy and by HPLC pigment analysis. The EC50 (periphyton) or EC125 (phytoplankton) values, calculated using in vivo fluorescence endpoints, increased with the herbicide concentration found in the water. In contrast, the structure of the algal communities (periphyton) inhabiting the contaminated stations seemed to be permanently affected when compared to the reference community. A 'memory effect' could be detected, both in herbicide sensitivity and in the structure of periphytic communities that persisted even when peak contaminations had disappeared. This study shows that the response of algal communities is likely to reflect past selection pressures, and suggests that the function and structure of a community could both be modified by the persistent or repeated presence of microcontaminants in natural environments. We could use short-term ecotoxicological tests on freshwater microalgae to assess the effects of past temporary contaminations by agricultural pesticides, and combining this with diversity indices could make it possible to assess the ecotoxicological risk of herbicide contamination even when a complete chemical analysis of the contamination is not feasible.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Station d'Hydrobiologie Lacustre, UMR CARRTEL, INRA BP 511, 75 av. de Corzent, Thonon les Bains cedex 74203, France.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

14654278

Citation

Dorigo, Ursula, et al. "Seasonal Changes in the Sensitivity of River Microalgae to Atrazine and Isoproturon Along a Contamination Gradient." The Science of the Total Environment, vol. 318, no. 1-3, 2004, pp. 101-14.
Dorigo U, Bourrain X, Bérard A, et al. Seasonal changes in the sensitivity of river microalgae to atrazine and isoproturon along a contamination gradient. Sci Total Environ. 2004;318(1-3):101-14.
Dorigo, U., Bourrain, X., Bérard, A., & Leboulanger, C. (2004). Seasonal changes in the sensitivity of river microalgae to atrazine and isoproturon along a contamination gradient. The Science of the Total Environment, 318(1-3), 101-14.
Dorigo U, et al. Seasonal Changes in the Sensitivity of River Microalgae to Atrazine and Isoproturon Along a Contamination Gradient. Sci Total Environ. 2004 Jan 5;318(1-3):101-14. PubMed PMID: 14654278.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Seasonal changes in the sensitivity of river microalgae to atrazine and isoproturon along a contamination gradient. AU - Dorigo,Ursula, AU - Bourrain,Xavier, AU - Bérard,Annette, AU - Leboulanger,Christophe, PY - 2003/12/5/pubmed PY - 2004/4/28/medline PY - 2003/12/5/entrez SP - 101 EP - 14 JF - The Science of the total environment JO - Sci Total Environ VL - 318 IS - 1-3 N2 - A study was undertaken to investigate the environmental impact of herbicides on natural communities of freshwater periphyton and phytoplankton in the river Ozanne and in related nearby water reservoirs, including both pristine and pesticide- (atrazine and isoproturon) contaminated stations. The microalgal toxicity of both herbicides was investigated by short-term studies, using the in vivo fluorescence pattern to perform dose-effect experiments. The taxonomic composition of the communities sampled was assessed by microscopy and by HPLC pigment analysis. The EC50 (periphyton) or EC125 (phytoplankton) values, calculated using in vivo fluorescence endpoints, increased with the herbicide concentration found in the water. In contrast, the structure of the algal communities (periphyton) inhabiting the contaminated stations seemed to be permanently affected when compared to the reference community. A 'memory effect' could be detected, both in herbicide sensitivity and in the structure of periphytic communities that persisted even when peak contaminations had disappeared. This study shows that the response of algal communities is likely to reflect past selection pressures, and suggests that the function and structure of a community could both be modified by the persistent or repeated presence of microcontaminants in natural environments. We could use short-term ecotoxicological tests on freshwater microalgae to assess the effects of past temporary contaminations by agricultural pesticides, and combining this with diversity indices could make it possible to assess the ecotoxicological risk of herbicide contamination even when a complete chemical analysis of the contamination is not feasible. SN - 0048-9697 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/14654278/Seasonal_changes_in_the_sensitivity_of_river_microalgae_to_atrazine_and_isoproturon_along_a_contamination_gradient_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -