Coastal and estuarine ecosystems are environments heavily influenced by natural and anthropogenic activities. Chemicals used for pest control in agriculture and aquaculture may accumulate in natural coastal environments. Pyrethroids are common pesticides that are used on crops as well as applied to aquaculture pens and then may disperse in the surrounding ocean once treatment is complete.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol Part D Genomics Proteomics
December 2021
Chlorpyrifos is an organophosphate that is currently used to reduce arthropod pests for the protection of agricultural crops. Coastal marine ecosystems may be exposed to agricultural pesticides via runoff and pesticide exposure can impact the health and survival of non-target species such as the American lobster (Homarus americanus). In the current study, the gene expression changes of H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBentho-pelagic life cycles are the dominant reproductive strategy in marine invertebrates, providing great dispersal ability, access to different resources, and the opportunity to settle in suitable habitats upon the trigger of environmental cues at key developmental moments. However, free-dispersing larvae can be highly sensitive to environmental changes. Among these, the magnitude and the occurrence of elevated carbon dioxide (CO) concentrations in oceanic habitats is predicted to exacerbate over the next decades, particularly in coastal areas, reaching levels beyond those historically experienced by most marine organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe organophosphate pesticide chlorpyrifos has been introduced to the marine environment via adsorption to agricultural soil runoff or as spray drift. Chlorpyrifos affects the survival of some larval decapod crustaceans, but no data exist on the impacts to the American lobster, Homarus americanus. The purpose of the present study was to assess the levels at which chlorpyrifos affects the survival of postlarval H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transition from the last pelagic larval stage to the first benthic juvenile stage in the complex life cycle of marine invertebrates, such as the American lobster Homarus americanus, a species of high economic importance, represents a delicate phase in these species development. Under future elevated pCO conditions, ocean acidification and other elevated pCO events can negatively affect crustaceans. This said their effects on the benthic settlement phase are virtually unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examined the effects of a range of ½-log concentrations of emamectin benzoate (commercially applied as SLICE) and ivermectin (commercially applied as IVOMEC) on juvenile American lobster, Homarus americanus. Phase I of the research assessed acute (up to 4 days) and chronic (30-day) toxicity of sediment dosed with the active ingredients emamectin benzoate (EMB) formulated as SLICE or ivermectin (IVM) formulated as IVOMEC at various nominal concentrations (EMB: 15, 48, 150, 475 and 1500 ng g wet sediment; IVM: 3, 9.5, 30, 95 and 300 ng g wet sediment) on juvenile Atlantic lobster (stages IV).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Atlantic Canada and other salmon-growing regions, treatment of sea lice infestations in salmon aquaculture is necessary to protect fish health. The product Salmosan®, which contains the organophosphate azamethiphos as the active ingredient, is a pesticide presently used for treatment against sea lice. It is applied as a bath treatment and then released into the surrounding seawater.
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