AI Article Synopsis

  • This study challenges the assumption that all individuals within a species respond the same way to chemical exposure by examining the copper sensitivity of the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis across different populations.
  • Significant variability in copper-induced mortality, daily death rates, and time to half mortality (LT50) was observed among the genetically distinct strains.
  • The findings suggest that using a single population for ecological risk assessments can lead to unreliable conclusions, highlighting the need to integrate evolutionary principles into ecotoxicity testing.

Article Abstract

The use of standardized monospecific testing to assess the ecological risk of chemicals implicitly relies on the strong assumption that intraspecific variation in sensitivity is negligible or irrelevant in this context. In this study, we investigated genetic variation in copper sensitivity of the freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis, using lineages stemming from eight natural populations or strains found to be genetically differentiated at neutral markers. Copper-induced mortality varied widely among populations, as did the estimated daily death rate and time to 50% mortality (LT50). Population genetic divergence in copper sensitivity was compared to neutral differentiation using the QST-FST approach. No evidence for homogenizing selection could be detected. This result demonstrates that species-level extrapolations from single population studies are highly unreliable. The study provides a simple example of how evolutionary principles could be incorporated into ecotoxicity testing in order to refine ecological risk assessment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2015.05.040DOI Listing

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