Multiple Stress Reduces the Advantage of Pesticide Adaptation.

Environ Sci Technol

Department of System-Ecotoxicology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research─UFZ, Permoserstraße 15, Leipzig 04318, Germany.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how adapting to pesticide stress affects crustacean populations in agricultural environments compared to those in more natural settings.
  • Under optimal conditions, crustaceans from agricultural streams exhibited greater pesticide tolerance, likely due to genetic and epigenetic changes; however, these adaptations made them more sensitive to rising temperatures.
  • Ultimately, the benefits of pesticide adaptation were diminished when both pesticides and warming were combined, leading to stronger negative effects on the adapted populations than anticipated.

Article Abstract

Under global change scenarios, multistress conditions may occur regularly and require adaptation. However, the adaptation to one stressor might be associated with the increased sensitivity to another stressor. Here, we investigated the ecological consequences of such trade-off under multiple stress. We compared the pesticide tolerance of the crustacean from agricultural streams with populations from reference streams. Under optimum temperature, from agricultural streams were considerably more tolerant to pesticides as compared to the reference populations. Here, we assume that the increased tolerance in agricultural populations is the combination of acclimation, epigenetic effect, and genetic evolution. After experimental pre-exposure to very low concentration (LC/1000), reference populations showed increased pesticide tolerance. In contrast, pre-exposure did not further increase the tolerance of agricultural populations. Moreover, these populations were more sensitive to elevated temperature alone due to the hypothesized fitness cost of genetic adaptation to pesticides. However, both reference and agricultural populations showed a similar tolerance to the combined stress of pesticides and warming due to stronger synergistic effects in adapted populations. As a result, pesticide adaptation loses its advantage. The combined effect was predicted well using the stress addition model, developed for predicting the synergistic interaction of independent stressors. We conclude that under multistress conditions, adaptation to pesticides reduces the general stress capacity of individuals and trade-off processes increase the sensitivity to additional stressors. This causes strong synergistic effects of additional stressors on pesticide-adapted individuals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c02669DOI Listing

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