Zinc toxicity to Daphnia magna in a two-species microcosm can be predicted from single-species test data: The effects of phosphorus supply and pH

Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Andreas FettweisErik Smolders

Abstract

Ecological interactions and abiotic stress factors may significantly affect species sensitivities to toxicants, and these are not incorporated in standard single-species tests. The present study tests whether a model, calibrated solely on single-species data, can explain abiotic stress factors in a two-species microcosm, a test applied to the effects of nutritional stress (phosphorus [P] limitation) on zinc (Zn) toxicity to Daphnia magna. A population model was developed based on P- and Zn-dependent algal and daphnid growth. Two separate two-species (phytoplankton Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata and consumer D. magna) microcosm experiments with P × Zn factorial combinations and a different pH (7.3 and 7.8) were set up to validate the model. The 21-d daphnid population size was considerably reduced by increased Zn and by decreased P supply, with a significant (p < 0.001) interaction between the 2 factors. The observed median effective concentration (EC50) of Zn on D. magna population size varied 12-fold (25 to 310 μg Zn L-1 ), with the lowest EC50 values found at the highest pH and high P treatments. For both experiments, Zn toxicity to D. magna was correctly predicted within a factor of 2 for EC50 values, and this is explained ...Continue Reading

References

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