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Pesticide and Predation Exposure Effects on Pond...
Journal article

Pesticide and Predation Exposure Effects on Pond Snail Immune System Function and Reproductive Output

Abstract

Malathion is an organophosphate pesticide that is sprayed agriculturally and for public health threats such as malaria and West Nile virus. It can contaminate surface waters, where it can interact with aquatic organisms. In addition to combating exposure to pesticides, aquatic organisms must defend against biotic stressors, which could intensify effects imparted by chemicals. We investigated effects that exposure to an environmentally relevant malathion concentration (0.001 g/L) and predation cues imparted on immune system function and reproductive output in individuals in the pond snail species Lymnaea stagnalis (Linnaeus, 1758) (Gastropoda: Pulmonata). Snails were grown in four exposure treatment groups: nonmalathion nonpredation, nonmalathionpredation, malathionnonpredation, and malathionpredation. Malathion exposure caused a decrease in hemocyte numbers, which was unaffected by predation cue exposure, and a decrease in egg numbers, which was amplified by predation cue exposure. These results demonstrate that pesticides can affect fitness-related traits in a manner that can be accentuated by natural stressors.

Authors

Latanville JK; Stone JR

Journal

Journal of Shellfish Research, Vol. 32, No. 3, pp. 745–750

Publisher

National Shellfisheries Association

Publication Date

December 1, 2013

DOI

10.2983/035.032.0317

ISSN

0730-8000

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