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Features of phototropic response of zooplankton to paired photostimulation under adverse environmental conditions

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 2023 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Victor Dyomin, Yuri N. Morgalev, Sergey Morgalev, Tamara Morgaleva, Alexandra Davydova, Igor Polovtsev, Nikolay Kirillov, Alexey Olshukov, Oksana Kondratova

Summary

Researchers developed a paired photostimulation method — exposing zooplankton to two successive light pulses — that more reliably detects behavioral changes in Daphnia caused by pollutants including microplastics, outperforming single-stimulus methods and traditional survival-based bioindication for tracking aquatic toxicity.

Our previous studies showed that the change in the plankton response to light could be an indicator of environmental pollution. This study experimentally reveals that the response of Daphnia magna Straus and Daphnia pulex plankton ensembles to photostimulation depends on the intensity of the attracting light. This makes it difficult to identify the occurrence and change of pollutant concentration. The large variability in the magnitude of the behavioral response is caused by the nonlinear response of plankton ensembles to the intensity of the attractor stimulus. As the intensity of the photostimulation increases, the variability of the phototropic response passes through increase, decrease, and relative stabilization phases. The paper proposes a modification of the photostimulation method-paired photostimulation involving successive exposure to two photostimuli of increasing intensity. The first stimulus stabilizes the behavioral response, while the increase in response to the second stimulus makes it possible to more accurately assess the responsiveness of the plankton ensemble. The paper studies the sensitivity of the method of paired stimulation of the behavioral response of different types of freshwater plankton ensembles: Daphnia magna Straus, Daphnia pulex to the effects of pollutants (potassium bichromate, microplastic). The study demonstrates good reliability and increased sensitivity of this method of detecting changes in environmental toxicity compared to single photostimulation or traditional bioindication through the survival rate of test organisms.

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