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Heart rate and behavioral responses in three phylogenetically distant aquatic model organisms exposed to environmental concentrations of carbaryl and fenitrothion

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 30 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.
Demetrio Raldúa, Jérôme Cachot Juliette Bedrossiantz, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Melissa Faria, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Eva Prats, Carlos Barata, Eva Prats, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Carlos Barata, Jérôme Cachot Carlos Barata, Carlos Barata, Demetrio Raldúa, Demetrio Raldúa, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Demetrio Raldúa, Carlos Barata, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Melissa Faria, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Demetrio Raldúa, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Juliette Bedrossiantz, Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot Jérôme Cachot

Summary

Researchers exposed zebrafish, Japanese medaka, and water fleas (Daphnia magna) to very low concentrations of two common insecticides — carbaryl and fenitrothion — that are considered "safe" by current standards. Despite being below established safety thresholds, both chemicals increased heart rate and disrupted normal swimming behavior across all three species, raising concerns that current safety standards may underestimate real-world risks to aquatic life.

Carbaryl and fenitrothion are two insecticides sharing a common mode of action, the inhibition of the acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity. Their use is now regulated or banned in different countries, and the environmental levels of both compounds in aquatic ecosystems have decreased to the range of pg/L to ng/L. As these concentrations are below the non-observed-adverse-effect-concentrations (NOAEC) for AChE inhibition reported for both compounds in aquatic organisms, there is a general agreement that the current levels of these two chemicals are safe for aquatic organisms. In this study we have exposed zebrafish, Japanese medaka and Daphnia magna to concentrations of carbaryl and fenitrothion under their NOAECs for 24-h, and the effects on heart rate (HR), basal locomotor activity (BLA), visual motor response (VMR), startle response (SR) and its habituation have been evaluated. Both pesticides increased the HR in the three selected model organisms, although the intensity of this effect was chemical-, concentration- and organism-dependent. The exposure to both pesticides also led to a decrease in BLA and an increase in VMR in all three species, although this effect was only significant in zebrafish larvae. For SR and its habituation, the response profile was more species- and concentration-specific. The results presented in this manuscript demonstrate that concentrations of carbaryl and fenitrothion well below their respective NOAECs induce tachycardia and the impairment of ecologically relevant behaviors in phylogenetically distinct aquatic model organisms, both vertebrates and invertebrates, emphasizing the need to include this range of concentrations in the environmental risk assessment.

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