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Polyamide microplastic exposure elicits rapid, strong and genome-wide evolutionary response in the freshwater non-biting midge Chironomus riparius
Summary
Researchers discovered that polyamide microplastic exposure triggered rapid and genome-wide evolutionary responses in the midge Chironomus riparius within just seven generations, demonstrating that microplastics can drive significant microevolutionary changes in aquatic organisms.
Susceptibility to hazardous materials and contamination is largely determined by genetic make-up and evolutionary history of affected organisms. Yet evolutionary adaptation and microevolutionary processes triggered by contaminants are rarely considered in ecotoxicology. Using an evolve and resequencing approach, we investigated genome-wide responses of the midge C. riparius exposed to virgin polyamide microplastics (0-180 μm size range, at concentration 1 g kg) during seven consecutive generations. The results were integrated to a parallel life-cycle experiment ran under the same exposure conditions. Emergence, life-cycle trait, showed first a substantial reduction in larval survival, followed by a rapid recovery within three generations. On the genomic level, we observed substantial selectively driven allele frequency changes (mean 0.566 ± 0.0879) within seven generations, associated with a mean selection coefficient of 0.322, indicating very strong selection pressure. Putative selection targets were mainly connected to oxidative stress in the microplastics exposed C. riparius population. This is the first multigenerational study on chironomids to provide evidence that upon exposure to polyamide microplastic there are changes on the genomic level, providing basis to rapid adaptation of aquatic organisms to microplastics.
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