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Comparison of fitness effects in the earthworm <i>Eisenia fetida</i> after exposure to single or multiple anthropogenic pollutants

2022 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Dimitri Seidenath, Anja Holzinger, Anja Holzinger, Dimitri Seidenath, Anja Holzinger, Dimitri Seidenath, Anja Holzinger, Anja Holzinger, Dimitri Seidenath, Heike Feldhaar Anja Holzinger, Darleen Lücker, Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Anja Holzinger, Anja Holzinger, Darleen Lücker, Heike Feldhaar Anja Holzinger, Heike Feldhaar Anja Holzinger, Darleen Lücker, Darleen Lücker, Darleen Lücker, Darleen Lücker, Darleen Lücker, Darleen Lücker, Anja Holzinger, Dimitri Seidenath, Dimitri Seidenath, Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Anja Holzinger, Nico Langhof, Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Heike Feldhaar Oliver Otti, Darleen Lücker, Thorsten Opel, Thorsten Opel, Darleen Lücker, Nico Langhof, Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Thorsten Opel, Thorsten Opel, Thorsten Opel, Nico Langhof, Anja Holzinger, Anja Holzinger, Nico Langhof, Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Oliver Otti, Heike Feldhaar Anja Holzinger, Nico Langhof, Oliver Otti, Oliver Otti, Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Heike Feldhaar Magdalena M. Mair, Heike Feldhaar Magdalena M. Mair, Oliver Otti, Oliver Otti, Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Heike Feldhaar Magdalena M. Mair, Magdalena M. Mair, Heike Feldhaar

Summary

Researchers exposed earthworms (Eisenia fetida) to single and combined anthropogenic pollutants including pesticides, heavy metals, and microplastics in a factorial design, finding that exposure to multiple pollutants simultaneously produced synergistic negative effects on earthworm fitness beyond what individual pollutant exposures predicted.

Polymers
Body Systems

Abstract Terrestrial ecosystems are exposed to many anthropogenic pollutants. Non-target effects of pesticides and fertilizers have put agricultural intensification in the focus as a driver for biodiversity loss. However, other pollutants, such as heavy metals, particulate matter, or microplastic also enter the environment, e.g. via traffic and industrial activities in urban areas. As soil acts as a potential sink for such pollutants, soil invertebrates like earthworms may be particularly affected by them. Under natural conditions soil invertebrates will likely be confronted with combinations of pollutants simultaneously, which may result in stronger negative effects if pollutants act synergistically. Within this work we study how multiple pollutants affect the soil-dwelling, substrate feeding earthworm Eisenia fetida . We compared the effects of the single stressors, polystyrene microplastic fragments, polystyrene fibers, brake dust and soot, with the combined effect of these pollutants when applied as a mixture. Endpoints measured were survival, growth, reproductive fitness, and changes in three oxidative stress markers. We found that among single pollutant treatments, brake dust imposed the strongest negative effects on earthworms in all measured endpoints including increased mortality rates. Sub-lethal effects were found for all pollutants. Exposing earthworms to all four pollutants simultaneously led to effects on mortality and oxidative stress markers that were smaller than expected by the respective null models. These antagonistic effects are likely a result of the adsorption of toxic substances found in brake dust to the other pollutants. With this study we show that effects of combinations of pollutants cannot necessarily be predicted from their individual effects and that combined effects will likely depend on identity and concentration of the pollutants.

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