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Image_2_Common Environmental Pollutants Negatively Affect Development and Regeneration in the Sea Anemone Nematostella vectensis Holobiont.TIF

Figshare 2021
Sylvia Klein (11871443), Victoria Frazier (11871446), Timothy Readdean (11871449), Emily Lucas (11871452), Erica P. Diaz-Jimenez (11871455), Mitchell Sogin (141282), Emil S. Ruff (11871458), Karen Echeverri (11871461)

Summary

This study used the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis as a model to investigate how early developmental exposure to potassium nitrate (fertilizer) and phthalates (plastic additives) causes developmental defects and mortality. The findings demonstrate that common agricultural and plastic-associated pollutants can severely disrupt the development of marine cnidarians.

Body Systems

The anthozoan sea anemone Nematostella vectensis belongs to the phylum of cnidarians which also includes jellyfish and corals. Nematostella are native to United States East Coast marsh lands, where they constantly adapt to changes in salinity, temperature, oxygen concentration and pH. Its natural ability to continually acclimate to changing environments coupled with its genetic tractability render Nematostella a powerful model organism in which to study the effects of common pollutants on the natural development of these animals. Potassium nitrate, commonly used in fertilizers, and Phthalates, a component of plastics are frequent environmental stressors found in coastal and marsh waters. Here we present data showing how early exposure to these pollutants lead to dramatic defects in development of the embryos and eventual mortality possibly due to defects in feeding ability. Additionally, we examined the microbiome of the animals and identified shifts in the microbial community that correlated with the type of water that was used to grow the animals, and with their exposure to pollutants.

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