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Long-term adverse effects of microplastics on Daphnia magna reproduction and population growth rate at increased water temperature and light intensity: Combined effects of stressors and interactions

The Science of The Total Environment 2021 82 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Alexandra Martins, Sara C. Cunha, Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino José O. Fernandes, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, Sara C. Cunha, Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, Lúcia Guilhermino José O. Fernandes, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Sara C. Cunha, José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino Lúcia Guilhermino José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, José O. Fernandes, Lúcia Guilhermino José O. Fernandes, Sara C. Cunha, Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Sara C. Cunha, Lúcia Guilhermino Sara C. Cunha, Sara C. Cunha, José O. Fernandes, Lúcia Guilhermino

Summary

Researchers investigated how increased water temperature and light intensity affect the long-term toxicity of microplastics to the water flea Daphnia magna. They found that microplastics caused mortality, reduced growth, and decreased reproduction across all conditions, but these effects were significantly worsened by both higher temperature and brighter light. The study suggests that climate change factors may synergistically amplify the harmful impacts of microplastic pollution on freshwater zooplankton.

Body Systems
Models

In many ecosystems, the zooplankton community has been pressured simultaneously by microplastic pollution and alterations resulting from global climate changes. The potential influence of light intensity rise (from 10,830 lx to 26,000 lx) and water temperature rise (from 20 °C to 25 °C) on the long term-toxicity of microplastics (MPs) to Daphnia magna were investigated. Three 21-day laboratory bioassays with model MPs (1-5 μm diameter) were carried out at (i) 20 °C/10830 lx, (ii) 20 °C/26000 lx, and (iii) 25 °C/10830 lx. In each bioassay, one control (no MPs) and three MP concentrations (0.04, 0.09, 0.19 mg/L) were tested. In all the bioassays, MPs caused parental and juvenile mortality, and reduced the somatic growth, reproduction and population growth rate. The MP EC<sub>50</sub>s on living offspring (95% confidence interval within brackets) were 0.146 mg/L (0.142-0.151 mg/L) at 20 °C/10830 lx, 0.102 mg/L (0.099-0.105 mg/L) at 20 °C/26000 lx, and 0.101 mg/L (0.098-0.104 mg/L) at 25 °C/10830 lx. Relatively to the respective control group, 0.19 mg/L of MPs decreased the mean of the population growth rate by 27% at 20 °C/10830 lx, 38% at 20 °C/26000 lx and 59% at 25 °C/10830 lx. Based on the population growth rate and in relation to 20 °C/10830 lx (control, no MPs), the interaction between increased light intensity (26,000 lx) and MPs was synergism (at all the MP concentrations tested). The interaction between water temperature rise (25 °C) and MPs was antagonism at 0.04 mg/L of MPs and synergism at 0.09 and 0.19 mg/L of MPs. In the present scenario of climate changes and global MP pollution such findings raise high concern because zooplankton communities are crucial for aquatic biodiversity conservation, ecosystem functioning and services provided to humans. Further studies on the combined effects of MPs, other common pollutants, and alterations due to climate changes are needed.

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