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Influence of environmental factors on the response of a natural population of Daphnia magna (Crustacea: Cladocera) to spinosad and Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis in Mediterranean coastal wetlands
Authors:C. Duchet  Th. Caquet  C. Lagneau
Affiliation:a Entente Interdépartementale de Démoustication du Littoral Méditerranéen, 165 avenue Paul-Rimbaud, Montpellier F-34184, France
b INRA, UMR985 Écologie et Santé des Écosystèmes, Équipe Écotoxicologie et Qualité des Milieux Aquatiques, 65 rue de Saint Brieuc, Rennes F-35042, France
c Université Paul Cézanne, Institut Méditerranéen d'Écologie et de Paléoécologie, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques Saint Jérôme, C31, Marseille F-13397, France
Abstract:The present study was undertaken to assess the impact of a candidate mosquito larvicide, spinosad (8, 17 and 33 μg L−1) on a field population of Daphnia magna under natural variations of water temperature and salinity, using Bti (0.16 and 0.50 μL L−1) as the reference larvicide. Microcosms (125 L) were placed in a shallow temporary marsh where D. magna was naturally present. The peak of salinity observed during the 21-day observation period may have been partly responsible for the decrease of daphnid population density in all the microcosms. It is also probably responsible for the absence of recovery in the microcosms treated with spinosad which caused a sharp decrease of D. magna abundance within the first two days following treatment whereas Bti had no effect. These results suggest that it may be difficult for a field population of daphnids to cope simultaneously with natural (water salinity and temperature) and anthropogenic (larvicides) stressors.
Keywords:Daphnia   Biopesticide   Salinity   Temperature   Stressor   In situ microcosms
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