Publication details

Water Browning Controls Adaptation and Associated Trade-Offs in Phytoplankton Stressed by Chemical Pollution

Authors

RIZZUTO Simone THRANE Jan-Erik BAHO Didier L. JONES Kevin C. ZHANG Hao HESSEN Dag O. NIZZETTO Luca LEU Eva

Year of publication 2020
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Environmental Science & Technology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.0c00548
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.0c00548
Keywords DISSOLVED ORGANIC-CARBON; BIOTIC LIGAND MODEL; AQUATIC TOXICITY; PHARMACEUTICALS; IMPACT; MATTER; PH; MICROPOLLUTANTS; FLUOXETINE; TRICLOSAN
Description The acquisition of tolerance to an environmental stressor can result in organisms displaying slower growth after stress release. While well-grounded in the theory, empirical evidence of the trade-off between stress tolerance and organism fitness is scarce and blurred by the interaction with different environmental factors. Here, we report the effects of water browning on the responses, tolerance acquisition, and associated trade-offs in a population of microalgae exposed to sublethal concentrations of organic micropollutants over multiple generations. Our results show that dissolved organic matter (DOM) reduces toxic responses and modulates tolerance acquisition by the algae, possibly by complexing micropollutants. Microalgae that acquire tolerance allocate resources to fitness at the cost of reduced cell size. They yield higher productivity than nonadapted ones when grown in the presence of micropollutants but lower in their absence. The net trade-off was positive, indicating that adaptation can result in a higher productivity and fitness in tolerant species in recurrently stressed environments.

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