Synergism and antagonism among multiple stressors
Abstract:
This study was designed to test for synergism (increased
stress) or antagonism (decreased stress) among multiple environmental
stressors using additive, multiplicative, and simple comparative effects
models. Model predictions were compared to empirical results of laboratory
experiments measuring interactions among thermal stress, toxin exposure,
and low food on reproduction and survival of two species of cladoceran
zooplankton. Stress was defined operationally as a reduction in reproduction
or survival relative to optimal conditions over a 7-d period. These
experiments are particularly applicable to episodic stresses such as
those associated with short-term heat waves. Toxin or low food in combination
with 30C temperatures were generally more harmful than high temperature
alone. However, most multiple stress effects were antagonistic, in that
effects in combination were not as severe as predicted based on the
sum or the product of their individual effects. In rare cases, interaction
among stressors even diminished effects of the worst single stressor.
Optimal conditions for reproduction and survival occurred at 25C, high
food and 0 mg liter-1 toxin (a surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate).
Suppressive effects of stressors examined individually ranked: high
temperature (30C) > SDS (10 mg liter-1 " low food (~100 mg C
liter-1) > low temperature (20C). Daphnia pulex isolated from a pond
which experiences high summer temperatures throughout was more tolerant
of 30C conditions than Daphnia pulicaria isolated from a lake with a
cold-water refuge. Differences were observed in individuals exposed
as either adults or as 24-h neonates.
Folt CL, Chen CY, Moore MV, Burnaford J., Limnol. Oceanogr., 44(3, part
2), 864-877, 1999.
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