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Evidence of interregional similarity in crayfish metabolomes at reference sites: Progress towards the metabolome as a biomonitoring tool.

Authors :
Bilhorn, Cora
Brua, Robert B.
Izral, Natalie M.
Yates, Adam G.
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Feb2024, Vol. 352, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

It has been proposed that biomonitoring may benefit from the use of metabolomics (the study of all small molecules in an organism) to detect sub-lethal organism stress through changes in the metabolite profile (i.e., the metabolome). However, to integrate the metabolome into biomonitoring programs the amount of natural variability among and within populations of indicator taxa must be established prior to generating a reference condition. This study determined variation in the metabolome among ecoregion and stream of origin in the northern crayfish (Faxonius virilis) and if that variation inhibited detection of stressor effects at sites exposed to human activities. We collected crayfish from seven minimally disturbed streams (i.e., reference streams), distributed across three level II ecoregions in central Canada and compared their metabolomes. We found ecoregion and stream origin were poor predictors of crayfish metabolomes. This result suggests crayfish metabolomes were similar, despite differing environmental conditions. Metabolomes of crayfish collected from three stream sites exposed to agricultural activity and municipal wastewater (i.e., test sites) were then compared to the crayfish metabolomes from the seven reference streams. Findings showed that crayfish metabolomes from test sites were strongly differentiated from those at all reference sites. The consistency in the northern crayfish metabolome at the studied reference streams indicates that a single reference condition may effectively detect impacts of human activities across the sampled ecoregions. • Application of metabolomics may enhance bioassessment of ecosystems. • Crayfish metabolomes from reference streams did not differ among ecoregion or stream. • Natural variation did not impede detection of impacts of human activity. • Regional reference conditions could include streams from multiple ecoregions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
352
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175136910
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.120076