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Contaminant effects on host-parasite interactions: atrazine, frogs, and trematodes
- Source :
- Environmental toxicology and chemistry. 26(10)
- Publication Year :
- 2007
-
Abstract
- The effects of contaminants on multispecies interactions can be difficult to predict. The herbicide atrazine is commonly used in North America for corn crops, runs off into wetlands, and has been implicated in the increasing susceptibility of larval frogs to trematode parasites. Using experimental challenges with free-living stages of trematodes (cercariae), it was found that Rana sylvatica tadpoles exposed to 30 microg/L of atrazine had significantly higher intensity of parasitism than did larval frogs either not exposed or exposed to 3 microg/L of atrazine. This result could not be explained by high concentrations of atrazine diminishing antiparasite behavior of tadpoles. Furthermore, when tadpoles and cercariae both were exposed to the same concentration of atrazine, either 3 or 30 microg/L, the abundance of formed cysts was not different from the condition in which both were housed at 0 microg/L of atrazine. Atrazine appears to be debilitating to both free-living cercariae and tadpoles. Studies examining relations between parasitism and contaminant levels must account for such combined effects as well as influences on other interacting species (e.g., first intermediate snail hosts).
- Subjects :
- Larva
biology
Ranidae
Host (biology)
Ecology
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Parasitism
Zoology
Snail
biology.organism_classification
Tadpole
Host-Parasite Interactions
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
Rana sylvatica
biology.animal
parasitic diseases
Environmental Chemistry
Parasite hosting
Animals
Atrazine
Trematoda
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 07307268
- Volume :
- 26
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Environmental toxicology and chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f0beb50aa71b7e9c1feb40937d87600a