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A multigenerational approach can detect early Cd pollution in Chironomus riparius.

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Cadmium (Cd) is a non-essential highly toxic metal and its presence in the environment has been a concern over the years. On the present study we adopt the spiked water… Click to show full abstract

Cadmium (Cd) is a non-essential highly toxic metal and its presence in the environment has been a concern over the years. On the present study we adopt the spiked water exposure scenario to study early Cd contamination across five generations of the model organism Chironomus riparius. Animals were, at the beginning of each generation, submitted to 0, 1, 3.2, 10, 32 and 100 μg/L of Cd. Classical endpoints like total emergence, EmT50, fertility and the integrative fitness measure, population growth rate (PGR), were calculated at each generation. Results could demonstrate that exposure to brief and low Cd concentrations can affect all the measured endpoints and, therefore, initial Cd pollution in previously unpolluted sites can be detected after just five consecutive generations. Importantly, at 100 μg/L of Cd fertility was greatly impaired after three generations. Also, PGR calculation is a sensitive tool for monitoring early pollution of Cd. Yet, no adaptation to Cd over five generations could be observed on the present experimental setup.

Keywords: pollution; early pollution; detect early; chironomus riparius; multigenerational approach; approach detect

Journal Title: Chemosphere
Year Published: 2020

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