Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Skeletonema marinoi (Bacillariophyceae) sensitivity to herbicides and effects of temperature increase on cellular responses to terbuthylazine exposure.

Aquatic Toxicology 2014 Februrary
The North East area of Italy is an intensively farmed area, where the use of herbicides has increased dramatically during the last years. Some of the most detected herbicides are triazine compounds, such as: simazine (SIM), terbuthylazine (TBA), its degradation product desethyl-terbuthylazine (D-TBA) and other herbicides, such as metolachlor (MET). In this paper, the sensitivity of the diatom Skeletonema marinoi to the most detected herbicides (TBA, D-TBA, SIM and MET) was preliminarily studied. All the pollutants tested significantly inhibited the diatom growth and photosynthetic efficiency (from the concentration of 15 μg L(-1)) with the exception of TBA which had the strongest effects on S. marinoi starting from the concentration of 5 μg L(-1). Consequently, cellular physiological responses to TBA exposure (1, 5, 10, 20 and 30 μg L(-1)) were further studied at increasing temperature conditions (15, 20 and 25°C). Inhibition of growth rate and photosynthetic efficiency was observed earlier and determined by lower TBA levels than those affecting cell growth. These responses were significantly enhanced at increasing temperature conditions when growth rates were higher than those measured at 15°C. Carbon cell content increased in the cultures exposed to high concentrations of TBA (from 20 μg L(-1)) compared to the controls, especially at high temperatures. Cell chlorophyll significantly increased from the added concentration of 10 μg L(-1) of TBA at all the temperatures and, as a consequence, also the Chl:C ratio significantly increased. The C:N ratio followed the pattern of nitrate uptake and was characterized, at all the temperatures, by low values during the lag phase in cultures with 20 and 30 μg L(-1) of TBA; in these conditions, in fact, the nutrient in the medium was exhausted later then in the controls. Only cultures exposed to 30 μg L(-1) of TBA at 25°C, which stopped to take up nutrients earlier and could not increase chlorophyll levels, did not display any growth capacity. This study shows that S. marinoi is affected by TBA concentrations lower than those affecting some harmful flagellate species frequently observed in the Adriatic Sea. Thus, it raises the question of the combined effects of herbicides pollution and high temperature pressures on phytoplankton composition.

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