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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Castillo, Nicole"

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    Interactive impact of residual pyrethroid compounds used in the Chilean salmon farming industry and coastal acidification conditions on the feeding performance of farmed mussels in northern Patagonia
    (2024) Conejeros, Adonis; Martin, Valeska A. San; Castillo, Nicole; Cuevas, L. Antonio; Garces, Karen; Barra, Ricardo O.; Aguilera, Victor M.; Vargas, Cristian A.
    The use of pyrethroids in aquaculture has been an important component of achieving a thriving salmon farming industry in Chile. While the residual presence of such substances is known to depend on environmental conditions, most ecotoxicological studies to date have not considered environmental context. Here, we conducted oceanographic monitoring combined with experiments aiming to estimate the effects of two pyrethroids on the feeding rates of larvae of farmed mussels, Mytilus chilensis. In additional experiments, mussel spats were exposed to both pyrethroids, but under contrasting temperature/pH so as to mimic winter and summer conditions. Experiments mimicking spring conditions revealed that both pyrethroid substances affected the feeding of mussel larvae as a function of concentration. Conversely, significant impact of pyrethroids on adults were not observed with regard to temperature and pH, but a significant impact of low temperature/low pH condition on ingestion rates was confirmed. Given the current status of increasing ocean acidification, the results of this study are expected to provide useful information with regard to achieving sustainable mussel aquaculture, especially considering both activities occur in similar geographic areas, and the expansion of salmon farming areas is ongoing in Chile.
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    Slow and steady hurts the crab: Effects of chronic and acute microplastic exposures on a filter feeder crab
    (2023) Urbina, Mauricio A.; da Silva Montes, Caroline; Schafer, Angela; Castillo, Nicole; Urzua, Angel; Lagos, Marcelo E.
    Microplastics are a widespread environmental contaminant Although detrimental effects on aquatic organisms are well documented, little is known about the long-term effects of microplastic exposure to filter-feeding organisms at ecologically realistic levels. This study investigates the effects of environmentally relevant concentrations of polyethylene micro beads ranging in site from 3 to 30 mu m, on the physiology and energetics of a coastal filter-feeding crab Petrolisthes laevigatus. We evaluated the impact of microplastics by exposing P. laevigatus to two different concentrations and exposure times: i) a chronic exposure for five months at 250 particles L-1, and ii) an acute exposure for 48 hat 20,800 particles L-1, similar to 80 times higher than the chronic exposure. The results showed that only chronic exposures elicited negative effects on the coastal crab in both, metabolic and physiological parameters. Our findings demonstrate a strong correlation between the ingestion rate and weight loss, even at low concentrations, the crabs exhibited severe nutritional damage as a result of long-term microplastic exposure. By contrast, acute exposure revealed no significant effects to the crabs, a possible explanation for this being short-term compensatory responses. These results suggest that environmentally relevant concentrations of microplastics are harmful to marine organisms, and they should be evaluated during realistic temporal scales, as their effects strongly dependent on the exposure time. Our results also suggest that the effects of microplastics have been likely underestimated to date, due to the dominance of short-term exposures (acute) reported in the current literature.

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