Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms: a review

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms : a review. / Castaño Sanchez, Andrea; Hose, Grant C.; Reboleira, Ana Sofia.

I: Chemosphere, Bind 244, 125422, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Castaño Sanchez, A, Hose, GC & Reboleira, AS 2020, 'Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms: a review', Chemosphere, bind 244, 125422. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125422

APA

Castaño Sanchez, A., Hose, G. C., & Reboleira, A. S. (2020). Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms: a review. Chemosphere, 244, [125422]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125422

Vancouver

Castaño Sanchez A, Hose GC, Reboleira AS. Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms: a review. Chemosphere. 2020;244. 125422. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125422

Author

Castaño Sanchez, Andrea ; Hose, Grant C. ; Reboleira, Ana Sofia. / Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms : a review. I: Chemosphere. 2020 ; Bind 244.

Bibtex

@article{f2fa2b638b8f439a854aea81127213d5,
title = "Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms: a review",
abstract = "How anthropogenic stressors affect biodiversity is a central question in a changing world. Subterranean ecosystems and their biodiversity are particularly vulnerable to change, yet, these species are frequently neglected in analyses of global biodiversity and assessments of ecological status and risk. Are these hidden species affected by anthropogenic stressors? Do they survive outside of the current thermal limits of their ecosystems? These and other important questions can be addressed with ecotoxicological testing, relating contaminants and temperature resistance of species with measured environmental concentrations and climatic data. Ecotoxicological knowledge specific to subterranean ecosystems is crucial for establishing thresholds for their protection, but such data are both scarce and scattered. Here, we review the existing ecotoxicological studies of these impacts to subterranean-adapted species. An effort that includes 167 measured endpoints and presents a database containing experimentally derived species{\textquoteright} tolerance data for 28 contaminants and temperature, for 46 terrestrial and groundwater species, including fungi and animals. The lack of standard data among the studies is currently the major impediment to evaluate how stressors affect subterranean-adapted species and how differently they respond from their relatives at surface. Improving understanding of ecotoxicological effects on subterranean-adapted species will require extensive analysis of physiological responses to a wide range of untested stressors, standardization of testing protocols and evaluation of exposures under realistic scenarios.",
author = "{Casta{\~n}o Sanchez}, Andrea and Hose, {Grant C.} and Reboleira, {Ana Sofia}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125422",
language = "English",
volume = "244",
journal = "Chemosphere",
issn = "0045-6535",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ecotoxicological effects of anthropogenic stressors in subterranean organisms

T2 - a review

AU - Castaño Sanchez, Andrea

AU - Hose, Grant C.

AU - Reboleira, Ana Sofia

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - How anthropogenic stressors affect biodiversity is a central question in a changing world. Subterranean ecosystems and their biodiversity are particularly vulnerable to change, yet, these species are frequently neglected in analyses of global biodiversity and assessments of ecological status and risk. Are these hidden species affected by anthropogenic stressors? Do they survive outside of the current thermal limits of their ecosystems? These and other important questions can be addressed with ecotoxicological testing, relating contaminants and temperature resistance of species with measured environmental concentrations and climatic data. Ecotoxicological knowledge specific to subterranean ecosystems is crucial for establishing thresholds for their protection, but such data are both scarce and scattered. Here, we review the existing ecotoxicological studies of these impacts to subterranean-adapted species. An effort that includes 167 measured endpoints and presents a database containing experimentally derived species’ tolerance data for 28 contaminants and temperature, for 46 terrestrial and groundwater species, including fungi and animals. The lack of standard data among the studies is currently the major impediment to evaluate how stressors affect subterranean-adapted species and how differently they respond from their relatives at surface. Improving understanding of ecotoxicological effects on subterranean-adapted species will require extensive analysis of physiological responses to a wide range of untested stressors, standardization of testing protocols and evaluation of exposures under realistic scenarios.

AB - How anthropogenic stressors affect biodiversity is a central question in a changing world. Subterranean ecosystems and their biodiversity are particularly vulnerable to change, yet, these species are frequently neglected in analyses of global biodiversity and assessments of ecological status and risk. Are these hidden species affected by anthropogenic stressors? Do they survive outside of the current thermal limits of their ecosystems? These and other important questions can be addressed with ecotoxicological testing, relating contaminants and temperature resistance of species with measured environmental concentrations and climatic data. Ecotoxicological knowledge specific to subterranean ecosystems is crucial for establishing thresholds for their protection, but such data are both scarce and scattered. Here, we review the existing ecotoxicological studies of these impacts to subterranean-adapted species. An effort that includes 167 measured endpoints and presents a database containing experimentally derived species’ tolerance data for 28 contaminants and temperature, for 46 terrestrial and groundwater species, including fungi and animals. The lack of standard data among the studies is currently the major impediment to evaluate how stressors affect subterranean-adapted species and how differently they respond from their relatives at surface. Improving understanding of ecotoxicological effects on subterranean-adapted species will require extensive analysis of physiological responses to a wide range of untested stressors, standardization of testing protocols and evaluation of exposures under realistic scenarios.

U2 - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125422

DO - 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125422

M3 - Review

C2 - 31805461

VL - 244

JO - Chemosphere

JF - Chemosphere

SN - 0045-6535

M1 - 125422

ER -

ID: 230756592