Abstract

This study aimed to assess the behavioral responses (immobilization, horizontal and vertical motility, and response to light) of Chironomus aprilinus larvae exposed to individual cyanobacterial metabolites aeruginosin 98B (AER-B), anabaenopeptin-B (ANA-B), and cylindrospermopsin (CYL), and their binary and ternary mixtures. The investigation revealed that single metabolites ANA-B and CYL exhibited the highest potency in immobilizing the larvae. Notably, the binary mixture AER-B+CYL induced a remarkably strong synergistic interaction, while other tested binary and ternary mixtures demonstrated antagonistic effects. Both individual metabolites and their mixtures led to a decrease in larval movement speed, with the AER-B+CYL combination showing a very synergistic effect, and strong antagonistic interactions between the oligopeptides in the ternary mixture. Conversely, while AER-B and the binary mixture ANA-B+CYL stimulated vertical movement, other single metabolites and binary and ternary mixtures decreased this parameter. Antagonistic interactions were observed in all mixtures. ANA-B emerged as the most potent inhibitor, yet all tested metabolites and their mixtures decreased larval response to light, displaying synergistic interactions, except for the AER-B+ANA-B mixture at 250 μg L-1 + 250 μg L-1. These findings underscore the sensitivity of Chironomus larvae behavioral parameters as indicators of environmental stressors and mixtures. Consequently, they are recommended for assessing toxic effects induced by cyanobacterial products and other bioactive chemicals.

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