Abstract

The harpacticoid copepod Microarthridion littorale (Poppe) was tested for interaction effects between salinity change and acute pesticide exposure on the survival and genotypic composition of a South Carolina population. Previous data suggested a significant link between a combined exposure to chlorpyrifos (CHPY) and dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and mitochondrial haplotype in the cytochrome b apoenzyme for this euryhaline species when exposed at 12-ppt salinity seawater. Our tests demonstrate a significant non-linear survival response for M. littorale to short-term immersion (24 h) in 3-, 12- and 35-ppt seawater, with copepods transferred to 12-ppt seawater having the lowest survival. There was significant statistical interaction between salinity and pesticide exposure for the dependent variable “survival.” However, changes in genetic composition of survivors were not significant, and they were complicated by extremely low survival in the pesticide/3 ppt and pesticide/36 ppt treatments. As noted for many studies of harpacticoids, males faired worse than females in all treatments, with none surviving pesticide exposure at 45 μg/l CHPY and 6 μg/l DDT.

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