Abstract

The use of behaviour in ecotoxicology is expanding, however the lack of standardisation and validation of these assays currently presents a major drawback in moving forward in the development of behavioural assays. Furthermore, there is a current paucity of control data on test species, particularly invertebrate models. In this study we assessed a range of behaviours associated with spatial distribution and locomotion in relation to arena size and shape in two species of amphipod crustacean (Echinogammarus marinus and Gammarus pulex). Arena shape had significant effects on almost all behavioural parameters analysed. Increasing arena size resulted in an increased mean velocity and activity plus increased proportional use of the central zones. These results indicate that ‘ceiling effects’ may occur in some ecotoxicological studies resulting in potentially ‘false’ negative effects if careful consideration is not paid to experimental design. Differences in behaviours were observed between the two species of amphipod. For example, G. pulex spend approximately five times (∼20%) more of the available time crossing the central zones of the arenas compared to E. marinus (∼4%) which could have implications on assessing anxiolytic behaviours. The results of this study highlight several behaviours with potential for use in behavioural ecotoxicology with crustaceans but also underscore the need for careful consideration when designing these behavioural assays.

Highlights

  • Behaviour is a useful endpoint in ecotoxicology as it may provide a link between biochemical and ecological effects of environmental contamination (Scott & Sloman, 2004; Sloman & Mcneil, 2012)

  • This study has provided evidence that amphipods exhibit a range of measurable behaviours potentially associated with anxiety

  • Differences in zone use and spatial distribution between the two amphipod species suggest that care should be taken when selecting your test species for use in behavioural ecotoxicological studies as this could potentially affect the interpretation of toxicity tests

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Summary

Introduction

Behaviour is a useful endpoint in ecotoxicology as it may provide a link between biochemical and ecological effects of environmental contamination (Scott & Sloman, 2004; Sloman & Mcneil, 2012). Many of these endpoints have been assessed by pharmacological studies and have previously been limited to vertebrate models namely rodents and fish. Some amphipod species have been used successfully in ecotoxicology assays for the assessment of phototactic behaviour (Guler & Ford, 2010), activity (Bossus et al, 2014) and anxiety (Perrot-Minnot, Banchetry & Cézilly, 2017).

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