Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system

Rivers are often exposed to multiple stressors, such as nutrients and contaminants, whose impacts on the river food webs may not be distinguished by sole assessment of biological community structures. We examined the benthic algal assemblages and the fatty acids (FA) of benthic macroinvertebrates in...

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Main Authors: Lau, Danny C P, Goedkoop, Willem
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/32194/
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author Lau, Danny C P
Goedkoop, Willem
author_facet Lau, Danny C P
Goedkoop, Willem
author_sort Lau, Danny C P
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
description Rivers are often exposed to multiple stressors, such as nutrients and contaminants, whose impacts on the river food webs may not be distinguished by sole assessment of biological community structures. We examined the benthic algal assemblages and the fatty acids (FA) of benthic macroinvertebrates in the lower Athabasca River in Canada, aiming to assess the changes in algal support and nutritional quality of the benthic food web in response to cumulative exposure to natural bitumen, municipal sewage discharge (hereafter, "sewage"), and oil sands mining ("mining"). Data show that the decline in water quality (increases in nutrient concentrations and total suspended solids) was associated with decreases in benthic diatom abundance, and was driven mainly by sewageinduced nutrient enrichment. Responses in nutritional quality of benthic macroinvertebrates, indicated by their polyunsaturated FA (PUFA) concentrations, were taxon- and stressor-specific. Nutritional quality of the larval dragonfly predator, Ophiogomphus, decreased nonlinearly with decreasing benthic diatom abundance and was lowest at the sewage-affected sites, although exposure to natural bitumen also resulted in reduced Ophiogomphus PUFA concentrations. In contrast, the PUFA concentrations of mayfly grazers/collector-gatherers were not affected by natural bitumen exposure, and were higher at the sewage and sewage+mining sites. The PUFA concentrations of the shredder Pteronarcys larvae did not change with cumulative exposure to the stressors. Sediment metal and polycyclic aromatic compound concentrations were not associated with the macroinvertebrate FA changes. Overall, we provide evidence that sewage induced reduction in trophic support by PUFA-rich diatoms, and was the predominant driver of the observed changes in FA composition and nutritional quality of the benthic macroinvertebrates. Fatty-acid metrics are useful to untangle effects of concurrent stressors, but the assessment outcomes depend on the functional feeding guilds used. A food-web ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Athabasca River
genre_facet Athabasca River
geographic Athabasca River
Canada
geographic_facet Athabasca River
Canada
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institution Open Polar
language English
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op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/32194/1/lau-d-c-p-et-al-20231117.pdf
Lau, Danny C P and Goedkoop, Willem (2023). Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system. Environmental Pollution. 337 , 122598 [Research article]
publishDate 2023
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spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:32194 2025-04-27T14:25:46+00:00 Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system Lau, Danny C P Goedkoop, Willem 2023 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/32194/ en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/32194/1/lau-d-c-p-et-al-20231117.pdf Lau, Danny C P and Goedkoop, Willem (2023). Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system. Environmental Pollution. 337 , 122598 [Research article] Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507) Research article NonPeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2023 ftslunivuppsala 2025-03-28T11:17:59Z Rivers are often exposed to multiple stressors, such as nutrients and contaminants, whose impacts on the river food webs may not be distinguished by sole assessment of biological community structures. We examined the benthic algal assemblages and the fatty acids (FA) of benthic macroinvertebrates in the lower Athabasca River in Canada, aiming to assess the changes in algal support and nutritional quality of the benthic food web in response to cumulative exposure to natural bitumen, municipal sewage discharge (hereafter, "sewage"), and oil sands mining ("mining"). Data show that the decline in water quality (increases in nutrient concentrations and total suspended solids) was associated with decreases in benthic diatom abundance, and was driven mainly by sewageinduced nutrient enrichment. Responses in nutritional quality of benthic macroinvertebrates, indicated by their polyunsaturated FA (PUFA) concentrations, were taxon- and stressor-specific. Nutritional quality of the larval dragonfly predator, Ophiogomphus, decreased nonlinearly with decreasing benthic diatom abundance and was lowest at the sewage-affected sites, although exposure to natural bitumen also resulted in reduced Ophiogomphus PUFA concentrations. In contrast, the PUFA concentrations of mayfly grazers/collector-gatherers were not affected by natural bitumen exposure, and were higher at the sewage and sewage+mining sites. The PUFA concentrations of the shredder Pteronarcys larvae did not change with cumulative exposure to the stressors. Sediment metal and polycyclic aromatic compound concentrations were not associated with the macroinvertebrate FA changes. Overall, we provide evidence that sewage induced reduction in trophic support by PUFA-rich diatoms, and was the predominant driver of the observed changes in FA composition and nutritional quality of the benthic macroinvertebrates. Fatty-acid metrics are useful to untangle effects of concurrent stressors, but the assessment outcomes depend on the functional feeding guilds used. A food-web ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Athabasca River Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Athabasca River Canada
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
Lau, Danny C P
Goedkoop, Willem
Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
title Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
title_full Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
title_fullStr Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
title_full_unstemmed Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
title_short Fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
title_sort fatty-acid based assessment of benthic food-web responses to multiple stressors in a large river system
topic Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
topic_facet Environmental Sciences (social aspects to be 507)
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/32194/