John H. Roea, b, *, William A. Hopkinsa,
c, Sarah E. DuRanta, c and Jason M. Unrinea
aSavannah
River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, Aiken, SC 29802, USA
bInstitute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, Canberra,
ACT 2601, Australia
cVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg,
VA 24061, USA
Abstract
Amphibians in natural systems must cope with a number of biotic and
abiotic stressors that can potentially interact with pollutants to influence
toxicity. Although interactive effects of short-lived pesticides with
various environmental stressors have been studied, how persistent and
bioaccumulative compounds such as metals interact with natural stressors
to influence amphibians remains unexplored. We exposed the salamander
Ambystoma talpoideum to coal-combustion wastes (a complex mixture
of metals and metalloids, hereafter referred to as CCW) at low and high
larval density throughout aquatic development in mesocosms simulating
temporary wetlands. CCW and high density reduced survival to metamorphosis
by 57–77% and 85–92%, respectively, and the effects of these
two factors together were additive. Reduced metamorphosis was due in
part to larval mortality prior to initiation of pond drying, but CCW
and high density also extended the larval period, causing mortality
of larvae that were not ready to metamorphose before the pond dried.
To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a pollutant-induced
extension of larval period leading to reduction in amphibian recruitment.
Metamorphs were smaller in high density compared to low in reference
ponds, but those from CCW emerged at similar sizes irrespective of density,
suggesting less-than-additive effects of density and CCW on metamorph
size. The adverse responses of salamanders to CCW were likely due to
direct toxicity, as A. talpoideum metamorphs accumulated high
concentrations of a suite of trace elements (As, Se, Sr, and V), and
also to indirect effects on the community food web. We conclude that
in no case did the addition of a natural stressor (high density) exacerbate
CCW-related effects, but that the effects of CCW alone can be detrimental
to larvae of salamanders that breed in temporary ponds.
Keywords:
Amphibians; Density; Ephemeral ponds; Interactive effects; Salamanders;
Pollution
*Corresponding
author
Tel.:
+61 2 6201 2937; fax: +61 2 6201 5305.
E-mail address: roe@aerg.canberra.edu.au (J.H. Roe).
SREL
Reprint #2972