4.4 Article

Effects of multiple stressors on northern leopard frogs in agricultural wetlands

Journal

PARASITOLOGY
Volume 148, Issue 7, Pages 827-834

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S003118202100038X

Keywords

Amphibians; atrazine; Lithobates pipiens; lysozyme; northern leopard frogs; oxidative stress; parasitism

Categories

Funding

  1. Environment and Climate Change Canada's Pesticide Science Fund
  2. St. Lawrence Action Plan
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Postgraduate Scholarship
  4. St Hilda's College Oxford

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Parasites can have significant effects on oxidative stress in frogs exposed to atrazine, with certain parasites interacting with the herbicide to affect protein levels, thiol concentrations, and catalase activity in the frogs. Confounding effects of parasitism should be considered in studies of oxidative stress in natural ecosystems, particularly for amphibians in agricultural landscapes.
Natural and anthropogenic stressors, including parasites and pesticides, may induce oxidative stress in animals. Measuring oxidative stress responses in sentinel species that are particularly responsive to environmental perturbations not only provides insight into host physiology but is also a useful readout of ecosystem health. Newly metamorphosed northern leopard frogs (Lithobates pipiens), a sentinel species, were collected from agricultural and non-agricultural wetlands exposed to varying concentrations of the herbicide atrazine. Significant effects of certain parasites' abundance and their interaction with atrazine exposure on frog oxidative stress were identified. Specifically, increased protein levels were detected in frogs infected with echinostome metacercariae. In addition, the nematode Oswaldocruzia sp. was significantly associated with increased thiol concentration and catalase activity. Significant parasite x atrazine interactions were observed for atrazine exposure and the abundance of Oswaldocruzia sp. on thiol, as thiol concentrations increased with parasite abundance at low atrazine localities and decreased in high atrazine wetlands. In addition, a significant interaction between the abundances of Oswaldocruzia sp. and gorgoderid trematodes on thiol concentrations was observed. These findings demonstrate that studies of oxidative stress on animals in natural ecosystems should account for the confounding effects of parasitism, particularly for amphibians in agricultural landscapes.

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