4.7 Article

Artificial light at night alters the activity and feeding behaviour of sandy beach amphipods and pose a threat to their ecological role in Atlantic Canada

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 780, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146568

Keywords

Light pollution; Amphipods; Surface activity; Feeding; Sandy beach ecosystem; Mesocosm experiments

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Canada (NSERC)
  2. UPEI (PAQ)
  3. FONDECYT [1171056, 1200794, 1181609, 1200813]
  4. Millennium Nucleus Center for the Study of Multiple-Drivers on Marine Socio-ecological Systems - ICM MINECON

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The study found that artificial light at night (ALAN) had a temporary detrimental effect on the surface activity, consumption rates, and absorption efficiency of Americorchestia longicornis, but did not affect its growth rates. The plasticity exhibited by the amphipods allowed them to quickly recover their natural rhythm of activity after the removal of ALAN.
Artificial light at night (ALAN) is a growing source of stress for organisms and communities worldwide. These include species associated with sandy beaches, which consume and process stranded seaweeds (wrack) in these ecosystems. This study assessed the influence of ALAN on the activity and feeding behaviour of Americorchestia longicornis, a prominent talitrid amphipod living in sandy beaches of Prince Edward Island, Atlantic Canada. First, two parallel field surveys were conducted to document the natural daily cycle of activity of this species. Then, three related hypotheses were used to assess whether ALAN disrupts its locomotor activity, whether that disruption lasts over time, and whether it affects the feeding behaviour and growth of the amphipods. Tanks equipped with actographs recorded amphipod locomotor activity for similar to 7 days and then its potential recovery (after ALAN removal) for additional similar to 3 days. Separate tanks were used to compare amphipod food consumptions rates, absorption efficiency and growth rates under natural daylight / night (control) and altered conditions (ALAN). The results of these manipulations provide support to two of the three hypotheses proposed and indicate that ALAN was temporarily detrimental for (i.e. significantly reduced) the surface activity, consumption rates and absorption efficiency of the amphipods, whereas growth rates remained unaffected. The results also rejected the remaining hypothesis and suggest that the plasticity exhibited by these amphipods confer them the capacity to recover their natural rhythm of activity shortly after ALAN was removed from the system. Combined, these results suggest that ALAN has a strong, albeit temporary, influence upon the abundant populations of A. longicornis. Such influence has implications for the ecosystem role played by these amphipods as consumers and processors of the subsidy of stranded seaweeds entering these ecosystems. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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