4.7 Article

Carryover effects minimized the positive effects of treated wastewater on anuran development

期刊

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
卷 289, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.112571

关键词

Amphibian; Common duckweed; Constructed wetland; Contaminants; Effluent; Pharmaceuticals; Wetland; Wildlife

资金

  1. Yeatman Fund at the University of the South
  2. McCrickard Awards at the University of the South
  3. Appalachian College Association
  4. Chadwick Lewis Memorial Grant from the Tennessee Herpetological Society
  5. Coca Cola Foundation
  6. Coca Cola Bottling Company United

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that constructed wetlands for wastewater treatment may have negative impacts on wildlife, such as reducing terrestrial survival rates and altering individual morphology. While there may be some short-term benefits, there could be detrimental effects on overall fitness in the long term.
Constructed wetlands (CWs) are a potential solution for wastewater treatment due to their capacity to support native species and provide tertiary wastewater treatment. However, CWs can expose wildlife communities to excess nutrients and harmful contaminants, affecting their development, morphology, and behavior. To examine how wastewater CWs may affect wildlife, we raised Southern leopard frogs, Lithobates sphenocephalus, in wastewater from conventional secondary lagoon and tertiary CW treatments for comparison with pondwater along with the presence and absence of a common plant invader to these systems ? common duckweed (Lemna minor) - and monitored their juvenile development for potential carryover effects into the terrestrial environment. The tertiary CW treatment did not change demographic or morphological outcomes relative to conventional wastewater treatment in our study. Individuals emerging from both wastewater treatments demonstrated lower terrestrial survival rates than those emerging from pondwater throughout the experiment though experiment-wide survival rates were equivalent among treatments. Individuals from wastewater treatments transformed at larger sizes relative to those in pondwater, but this advantage was minimized in the terrestrial environment. Individuals that developed with duckweed had consistent but marginally better performance in both environments. Our results suggest a potential trade-off between short-term benefits of development in treated effluent and long-term consequences on overall fitness. Overall, we demonstrate that CWs for the purpose of wastewater treatment may not be suitable replicates for wildlife habitat and could have consequences for local population dynamics.

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