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Autori principali: Ren, Jingying, Liu, Yongliang, Liu, Xin, Zhao, Jianmin, Zhang, Tianyu
Natura: Artículo científico
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: Journal of hazardous materials 2025
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Accesso online:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39756319/
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author Ren, Jingying
Liu, Yongliang
Liu, Xin
Zhao, Jianmin
Zhang, Tianyu
author_facet Ren, Jingying
Liu, Yongliang
Liu, Xin
Zhao, Jianmin
Zhang, Tianyu
Ren, Jingying
Liu, Yongliang
Liu, Xin
Zhao, Jianmin
Zhang, Tianyu
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Diurnal temperature variation exacerbates the effects of phenanthrene on Trochus pyramis Born in a warmer ocean. Ren, Jingying Liu, Yongliang Liu, Xin Zhao, Jianmin Zhang, Tianyu Phenanthrenes Animals Water Pollutants, Chemical Temperature Gastropoda Energy Metabolism Oceans and Seas Antioxidants Under global change scenarios, rising seawater temperature could affect the toxicity of chemical pollutants on marine organisms. Tropical species inhabiting coastal areas are especially vulnerable to diurnal temperature variation (DTV), yet the impacts of DTV on pollutant toxicity remains obscured. This study evaluated how a 4℃ DTV affects the toxicity of phenanthrene (PHE) on the physiological traits of Trochus pyramis, a key herbivorous gastropod in coral reef ecosystems, under both control (28°C) and elevated temperature (31°C) conditions. T. pyramis were exposed to PHE (1 and 10 μg/L) across different temperature scenarios for 14 days. Subsequently, PHE bioaccumulation, heat tolerance, antioxidant responses, and energy budgets of T. pyramis were assessed. The results showed that PHE had minimal effect on T. pyramis under DTV at 28°C, likely due to enhanced antioxidant responses and adaptive energy supply strategies induced by DTV. Conversely, DTV exacerbated the deleterious effect of PHE at 31°C, particularly under exposure to high-concentration PHE (10 μg/L), leading to reduced heat tolerance, suppressed antioxidant responses, and disturbed energy metabolism. These results underscore the necessity of incorporating DTV into PHE risk assessments for coral reef ecosystems in the context of global warming.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_39756319
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Journal of hazardous materials
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Diurnal temperature variation exacerbates the effects of phenanthrene on Trochus pyramis Born in a warmer ocean.
Ren, Jingying
Liu, Yongliang
Liu, Xin
Zhao, Jianmin
Zhang, Tianyu
Phenanthrenes
Animals
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Temperature
Gastropoda
Energy Metabolism
Oceans and Seas
Antioxidants
Diurnal temperature variation exacerbates the effects of phenanthrene on Trochus pyramis Born in a warmer ocean. Ren, Jingying Liu, Yongliang Liu, Xin Zhao, Jianmin Zhang, Tianyu Phenanthrenes Animals Water Pollutants, Chemical Temperature Gastropoda Energy Metabolism Oceans and Seas Antioxidants Under global change scenarios, rising seawater temperature could affect the toxicity of chemical pollutants on marine organisms. Tropical species inhabiting coastal areas are especially vulnerable to diurnal temperature variation (DTV), yet the impacts of DTV on pollutant toxicity remains obscured. This study evaluated how a 4℃ DTV affects the toxicity of phenanthrene (PHE) on the physiological traits of Trochus pyramis, a key herbivorous gastropod in coral reef ecosystems, under both control (28°C) and elevated temperature (31°C) conditions. T. pyramis were exposed to PHE (1 and 10 μg/L) across different temperature scenarios for 14 days. Subsequently, PHE bioaccumulation, heat tolerance, antioxidant responses, and energy budgets of T. pyramis were assessed. The results showed that PHE had minimal effect on T. pyramis under DTV at 28°C, likely due to enhanced antioxidant responses and adaptive energy supply strategies induced by DTV. Conversely, DTV exacerbated the deleterious effect of PHE at 31°C, particularly under exposure to high-concentration PHE (10 μg/L), leading to reduced heat tolerance, suppressed antioxidant responses, and disturbed energy metabolism. These results underscore the necessity of incorporating DTV into PHE risk assessments for coral reef ecosystems in the context of global warming.
title Diurnal temperature variation exacerbates the effects of phenanthrene on Trochus pyramis Born in a warmer ocean.
topic Phenanthrenes
Animals
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Temperature
Gastropoda
Energy Metabolism
Oceans and Seas
Antioxidants
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39756319/