Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2025.140293
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) Double trouble: the synergistic threat of environmental stressors and pesticide mixtures
Author Shahid, N.; Siddique, A. ORCID logo ; Krauss, M. ORCID logo ; Böhme, A.; Brack, W.; Jahnke, A. ORCID logo ; Liess, M.
Source Titel Journal of Hazardous Materials
Year 2025
Department ETOX; EXPO
Page From art. 140293
Language englisch
Topic T9 Healthy Planet
Supplements https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0304389425032133-mmc1.pdf
Keywords Effect addition; concentration addition; synergism; field-relevant; elevated temperature; stress addition
Abstract

Halting biodiversity loss demands a clear understanding of how multiple stressors interact across levels of biological organization. Here, we investigate these interactions at the individual level using Daphnia magna as a model species. We exposed D. magna to a single pesticide (esfenvalerate) and a field-relevant mixture of 13 pesticides (summed toxic units), under two common climate-related stressors: food limitation and elevated temperature. The pesticide mixture behaved additively, conforming to Concentration Addition (CA); in contrast, environmental stressors produced synergistic effects accurately predicted by the Stress Addition Model (SAM).

Food limitation amplified toxicity about four-fold for esfenvalerate and ten-fold for the mixture (model-deviation ratios, MDR = 4 and 10, respectively). Adding elevated temperature (+5 °C above optimum) further intensified these interactions, driving MDRs to 19 for esfenvalerate and 42 for the mixture, with latent interactions strengthening throughout the 21-day test. The 19-fold synergism was driven entirely by the two non-chemical stressors, whereas adding pesticide mixtures only doubled it. Consequently, LC50 under environmental stress decreased from TU 3.46 (0.45 μg/L) to TU 0.18 (0.024 μg/L) for esfenvalerate, and from TU 2.85 to TU 0.068 for the pesticide mixture, while LC10 dropped by more than two orders of magnitude. Food limitation and elevated temperature were the primary drivers of synergism. Although pesticide mixture slightly deviated from additivity, environmental stress greatly intensified toxicity. Therefore, ecological risk assessments should account for both chemical mixtures and co-occurring environmental stressors.

Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=31497
Shahid, N., Siddique, A., Krauss, M., Böhme, A., Brack, W., Jahnke, A., Liess, M. (2025):
Double trouble: the synergistic threat of environmental stressors and pesticide mixtures
J. Hazard. Mater. , art. 140293 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2025.140293