Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus

Environmental degradation in Latin America has increased in the last three decades. The agricultural frontier of Argentina is spreading out, and this phenomenon has involved a significant increase in the use of biocides. Glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine, PMG) is the most widely used herbicide in...

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Autor principal: Menéndez Helman, Renata Julia
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
PMG
Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman
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spelling paper:paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman2023-06-08T16:38:28Z Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus Menéndez Helman, Renata Julia Acetylcholinesterase AChE Biomarkers Catalase Cnesterodon decemmaculatus Freshwater fish Glyphosate N-phosphonomethylglycine PMG Toxicity Environmental degradation in Latin America has increased in the last three decades. The agricultural frontier of Argentina is spreading out, and this phenomenon has involved a significant increase in the use of biocides. Glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine, PMG) is the most widely used herbicide in this country. Particularly the application of formulated glyphosate increased from 70 million kg in 1999 to more than 210 million in 2011. Although this herbicide is considered as "environmentally friendly" with moderate persistence, the mobility and fate will be conditioned by the chemical and biological profile of the environment, and regarding that, several authors have determined environmentally relevant levels of glyphosate and its metabolites in surface water. The risk associated with the use of PMG, could be assessed by the evaluation of the impact on a non-target species: Cnesterodon decemmaculatus, a Neotropical endemic teleost, widely distributed in the region. Experimental results would indicate that glyphosate (active ingredient, analytical grade, acid form) does not present a high level of toxicity (LC50-96h > 100 mg.L-1) on C. decemmaculatus. However, the toxicity of one of the glyphosate-based herbicide formulation was found to be significantly higher (LC50-96h = 29 mg.L-1). These results are consistent with other evidences that indicate a remarkable increase in the toxicity of formulations regarding to the active ingredient in freshwater teleosts. Several scientists have focused their research on the identification of biomarkers of environmental stress in non-target species. These could be specific and early signals of the toxic-organism interaction. In this regard, the utility of morphological and biochemical parameters as quantitative bioindicators of xenobiotic exposure has been shown. Within this framework, we measured the impact of sublethal exposure of Cnesterodon decemmaculatus to PMG on antioxidant defenses (catalase activity) and neurotoxicity (acetylcholinesterase activity). After acute exposure, PMG caused changes in the enzyme activities: an increase in the activity of catalase and an inhibition of the acetylcholinesterase activity. These results are the first report indicating that sublethal PMG affect these biomarkers in a native teleost species. © 2014 by Nova Science Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Fil:Menéndez-Helman, R.J. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. 2013 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Acetylcholinesterase
AChE
Biomarkers
Catalase
Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
Freshwater fish
Glyphosate
N-phosphonomethylglycine
PMG
Toxicity
spellingShingle Acetylcholinesterase
AChE
Biomarkers
Catalase
Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
Freshwater fish
Glyphosate
N-phosphonomethylglycine
PMG
Toxicity
Menéndez Helman, Renata Julia
Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
topic_facet Acetylcholinesterase
AChE
Biomarkers
Catalase
Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
Freshwater fish
Glyphosate
N-phosphonomethylglycine
PMG
Toxicity
description Environmental degradation in Latin America has increased in the last three decades. The agricultural frontier of Argentina is spreading out, and this phenomenon has involved a significant increase in the use of biocides. Glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine, PMG) is the most widely used herbicide in this country. Particularly the application of formulated glyphosate increased from 70 million kg in 1999 to more than 210 million in 2011. Although this herbicide is considered as "environmentally friendly" with moderate persistence, the mobility and fate will be conditioned by the chemical and biological profile of the environment, and regarding that, several authors have determined environmentally relevant levels of glyphosate and its metabolites in surface water. The risk associated with the use of PMG, could be assessed by the evaluation of the impact on a non-target species: Cnesterodon decemmaculatus, a Neotropical endemic teleost, widely distributed in the region. Experimental results would indicate that glyphosate (active ingredient, analytical grade, acid form) does not present a high level of toxicity (LC50-96h > 100 mg.L-1) on C. decemmaculatus. However, the toxicity of one of the glyphosate-based herbicide formulation was found to be significantly higher (LC50-96h = 29 mg.L-1). These results are consistent with other evidences that indicate a remarkable increase in the toxicity of formulations regarding to the active ingredient in freshwater teleosts. Several scientists have focused their research on the identification of biomarkers of environmental stress in non-target species. These could be specific and early signals of the toxic-organism interaction. In this regard, the utility of morphological and biochemical parameters as quantitative bioindicators of xenobiotic exposure has been shown. Within this framework, we measured the impact of sublethal exposure of Cnesterodon decemmaculatus to PMG on antioxidant defenses (catalase activity) and neurotoxicity (acetylcholinesterase activity). After acute exposure, PMG caused changes in the enzyme activities: an increase in the activity of catalase and an inhibition of the acetylcholinesterase activity. These results are the first report indicating that sublethal PMG affect these biomarkers in a native teleost species. © 2014 by Nova Science Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved.
author Menéndez Helman, Renata Julia
author_facet Menéndez Helman, Renata Julia
author_sort Menéndez Helman, Renata Julia
title Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
title_short Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
title_full Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
title_fullStr Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
title_full_unstemmed Lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: Biomarkers responses in Cnesterodon decemmaculatus
title_sort lethal and sublethal glyphosate effects on non-target fish species: biomarkers responses in cnesterodon decemmaculatus
publishDate 2013
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_97816294_v_n_p86_MenendezHelman
work_keys_str_mv AT menendezhelmanrenatajulia lethalandsublethalglyphosateeffectsonnontargetfishspeciesbiomarkersresponsesincnesterodondecemmaculatus
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