posted on 2013-01-02, 00:00authored byRaúl A. Loayza-Muro, Jenny K. Marticorena-Ruiz, Edwin J. Palomino, Camille Merritt, Milo L. De Baat, Maarten Van Gemert, Rudo A. Verweij, Michiel H. S. Kraak, Wim Admiraal
In high altitude Andean streams an intense solar radiation
and
coinciding metal pollution allow the persistence of only a few specialized
taxa, including chironomids. The aim of the present study was therefore
to determine the mechanisms underlying the persistence of chironomids
under these multiple stress conditions, hypothesizing that melanin
counteracts both the adverse effects of solar radiation and of metals.
Melanin was determined in chironomids from reference and metal polluted
streams at 3000 and 4000 m altitude, being 2-fold higher at 4000 m
compared to 3000 m, and 2-fold higher in polluted streams than in
reference streams at both altitudes. The field observations were experimentally
verified by assessing the combined effects of Cu and UV-B on the survival
and melanin concentration in larvae of the model species Chironomus
riparius (Chironomidae, Diptera). In laboratory exposures,
the highest melanin concentrations were found in larvae surviving
toxic Cu concentrations, but not in those exposed to the highest UV-B
radiation. Pre-exposure to UV-B decreased the sensitivity of the larvae
to UV-B and to Cu+UV-B. It is concluded that in the field, melanin
may protect chironomids partially against both elevated metal concentrations
and solar radiation, allowing them to persist under the harshest conditions
in high altitude streams.