Periodic Reporting for period 1 - AquaDrugs (Uncovering the effects of pharmaceuticals in the wild, beyond individuals to animal communities)
Période du rapport: 2023-01-01 au 2024-12-31
How do environmental pharmaceuticals affect the behaviour, survival, and ecological communities of wildlife? My project, AquaDrugs, uses artificial intelligence and underwater animal tracking to connect the behavioural impacts of pharmaceutical pollutants across biological scales. It will provide fundamental new insights into how phamaceutical pollutants can effect animal social and ecological interactions - key biological processes that underpin population and community dynamics. In doing so, AquaDrugs will enhance the predictive power of lab-based behavioural studies in chemical risk assessments, helping to strengthen regulatory action on pharmaceuticals and other emerging contaminants in aquatic environments across Europe and beyond.
1. In the first experiment, I explored the interactive effects of pharmaceutical contamination and temperature on the behaviour and behavioural variability of brown trout (Salmo trutta). This study is among the first to examine how temperature modulates the behavioural and plasticity responses to pharmaceutical pollutants. The findings highlight the complex interplay between environmental stressors and pollutant impacts, offering new insights into temperature-dependent ecotoxicological risks.
2. In the second experiment, I investigated how pharmaceutical exposure affects the collective behaviour of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). As part of this project, I enhanced automated tracking software (idTracker) to quantify the effects of pollutants on group formation, structure, and dynamics. These tools improve the efficiency, standardisation, and reproducibility of behavioural phenotyping in ecotoxicology, offering a robust framework for screening the effects of chemical pollutants on social animals.
3. In the third experiment, I employed an innovative acoustic telemetry approach to assess how pharmaceutical pollution influences species interactions and survival in natural environments. This will be one of the first studies to demonstrate how drug-induced behavioral changes affect predator-prey dynamics and social interactions in the wild, providing critical data on the ecological consequences of pharmaceutical contamination.
1. At higher temperatures, pharmaceutical exposure has a stronger effect on animal behaviour and behavioural variability. These findings suggest that as temperatures rise, the impact of pharmaceutical pollutants may intensify, which has significant implications in the context of climate change.
2. Pharmaceutical exposure can disrupt collective behaviours in fish, weakening their responses to predation threats. Specifically, I observed that fish groups exposed to pharmaceuticals become less cohesive, and their leadership structures break down, resulting in poorly coordinated schools in the presence of predators.
3. Pharmaceutical exposure increases an individual’s predation risk in the wild. My findings indicate that prey species exposed to pharmaceuticals are less likely to use shelter and spend more time in high-risk areas with a greater likelihood of encountering predators, making them more vulnerable to predation.
Overall, these results offer novel insights into the effects of pharmaceutical pollution on wildlife behaviour, revealing how such impacts may scale up to population and community levels in contaminated ecosystems.