Feeding partridges with organic or conventional grain triggers cascading effects in life-history traits

Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
-- Langue source --
Titre
Feeding partridges with organic or conventional grain triggers cascading effects in life-history traits
Titre français
Titre anglais
Auteur(s)
  • MOREAU Jérôme
  • MONCEAU Karine
  • CRÉPIN Malaury
  • TOCHON Flavie Derouin
  • MONDET Cécilia
  • FRAIKIN Marie
  • TEIXEIRA Maria
  • BRETAGNOLLE Vincent
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
FMU9HIJG
Version
3785
Date ajout
6 mai 2021 08:05
Date modification
6 mai 2021 08:05
Résumé
Farmland birds are declining across Europe and North America and the research of factors behind is the subject of extensive researches. Agricultural intensification is now recognized as a major factor governing the loss of biodiversity with strong evidence that pesticides induced direct bird mortality at a high dose. However, less attention has been given to the long-term effects of chronic exposure to low dose of pesticides. Here, we used an experimental procedure in which grey partridges were fed with untreated grains obtained from either organic (no pesticide) or conventional agriculture (with pesticide) for 26 weeks, thus strictly mimicking wild birds foraging on fields. We then examined a suite of life-history traits (ecophysiological and behavioural) that may ultimately, influence population dynamics. We show for the first time that ingesting low pesticide doses over a long period has long-term consequences on several major physiological pathways without inducing differential mortality. Compared to control partridges, birds exposed to chronic doses i) had less developed carotenoid-based ornaments due to lower concentrations of plasmatic carotenoids, ii) had higher activated immune system, iii) showed signs of physiological stress inducing a higher intestinal parasitic load, iv) had higher behavioural activity and body condition and v) showed lower breeding investment. Our results are consistent with a hormetic effect, in which exposure to a low dose of a chemical agent may induce a positive response, but our results also indicate that breeding adults may show impaired fitness traits bearing population consequences through reduced breeding investment or productivity. Given the current scale of use of pesticides in agrosystems, we suggest that such shifts in life-history traits may have a negative long-term impact on wild bird populations across agrosystems. We stress that long-term effects should no longer be ignored in pesticide risk assessment, where currently, only short-term effects are taken into account.
Note
None
CRAW tags
  • AB - Modalité bio
  • FREDO alimentation animale
  • FREDO santé animale
  • GEO France
  • oiseau
WEB tags
  • carotenoid
  • immune system
  • long-term effect
  • parasite
  • pesticides residuals
  • realistic exposure
Titre de la publication
Environmental Pollution
Volume
278
Pages
116851
Date caractères
June 1, 2021
Doi
10.1016/j.envpol.2021.116851 Le DOI est une URL unique de référencement d'une publication. Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique
Issn
0269-7491 L’ISSN est un code de 8 chiffres servant à identifier les journaux, revues, magazines, périodiques de toute nature et sur tous supports, papier comme électronique.