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Comparative Embryonic and Larval Developmental Responses of Estuarine Shrimp (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Palaemonetes pugio</Emphasis>) to the Juvenile Hormone Agonist Fenoxycarb
Authors:Jr" target="_blank">C L McKenneyJr  G M Cripe  S S Foss  S R Tuberty  M Hoglund
Institution:(1) Gulf Ecology Division, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, United States Environmental Protection Agency,, One Sabine Island Dr., Gulf Breeze, Florida 32561-5299, United States;(2) Center for Environmental Diagnostics and Bioremediation, University of West Florida, Pensacola, Florida 32514, United States
Abstract:Grass shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) were reared separately through both embryonic and total larval development during exposure to fenoxycarb at measured concentrations of <2.2 to 888 mgrg L–1. A fenoxycarb concentration of 888 mgrg L–1 significantly (p < 0.05) inhibited embryonic development to larval hatching and extended the embryonic developmental period from 11.9 to 12.7 days. Exposure to fenoxycarb concentrations le502 mgrg L–1 had no significant (p > 0.05) effect on complete embryonic development. Significantly fewer shrimp successfully metamorphosed to postlarvae when exposed through complete larval development to fenoxycarb concentrations ge4 mgrg L–1. Larval development of grass shrimp was therefore >2 orders of magnitude more sensitive to this juvenile hormone agonist than was embryonic development. Viability of larvae developing in fenoxycarb was concentration dependent. Development beyond third zoeal stage was significantly inhibited at fenoxycarb concentrations ge190 mgrg L–1, whereas development beyond fourth zoeal stage was inhibited by a concentration of ge45 mgrg L–1. Fenoxycarb exposure of developing larvae did not alter either the duration of total larval development or the total number of larval stages before metamorphosis. Rearing of fenoxycarb-exposed embryos through larval development without further exposure had no significant effect on number of larval stages, larval development rate, or metamorphic success of larvae. Similarities in the sensitivity of grass shrimp larvae and mosquito larvae to fenoxycarb suggests that the use of a bioassay protocol measuring the metamorphic success of crustacean larvae would be a valuable adjunct to the hazard assessment of newly developed pesticides that target endocrine control of metamorphosis in insects and possibly other endocrine-disrupting xenobiotics as well.
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