TY - JOUR A1 - Heß, Sebastian A1 - Hof, Delia A1 - Oetken, Matthias A1 - Sundermann, Andrea T1 - Macroinvertebrate communities respond strongly but non-specifically to a toxicity gradient derived by effect-based methods T2 - Environmental Pollution N2 - Highlights • Linking ecological and ecotoxicological data from 30 river sites. • Bioassays indicate complex mixture of chemicals with different modes of action. • Macroinvertebrate community deteriorates along a toxicity gradient. • Macroinvertebrate response has low potential for toxicity-specific bioindicators. • Effect-based methods could isolate toxicity effects from multiple stressors. Abstract Chemical pollution is one of the most important threats to freshwater ecosystems. The plethora of potentially occurring chemicals and their effects in complex mixtures challenge standard monitoring methods. Effect-based methods (EBMs) are proposed as complementary tools for the assessment of chemical pollution and toxic effects. To investigate the effects of chemical pollution, the ecological relevance of EBMs and the potential of macroinvertebrates as toxicity-specific bioindicators, ecological and ecotoxicological data were linked. Baseline toxicity, mutagenicity, dioxin-like and estrogenic activity of water and sediment samples from 30 river sites in central Germany were quantified with four in vitro bioassays. The responses of macroinvertebrate communities at these sites were assessed by calculating 16 taxonomic and functional metrics and by investigating changes in the taxonomic and trait composition. Principal component analysis revealed an increase in toxicity along a joint gradient of chemicals with different modes of action. This toxicity gradient was associated with a decrease in biodiversity and ecological quality, as well as significant changes in taxonomic and functional composition. The strength of the effects suggested a strong impact of chemical pollution and underlined the suitability of EBMs in detecting ecological relevant effects. However, the metrics, taxa, and traits associated with vulnerability or tolerance to toxicity were found to also respond to other stressors in previous studies and thus may have only a low potential as toxicity-specific bioindicators. Because macroinvertebrates respond integratively to all present stressors, linking both ecological and environmental monitoring is necessary to investigate the overall effects but also isolate individual stressors. EBMs have a high potential to separate the toxicity of chemical mixtures from other stressors in a multiple stressor scenario, as well as identifying the presence of chemical groups with specific modes of action. KW - Biological indicators KW - Ecotoxicological assessment KW - bioassays KW - Traits KW - Micropollutants KW - Chemical pollution Y1 - 2024 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/85855 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-858557 SN - 0269-7491 VL - 356 IS - 124330 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER -