Disruptive effects of chlorpyrifos on predator-prey interactions of Ceratophrys ornata tadpoles: consequences at the population level using computational modeling
Carolina Salgado Costa, Federico Rimoldi, Morena J. Pantucci, Saraleguia, M. Leticia Rubio Puzzo, Vance L. Trudeau, Guillermo S. Natale

TL;DR
This study combines experimental ecotoxicology and computational modeling to assess how chlorpyrifos affects tadpole predator-prey interactions, revealing behavioral and population-level impacts and demonstrating the utility of modeling as a predictive tool.
Contribution
It introduces a novel integrated approach using experiments and computational models to analyze pesticide effects on amphibian behavior and interactions.
Findings
Chlorpyrifos causes mortality and behavioral changes in tadpoles.
Behavioral effects persist during predator-prey interactions.
Model predictions align with experimental data within errors.
Abstract
Large-scale ecotoxicological studies have technical and ethical limitations, both related to the need to expose individuals to potentially harmful compounds. Computational modeling is a complementary useful and predictive tool that overcomes these limitations. Considering the increasing interest in the effects of pesticides on behavioral traits, the aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of chlorpyrifos (CPF) on intra- and inter-specific interactions of anuran tadpoles, complementing traditional ecotoxicological tools with a theoretical analysis verified by computational simulations. Experiments were developed under two consecutive phases: a first phase of exposure, and a second phase of interactions. The second phase consisted of evaluating the effects of CPF on intra- and inter-specific interactions of exposed C. ornata (Co) tadpoles acting as predators and unexposed Rhinella…
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