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Dive into the research topics where Brian M. Mattes is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian M. Mattes.


Evolutionary Applications | 2015

The contribution of phenotypic plasticity to the evolution of insecticide tolerance in amphibian populations

Jessica Hua; Devin K. Jones; Brian M. Mattes; Rickey D. Cothran; Rick A. Relyea; Jason T. Hoverman

Understanding population responses to rapid environmental changes caused by anthropogenic activities, such as pesticides, is a research frontier. Genetic assimilation (GA), a process initiated by phenotypic plasticity, is one mechanism potentially influencing evolutionary responses to novel environments. While theoretical and laboratory research suggests that GA has the potential to influence evolutionary trajectories, few studies have assessed its role in the evolution of wild populations experiencing novel environments. Using the insecticide, carbaryl, and 15 wood frog populations distributed across an agricultural gradient, we tested whether GA contributed to the evolution of pesticide tolerance. First, we investigated the evidence for evolved tolerance to carbaryl and discovered that population‐level patterns of tolerance were consistent with evolutionary responses to pesticides; wood frog populations living closer to agriculture were more tolerant than populations living far from agriculture. Next, we tested the potential role of GA in the evolution of pesticide tolerance by assessing whether patterns of tolerance were consistent with theoretical predictions. We found that populations close to agriculture displayed constitutive tolerance to carbaryl whereas populations far from agriculture had low naïve tolerance but high magnitudes of induced tolerance. These results suggest GA could play a role in evolutionary responses to novel environments in nature.


Environmental Pollution | 2015

Evolved pesticide tolerance in amphibians: Predicting mechanisms based on pesticide novelty and mode of action

Jessica Hua; Devin K. Jones; Brian M. Mattes; Rickey D. Cothran; Rick A. Relyea; Jason T. Hoverman

We examined 10 wood frog populations distributed along an agricultural gradient for their tolerance to six pesticides (carbaryl, malathion, cypermethrin, permethrin, imidacloprid, and thiamethoxam) that differed in date of first registration (pesticide novelty) and mode-of-action (MOA). Our goals were to assess whether: 1) tolerance was correlated with distance to agriculture for each pesticide, 2) pesticide novelty predicted the likelihood of evolved tolerance, and 3) populations display cross-tolerance between pesticides that share and differ in MOA. Wood frog populations located close to agriculture were more tolerant to carbaryl and malathion than populations far from agriculture. Moreover, the strength of the relationship between distance to agriculture and tolerance was stronger for older pesticides compared to newer pesticides. Finally, we found evidence for cross-tolerance between carbaryl and malathion (two pesticides that share MOA). This study provides one of the most comprehensive approaches for understanding patterns of evolved tolerance in non-pest species.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017

Combined effects of road salt and an insecticide on wetland communities

Aaron B. Stoler; Brent M. Walker; William D. Hintz; Devin K. Jones; Lovisa Lind; Brian M. Mattes; Matthew S. Schuler; Rick A. Relyea

As the numbers of chemical contaminants in freshwater ecosystems increase, it is important to understand whether contaminants interact in ecologically important ways. The present study investigated the independent and interactive effects of 2 contaminants that frequently co-occur in freshwater environments among higher latitudes, including a commonly applied insecticide (carbaryl) and road salt (NaCl). The hypothesis was that the addition of either contaminant would result in a decline in zooplankton, an algal bloom, and the subsequent decline of both periphyton and periphyton consumers. Another hypothesis was that combining the contaminants would result in synergistic effects on community responses. Outdoor mesocosms were used with communities that included phytoplankton, periphyton, zooplankton, amphipods, clams, snails, and tadpoles. Communities were exposed to 4 environmentally relevant concentrations of salt (27 mg Cl- L-1 , 77 mg Cl- L-1 , 277 mg Cl- L-1 , and 727 mg Cl- L-1 ) fully crossed with 4 carbaryl treatments (ethanol, 0 µg L-1 , 5 µg L-1 , and 50 µg L-1 ) over 57 d. Contaminants induced declines in rotifer and cladoceran zooplankton, but only carbaryl induced an algal bloom. Consumers exhibited both positive and negative responses to contaminants, which were likely the result of both indirect community interactions and direct toxicity. In contrast to the hypothesis, no synergistic effects were found, although copepod densities declined when high concentrations of both chemicals were combined. The results suggest that low concentrations of salt and carbaryl are likely to have mostly independent effects on aquatic communities. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:771-779.


Oecologia | 2015

Exposure to sublethal concentrations of a pesticide or predator cues induces changes in brain architecture in larval amphibians

Sarah K. Woodley; Brian M. Mattes; Erika K. Yates; Rick A. Relyea

Naturally occurring environmental factors shape developmental trajectories to produce variable phenotypes. Such developmental phenotypic plasticity can have important effects on fitness, and has been demonstrated for numerous behavioral and morphological traits. However, surprisingly few studies have examined developmental plasticity of the nervous system in response to naturally occurring environmental variation, despite accumulating evidence for neuroplasticity in a variety of organisms. Here, we asked whether the brain is developmentally plastic by exposing larval amphibians to natural and anthropogenic factors. Leopard frog tadpoles were exposed to predator cues, reduced food availability, or sublethal concentrations of the pesticide chlorpyrifos in semi-natural enclosures. Mass, growth, survival, activity, larval period, external morphology, brain mass, and brain morphology were measured in tadpoles and after metamorphosis. Tadpoles in the experimental treatments had lower masses than controls, although developmental rates and survival were similar. Tadpoles exposed to predator cues or a high dose of chlorpyrifos had altered body shapes compared to controls. In addition, brains from tadpoles exposed to predator cues or a low dose of chlorpyrifos were narrower and shorter in several dimensions compared to control tadpoles and tadpoles with low food availability. Interestingly, the changes in brain morphology present at the tadpole stage did not persist in the metamorphs. Our results show that brain morphology is a developmentally plastic trait that is responsive to ecologically relevant natural and anthropogenic factors. Whether these effects on brain morphology are linked to performance or fitness is unknown.


Evolutionary Applications | 2017

Evolved pesticide tolerance influences susceptibility to parasites in amphibians

Jessica Hua; Vanessa Wuerthner; Devin K. Jones; Brian M. Mattes; Rickey D. Cothran; Rick A. Relyea; Jason T. Hoverman

Because ecosystems throughout the globe are contaminated with pesticides, there is a need to understand how natural populations cope with pesticides and the implications for ecological interactions. From an evolutionary perspective, there is evidence that pesticide tolerance can be achieved via two mechanisms: selection for constitutive tolerance over multiple generations or by inducing tolerance within a single generation via phenotypic plasticity. While both mechanisms can allow organisms to persist in contaminated environments, they might result in different performance trade‐offs including population susceptibility to parasites. We have identified 15 wood frog populations that exist along a gradient from close to agriculture and high, constitutive pesticide tolerance to far from agriculture and inducible pesticide tolerance. Using these populations, we investigated the relationship between evolutionary responses to the common insecticide carbaryl and host susceptibility to the trematode Echinoparyphium lineage 3 and ranavirus using laboratory exposure assays. For Echinoparyphium, we discovered that wood frog populations living closer to agriculture with high, constitutive tolerance experienced lower loads than populations living far from agriculture with inducible pesticide tolerance. For ranavirus, we found no relationship between the mechanism of evolved pesticide tolerance and survival, but populations living closer to agriculture with high, constitutive tolerance experienced higher viral loads than populations far from agriculture with inducible tolerance. Land use and mechanisms of evolved pesticide tolerance were associated with susceptibility to parasites, but the direction of the relationship is dependent on the type of parasite, underscoring the complexity between land use and disease outcomes. Collectively, our results demonstrate that evolved pesticide tolerance can indirectly influence host–parasite interactions and underscores the importance of including evolutionary processes in ecotoxicological studies.


Freshwater Science | 2017

Leaf litter mediates the negative effect of road salt on forested wetland communities

Aaron B. Stoler; William D. Hintz; Devin K. Jones; Lovisa Lind; Brian M. Mattes; Matthew S. Schuler; Rick A. Relyea

Human modification of landscapes has substantially altered the quality and quantity of terrestrial subsidies to freshwater ecosystems. The same modifications frequently lead to addition of chemical contaminants to freshwater environments. Both types of environmental change can alter the abundance of species and can lead to ecological interactions that affect entire communities. We examined how variation of tree litter inputs interacts with inputs of road salt deicers, which are an increasingly common contaminant in northern latitudes. Based on studies of the effects of each factor in isolation, we hypothesized that elevated Cl− levels would reduce copepod densities, increase algal abundance, and subsequently increase salt-tolerant consumer densities and biomass. We also hypothesized that these effects would be most pronounced in the presence of highly soluble leaf litter (e.g., Acer rubrum). We constructed experimental freshwater ponds containing assemblages of phytoplankton, periphyton, zooplankton, Physa acuta snails, and 2 species of tadpoles (Lithobates sylvaticus and Anaxyrus americanus). We used a fully factorial design, manipulating leaf litter (none, A. rubrum, or Quercus velutina) and Cl− concentration (114, 220, 314, and 867 mg Cl/L). Road salt at the 3 lower concentrations had few significant effects. The highest Cl− concentration reduced copepod densities and increased phytoplankton concentrations, but only in the presence of maple litter. We also observed increased rotifer densities in the highest Cl− concentration, but only in the presence of either litter species. Our results indicate that road salt contamination can have significant effects on wetland community composition at relatively high concentrations, but these effects depend on the chemistry of allochthonous inputs.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Inducible Tolerance to Agrochemicals Was Paved by Evolutionary Responses to Predators

Devin K. Jones; William D. Hintz; Matthew S. Schuler; Erika K. Yates; Brian M. Mattes; Rick A. Relyea

Recent research has reported increased tolerance to agrochemicals in target and nontarget organisms following acute physiological changes induced through phenotypic plasticity. Moreover, the most inducible populations are those from more pristine locations, far from agrochemical use. We asked why do populations with no known history of pesticide exposure have the ability to induce adaptive responses to novel agrochemicals? We hypothesized that increased pesticide tolerance results from a generalized stressor response in organisms, and would be induced following sublethal exposure to natural and anthropogenic stressors. We exposed larval wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus) to one of seven natural or anthropogenic stressors (predator cue (Anax spp.), 0.5 or 1.0 mg carbaryl/L, road salt (200 or 1000 mg Cl-/L), ethanol-vehicle control, or no-stressor control) and subsequently tested their tolerance to a lethal carbaryl concentration using time-to-death assays. We observed induced carbaryl tolerance in tadpoles exposed to 0.5 mg/L carbaryl and also in tadpoles exposed to predator cues. Our results suggest that the ability to induce pesticide tolerance likely arose through evolved antipredator responses. Given that antipredator responses are widespread among species, many animals might possess inducible pesticide tolerance, buffering them from agrochemical exposure.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2018

Timing and frequency of sublethal exposure modifies the induction and retention of increased insecticide tolerance in wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus)

Devin K. Jones; Erika K. Yates; Brian M. Mattes; William D. Hintz; Matthew S. Schuler; Rick A. Relyea

Although the paradigm for increased tolerance to pesticides has been by selection on constitutive (naïve) traits, recent research has shown it can also occur through phenotypic plasticity. However, the time period in which induction can occur, the duration of induced tolerance, and the influence of multiple induction events remain unknown. We hypothesized that the induction of increased pesticide tolerance is limited to early sensitive periods, the magnitude of induced tolerance depends on the number of exposures, and the retention of induced tolerance depends on the time elapsed after an exposure and the number of exposures. To test these hypotheses, we exposed wood frog tadpoles to either a no-carbaryl control (water) or 0.5 mg/L carbaryl at 4 time periods, and later tested their tolerance to carbaryl using time-to-death assays. We discovered that tadpoles induced increased tolerance early and midway but not late in our experiment and their constitutive tolerance increased with age. We found no difference in the magnitude of induced tolerance after a single or 2 exposures. Finally, induced pesticide tolerance was reversed within 6 d but was retained only when tadpoles experienced all 4 consecutive exposures. Phenotypic plasticity provides an immediate response for sensitive amphibian larvae to early pesticide exposures and reduces phenotypic mismatches in aquatic environments contaminated by agrochemicals. Environ Toxicol Chem 2018;37:2188-2197.


Ecological Applications | 2017

Salinization triggers a trophic cascade in experimental freshwater communities with varying food‐chain length

William D. Hintz; Brian M. Mattes; Matthew S. Schuler; Devin K. Jones; Aaron B. Stoler; Lovisa Lind; Rick A. Relyea


Environmental Pollution | 2017

Investigation of road salts and biotic stressors on freshwater wetland communities

Devin K. Jones; Brian M. Mattes; William D. Hintz; Matthew S. Schuler; Aaron B. Stoler; Lovisa Lind; Reilly O. Cooper; Rick A. Relyea

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Rick A. Relyea

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Devin K. Jones

University of Pittsburgh

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William D. Hintz

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Matthew S. Schuler

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Aaron B. Stoler

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Lovisa Lind

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Erika K. Yates

University of Pittsburgh

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