S.A.E. Kools
VU University Amsterdam
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Featured researches published by S.A.E. Kools.
Ecological Applications | 2007
A.W.G. van der Wurff; S.A.E. Kools; M.E. Boivin; P.J. van den Brink; H.H.M. van den Megen; J.A.G. Riksen; A. Doroszuk; J.E. Kammenga
This study aims to reveal whether complexity, namely, community and trophic structure, of chronically stressed soil systems is at increased risk or remains stable when confronted with a subsequent disturbance. Therefore, we focused on a grassland with a history of four centuries of patchy contamination. Nematodes were used as model organisms because they are an abundant and trophically diverse group and representative of the soil food web and ecosystem complexity. In a field survey, a relationship between contaminants and community structures was established. Following, two groups of soil mesocosms from the field that differed in contamination level were exposed to different disturbance regimes, namely, to the contaminant zinc and a heat shock. The zinc treatment revealed that community structure is stable, irrespective of soil contamination levels. This implies that centuries of exposure to contamination led to adaptation of the soil nematode community irrespective of the patchy distribution of contaminants. In contrast, the heat shock had adverse effects on species richness in the highly contaminated soils only. The total nematode biomass was lower in the highly contaminated field samples; however, the biomass was not affected by zinc and heat treatments of the mesocosms. This means that density compensation occurred rapidly, i.e., tolerant species quickly replaced sensitive species. Our results support the hypothesis that the history of contamination and the type of disturbance determine the response of communities. Despite that ecosystems may be exposed for centuries to contamination and communities show adaptation, biodiversity in highly contaminated sites is at increased risk when exposed to a different disturbance regime. We discuss how the loss of higher trophic levels from the entire system, such as represented by carnivorous nematodes after the heat shock, accompanied by local biodiversity loss at highly contaminated sites, may result in detrimental effects on ecosystem functions.
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2009
S.A.E. Kools; M.E.Y. Boivin; A.W.G. van der Wurff; Matty P. Berg; C.A.M. van Gestel; N.M. van Straalen
Ecosystem effects of metal pollution in field situations are hard to predict, since metals occur often in mixtures and links between structural (organisms) and functional endpoints (ecosystem processes) are not always that clear. In grasslands, both structure and functioning was suspected to be affected by a mixture of copper, lead, and zinc. Therefore, the structural and functional variables were studied simultaneously using Terrestrial Model Ecosystems (TMEs). Comparing averages of low- and high-polluted soil, based on total metal concentrations, did not show differences in structural and functional variables. However, nematode community structure (Maturity Index) negatively correlated with metal concentrations. Next to that, multivariate statistics showed that enchytraeid, earthworm and, to lesser extent, nematode diversity decreased with increasing metal concentrations and a lower pH in the soil. Bacterial CFU and nematode biomass were positively related with decomposer activity and nitrate concentrations. Nitrate concentrations were negatively related to ammonium concentrations. Earthworm biomass, CO(2) production and plant yield were not related to metal concentrations. The most metal-sensitive endpoint was enchytraeid biomass. In all analyses, soil pH was a significant factor, indicating direct effects on organisms, or indicating indirect effects by influencing metal availability. In general, structural diversity seemed more positively related to functional endpoints than structural biomass. TMEs proved valuable tools to assess the structure and function in metal polluted field situations. The outcome feeds modeling effort and direct future research.
Science of The Total Environment | 2008
S.A.E. Kools; Matty P. Berg; M.E.Y. Boivin; Frans J.A. Kuenen; André W.G. van der Wurff; Cornelis A.M. van Gestel; Nico M. van Straalen
This study tested the hypothesis that soils with a deprived biodiversity due to metal pollution are less stable than non-polluted soils, containing a more diverse community. For this, soils were sampled from specific grasslands in the Netherlands that contain elevated heavy metal concentrations (Cu, Pb and Zn). Soils that showed the largest differences in metal concentrations were incubated in the laboratory using Terrestrial Model Ecosystems (TMEs). This approach enabled simultaneous measurement of structural (bacteria, nematodes, enchytraeids, earthworms) and functional parameters (nitrogen leaching, feeding activity, CO2 production, plant growth). The highest polluted soils showed a lower bacterial growth, and decreased enchytraeid and nematode biomass and diversity, hence a deprived community. More nitrate leached from high polluted soils, while all other functional endpoints did not differ. Additional stress application of zinc and heat was used to test the stability. Zinc treatment caused effects only in the higher polluted soils, observed at several moments in time for enchytraeids, CO2 fluxes and plant growth. Heat stress caused a large reduction in enchytraeid and earthworm biomass. Ammonium leaching was decreased by heat treatments in the most polluted soils, while CO2 was increased by heat in less polluted soils. Most effects were seen in the most polluted systems and it was concluded that they seem less stable.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2015
Vesna Lavtižar; R. Helmus; S.A.E. Kools; Darko Dolenc; C.A.M. van Gestel; Polonca Trebše; S.L. Waaijers; M.H.S. Kraak
Chlorantraniliprole (CAP) is a newly developed, widely applied insecticide. In the aquatic environment, several transformation products are formed under natural conditions, one by dehydration and others by photoinduced degradation. Data on aquatic ecotoxicity of CAP can mainly be found in registration and regulatory evaluation reports. Moreover, the toxicity of its transformation products and especially effects upon chronic exposure remain completely unknown. Hence, our aim was to investigate the acute and chronic toxicity of CAP and its transformation products to the daphnid Daphnia magna. The results showed that CAP is extremely toxic to D. magna, with an acute and chronic LC50 of 9.4 and 3.7 μg/L, respectively. No effects on daphnid reproduction were observed, but the impact on daphnid survival also affected population growth rate, with an EC50 of 3.5 μg/L. In contrast, no negative effects of the two main degradation products were observed. The present study demonstrated a high sensitivity of nontarget microcrustaceans to CAP. However, the actual risk of CAP in water diminishes with its spontaneous or light-induced degradation into two transformation products, showing no toxicity to the daphnids in the present study.
Applied Soil Ecology | 2006
M.E.Y. Boivin; Gerdit D. Greve; S.A.E. Kools; A.W.G. van der Wurff; P. Leeflang; E. Smit; A.M. Breure; M. Rutgers; N.M. van Straalen
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2005
S.A.E. Kools; M. van Roovert; C.A.M. van Gestel; N.M. van Straalen
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2005
S.A.E. Kools; Bart Ferwerda; Cornelis A.M. van Gestel; Nico M. van Straalen
Archive | 2001
N.M. (Nico) van Straalen; S.A.E. Kools
Exposure and ecological effects of toxic mixtures at field-relevant concentrations: Model validation and integration of the SSEO programme | 2007
A.W.G. van der Wurff; S.A.E. Kools; M.E.Y. Boivin; P.J. van den Brink; H.H.B. van Megen; J.A.G. Riksen; A. Doroszuk; J.E. Kammenga
Archive | 2004
S.A.E. Kools; M.E.Y. Boivin; A.W.G. van der Wurff; Frans J.A. Kuenen; C.A.M. van Gestel; N.M. van Straalen