In the face of global
climate change, where temperature fluctuations
and the frequency of extreme weather events are increasing, it is
needed to evaluate the impact of temperature on the ecological risk
assessment of chemicals. Current state-of-the-art mechanistic effect
models, such as toxicokinetic–toxicodynamic (TK–TD)
models, often do not explicitly consider temperature as a modulating
factor. This study implemented the effect of temperature in a widely
used modeling framework, the General Unified Threshold model for Survival
(GUTS). We tested the model using data from toxicokinetic and toxicity
experiments with Gammarus pulex exposed
to the insecticides imidacloprid and flupyradifurone. The experiments
revealed increased TK rates with increasing temperature and increased
toxicity under chronic exposures. Using the widely used Arrhenius
equation, we could include the temperature influence into the modeling.
By further testing of different model approaches, differences in the
temperature scaling of TK and TD model parameters could be identified,
urging further investigations of the underlying mechanisms. Finally,
our results show that predictions of TK–TD models improve if
we include the toxicity modulating effect of temperature explicitly.
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