Hydraulic fracturing extracts oil and gas through the
injection
of water and proppants into subterranean formations. These injected
fluids mix with the host rock formation and return to the surface
as a complex wastewater containing salts, metals, and organic compounds,
termed flowback and produced water (FPW). Previous research indicates
that FPW is toxic to Daphnia magna (D. magna), impairing reproduction, molting, and maturation time; however,
recovery from FPW has not been extensively studied. Species unable
to recover have drastic impacts on populations on the ecological scale;
thus, this study sought to understand if recovery from an acute 48
h FPW exposure was possible in the freshwater invertebrate, D. magna by using a combination of physiological
and molecular analyses. FPW (0.75%) reduced reproduction by 30% and
survivorship to 32% compared to controls. System-level quantitative
proteomic analyses demonstrate extensive perturbation of metabolism
and protein transport in both 0.25 and 0.75% FPW treatments after
a 48 h FPW exposure. Collectively, our data indicate that D. magna are unable to recover from acute 48 h exposures
to ≥0.25% FPW, as evidence of toxicity persists for at least
19 days post-exposure. This study highlights the importance of considering
persisting effects following FPW remediation when modeling potential
spill scenarios.
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