Short-term ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation was administered in the laborator
y to mayfly nymphs (Diphetor hageni) midge larvae (Corynoneura taris) and s
nails (Elimia claveformis and Physella gyrina) to determine relative suscep
tibility to W-B stress. Invertebrate response was a function of the total a
mount of UV-B received (dose, kJ/m(2)), and the fluence rate at which UV-B
was administered (irradiance, W/m(2)). Reciprocity did not hold for organis
ms tested in this study; effect of a given dose was dependent on irradiance
. Invertebrates received a gradient of cumulative doses between 0 and 30 kJ
/m(2) UV-B while simultaneously receiving UV-A and photosynthetically activ
e radiation. UV-B wavelengths were weighted with the DNA action spectrum to
obtain biologically effective doses between 0 and 0.214 kJ/m(2) UV-B-DNA.
This dose gradient was repeated at 3 different UV-B irradiances (1.6, 2.0 a
nd 2.7 W/m(2)). Total dose, irradiance, and organism size all contributed t
o W-B mortality. Mayfly nymphs and midge larvae had similar UV-B thresholds
, and the lethal dose at which 50% of the organisms died (LD50) decreased w
ith increased irradiance. For instance, LD(50)s for the midges were 17.2, 1
5.2 and 10 kJ/m(2) at 1.6, 2.0, and 2.7 W/m(2), respectively. Both snails w
ere relatively resistant to W-B. The prosobranch snail Elimia showed no mor
tality at any of the UV-B doses administered in this study. A size-class ex
periment using the pulmonate snail Physella suggested that organism size al
so affects its ability to cope with UV-B stress: small snails (1.2 +/- 0.1
mm,(x) over bar +/- 1 SD) were 5 times more likely to die from W-B exposure
than medium (5.1 +/- 0.3 mm) or large (7.8 +/- 0.6 mm) snails. Our experim
ents demonstrated that benthic invertebrates are differentially susceptible
to acute UV-B stress, which could lead to alterations in invertebrate asse
mblages where UV-B levels are high.