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Research Road salt creates more harm to freshwater life than expected, study finds - Printable Version

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Road salt creates more harm to freshwater life than expected, study finds - C C - Feb 13, 2026

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1116391

INTRO: Freshwater streams, ponds and lakes across the United States are becoming saltier, and new research from the University of Missouri shows the damage may be greater than scientists once thought.

Scientists at Mizzou’s College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources found that road salt becomes much more deadly to freshwater snails when combined with the fear of natural predators in the water.

Road salt mainly enters fresh water through road runoff from winter deicing. While scientists know that salt alone is harmful to freshwater animals, most research looks at salt exposure by itself. But in the real world, animals face challenges from many additional stressors at the same time, including predators.

To better reflect a snail’s natural environment, Rick Relyea and colleagues conducted semi-outdoor experiments using different salt levels and the presence or absence of different predator species.

“Freshwater organisms have evolved in low-salt environments,” Relyea, director of Mizzou’s Johnny Morris Institute of Fisheries, Wetlands and Aquatic Systems and co-author of the study, said. “Adding road salt makes their survival much harder, especially when these animals experience the fear of being eaten by predators. At the highest salt levels, we found that predator stress dramatically increased snail deaths, causing nearly 60% higher mortality compared to salt alone.”

Relyea and colleagues noticed that when snails sense nearby predators, they slow their eating and move less to avoid being noticed. At the same time, an increase in salty water forces them to use more energy just to stay alive. Together, these forces drain their energy. The researchers believe this combination of factors may increase a snail’s risk of death.

“These effects don’t show up in typical lab studies,” Scott Goeppner, a Mizzou postdoctoral fellow and co-author, said. “That means we may be underestimating how dangerous common pollutants, such as road salt, really are.” (MORE - details, no ads)