Résumé : Interactions between emerging contaminants and other drivers of community structure and function are poorly known. We used laboratory microcosms to investigate the single and combined effects of grazing and triclosan toxicity on the structure and function of stream periphyton. Grazing alone strongly reduced algal biomass, but also reduced oxidative stress and increased periphyton productivity and phosphorus (P) uptake capacity. This suggests that grazed algal communities can compensate for reduced biomass by enhanced growth after being released from grazing. Triclosan exposure (11.6 ± 1.1 μg L−1) reduced the detoxification capacity and P-uptake capacity of periphyton and altered diatom taxonomic composition. This indicates that triclosan at environmentally relevant concentrations affects the capacity of periphyton to remove dissolved nutrients and to cope with toxicant mixtures commonly occurring in streams. Triclosan exposure and grazing pressure had negative synergistic effects on algal size-class distribution and diatom mortality, since the effects of triclosan were higher than expected when periphyton was subject to grazing. Periphyton exposed to toxic substances such as triclosan had a lower capacity to cope with grazing than unexposed communities, because toxicity can limit algal regrowth after release from grazing and promote the loss of less abundant species. This synergism may have important implications because grazing pressure will magnify the negative effects of toxicants on community structure and ecosystem functions such as primary production and nutrient cycling.