Title of article :
Long-term stream invertebrate community alterations induced
by the insecticide thiacloprid: Effect concentrations
and recovery dynamics
Author/Authors :
Mikhail A. Beketova، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Ralf Bernhard Sch?fera، نويسنده , , b، نويسنده , , Andreas Marwitza، نويسنده , ,
Albrecht Paschkec، نويسنده , , Matthias Liessa، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
In pesticide risk assessment, effect concentrations and dynamics of long-term communitylevel
effects caused by pulse exposures remain to be investigated. This is because long-term
experiments are exceptionally rare, and most of the previously investigated communities
had low proportions of sensitive long-living species. The aim of the present study was to
investigate the effect of a single pulse contamination with the insecticide thiacloprid on
invertebrates. We employed mesocosms designed to realistically mimic communities in
small streams within the agricultural landscape. Specifically, the objectives were to (i)
compare the community Lowest-Observed-Effect Concentration (LOEC) with organism-level
median lethal concentrations (LC50), and (ii) to assess recovery dynamics with special focus
on short- and long-living taxa. The contamination resulted in long-term alteration of the
overall invertebrate community structure (7 months, until the end of the experiment). Longterm
community LOEC was 3.2 μg/L (Redundancy Analysis), slightly below the acute LC50s
known for sensitive invertebrates relevant to the mesocosm community. However, one
species (stonefly Nemoura cinerea) was affected at the lowest tested concentration, 70 times
below the lowest known LC50. Concerning time to recovery from the effect, we found that
the duration depends on the life-cycle characteristics of species, but not on the toxicant
concentration: short-living (mulivoltine) species recovered after 10 weeks following
contamination, whereas long-living (uni- and semivoltine) species did not recover until
the end of the experiment (7 months). The present example shows that concentrations of
pesticides at which majority of the species is affected can be predicted by acute organismlevel
toxicity tests with sensitive species. However, tests with longer observation periods, as
well as consideration of environmental factors and inter-taxon variability in sensitivity are
required to predict effects on all species comprising a community. Realistic prediction of
community recovery dynamics requires consideration of the speciesʹ life-cycle traits.
Keywords :
PesticidesCommunity levelEffect and recoveryStream invertebratesTraitsLife cycles
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment