Back to Search Start Over

Broad-scale effect of herbicides on functional properties in benthic invertebrate communities of rivers: An integrated analysis of biomonitoring and exposure evaluations.

Authors :
Misaki, Takahiro
Yokomizo, Hiroyuki
Tanaka, Yoshinari
Source :
Ecotoxicology & Environmental Safety; Apr2019, Vol. 171, p173-180, 8p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract We conducted a broad-scale ecological effect assessment of agricultural chemicals where we combined biomonitoring databases of riverine invertebrate communities with predictions of environmental concentrations of chemicals, based on an exposure evaluation model for Japanese rivers. One of the difficulties of broad-scale assessment arises from the use of biomonitoring databases for which the monitoring sites are often spread across different geographic regions, with varying species compositions and heterogeneous environmental factors. This problem was circumvented using a trait-based approach, which extracts patterns of ecological properties of species response to changes in either chemical concentration or environmental factors. We identified groups of species that had particular trait categories that were negatively correlated with herbicide pollutants (the predicted concentration divided by the acute toxic concentration). Numerical abundances of species groups classified by trait categories had more sensitive responses to herbicide pollutants than total species abundance. However, a finding that trait diversity and species diversity indexes in the communities examined did not change with herbicide pollutants means that the two indexes showed resistance to chemical stresses. We inferred that the reason for the greater resistance in terms of trait and species diversity was that compositional changes of species caused by increasing herbicide pollutions were simply a shift from communities composed of susceptible species to those composed only of tolerant species. Graphical abstract fx1 Highlights • We assessed herbicide effects on invertebrate communities. • We used biomonitoring databases of riverine invertebrate communities (River Environmental Database) and the exposure evaluation of Japanese rivers (PeCHREM/G-CIEMS models) for this assessment. • Species abundance of particular trait categories significantly decreased with increased herbicide pollutants. • Species number, total abundance and wet biomass non-significantly decreased with increased herbicide pollutants. • Trait diversity was unaffected by herbicide pollutants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01476513
Volume :
171
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Ecotoxicology & Environmental Safety
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134424072
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2018.12.089