About

Log in?

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Anyone can log in and get personalized features such as favorites, tags and feeds.

Log in as DTU user Log in as non-DTU user No thanks

DTU Findit

Journal article

Recovery based on plot experiments is a poor predictor of landscape-level population impacts of agricultural pesticides : Agent-based simulation of population recovery

From

Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University, Rønde, Denmark.1

Current European Union regulatory risk assessment allows application of pesticides provided that recovery of nontarget arthropods in-crop occurs within a year. Despite the long-established theory of source-sink dynamics, risk assessment ignores depletion of surrounding populations and typical field trials are restricted to plot-scale experiments.

In the present study, the authors used agent-based modeling of 2 contrasting invertebrates, a spider and a beetle, to assess how the area of pesticide application and environmental half-life affect the assessment of recovery at the plot scale and impact the population at the landscape scale. Small-scale plot experiments were simulated for pesticides with different application rates and environmental half-lives.

The same pesticides were then evaluated at the landscape scale (10 km × 10 km) assuming continuous year-on-year usage. The authors' results show that recovery time estimated from plot experiments is a poor indicator of long-term population impact at the landscape level and that the spatial scale of pesticide application strongly determines population-level impact.

This raises serious doubts as to the utility of plot-recovery experiments in pesticide regulatory risk assessment for population-level protection. Predictions from the model are supported by empirical evidence from a series of studies carried out in the decade starting in 1988. The issues raised then can now be addressed using simulation.

Prediction of impacts at landscape scales should be more widely used in assessing the risks posed by environmental stressors.

Language: English
Year: 2014
Pages: 1499-1507
ISSN: 15528618 and 07307268
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1002/etc.2388
ORCIDs: Topping, Christopher John and 0000-0001-5387-3284

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Log in as DTU user

Access

Analysis