Estimating acute mortality of Lepidoptera caused by the cultivation of insect-resistant Bt maize - The LepiX model
Authored by Lorenz Fahse, Phillip Papastefanou, Mathias Otto
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2018.01.006
Sponsors:
German Federal Agency for Nature Conservation
Platforms:
C#
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The cultivation of Bt maize, genetically modified to be resistant to
insect pests, has led to intense scientific and political debate about
its possible adverse impacts on biodiversity. To better address this
question we developed an individual-based simulation model (LepiX).
LepiX considers the temporal dynamics of maize pollen shedding and
larval phonology, and pollen deposition on host plants related to
distance from the maize field, in order to estimate mortality of
lepidopteran larvae exposed to toxic Bt pollen. We employed a refined
exposure analysis, comparison to previous approaches, using recent
evidence on leaf pollen deposition and accounting for the spatial
heterogeneity of pollen on leaves. Moreover, we used a stochastic
approach, considering literature data on a minimum dataset for butterfly
biology in combination with historic data on temporal pollen deposition
to predict the coincidence between larval phenology and pollen
deposition. Since conservation management actions may act at the level
of the individual for protected species, LepiX, as an individual based
spatially explicit model, is suited to assist both risk assessment and
management measures based on threshold mortalities. We tested our model
using Inachis io (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) as butterfly species and the
cultivation of insect resistant MON810 maize. In accordance to
predictions based on other models we identified mortality risks of I. io
larvae for the second larval generation. An analysis of the sensitivity
of input parameters stressed the importance of both the slope and the
LC50 value of the dose-response curve as well as the earliest day of
larval hatching. Using different published data to characterize the
dose-response of MON810 pollen to I. io we revealed consequences due to
uncertainties in ecotoxicological parameters and thus highlight the
importance of key biological parameters for reliable estimates of
effects, and decision making (e.g. isolation distances) in risk
assessment.
Tags
Individual-based model
risk assessment
Simulation model
exposure
Mathematical-model
Risk-assessment
Plants
Pollen
Lepidoptera
Butterflies
Larvae
Gmo
Bt maize
Nontarget lepidoptera
Transgenic crops
Thermal ecology