Assessing the impact of pesticides on lumbricid populations: An individual-based modelling approach
Authored by JM Baveco, AM DeRoos
Date Published: 1996
DOI: 10.2307/2404784
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
1. In an ecological approach to risk assessment, population models may
play an important role. Our population dynamical models take into
account the complex life history of earthworms, as well as a particular
ecological interaction (predation).
2. Sublethal impact of pesticides is quantified at the individual level
in terms of impaired vital rates, i.e. growth, maturation and
reproduction. A simple model for the energetic relationships underlying
these vital rates quantifies toxic stress mechanistically through
proportionality constants relating size to energetic costs of
maintenance, growth, food intake and production of offspring.
3. Risk is defined at the population level. Risk resulting from chronic
exposure relates to reductions in (equilibrium) density, changes in
population size- and age-structure, and probability of surpassing an
extinction threshold. Risk posed by a single or intermittent application
of a highly degradable pesticide is defined in terms of extinction
probabilities and recovery times, and related to pesticide decay and
initial applied dose.
4. The models are individual-based and complementary. A deterministic
partial differential equation model is used to derive equilibrium
properties of the system analytically and to investigate the general
dynamic behaviour. An individual-by-individual model shows how this
behaviour is influenced by demographic and environmental stochasticity.
5. Results obtained for two species, Lumbricus rubellus and L.
terrestris, indicate that both are sensitive to pesticides affecting the
energy available for individual growth, as opposed to the amount of
energy available for reproduction. Retarded growth impedes individuals
in reaching adulthood. This juvenile delay regulation translates from
individual performance to population demography.
6. Life-history characteristics appear to make L. terrestris more
sensitive to toxic stress than L. rubellus, resulting in longer
population recovery times.
7. The insights obtained from the models and the way results depend on
model assumptions, are discussed, and compared to the little available
observational and experimental evidence. Extensions enabling a full
ecological risk assessment for pesticide use are identified.
Establishing an explicit relationship between ambient concentration and
individual performance seems mandatory prior to use of the models as
predictive tools.
Tags
Simulation
growth
Temperature
Consequences
Reproduction
Earthworms
Terrestris l
Intensive production
Laboratory culture
Oligochaeta