A Risk Assessment Example for Soil Invertebrates Using Spatially Explicit Agent-Based Models
Authored by Valery E Forbes, Melissa Reed, Tania Alvarez, Sonia Chelinho, Alice Johnston, Mattia Meli, Frank Voss, Rob Pastorok
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/ieam.1713
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Abstract
Current risk assessment methods for measuring the toxicity of plant
protection products (PPPs) on soil invertebrates use standardized
laboratory conditions to determine acute effects on mortality and
sublethal effects on reproduction. If an unacceptable risk is identified
at the lower tier, population-level effects are assessed using semifield
and field trials at a higher tier because modeling methods for
extrapolating available lower-tier information to population effects
have not yet been implemented. Field trials are expensive, time
consuming, and cannot be applied to variable landscape scenarios.
Mechanistic modeling of the toxicological effects of PPPs on individuals
and their responses combined with simulation of population-level
response shows great potential in fulfilling such a need, aiding
ecologically informed extrapolation. Here, we introduce and demonstrate
the potential of 2 population models for ubiquitous soil invertebrates
(collembolans and earthworms) as refinement options in current risk
assessment. Both are spatially explicit agent-based models (ABMs), incorporating individual and landscape variability. The models were used
to provide refined risk assessments for different application scenarios
of a hypothetical pesticide applied to potato crops (full-field spray
onto the soil surface {[} termed ``overall{''}], in-furrow, and
soil-incorporated pesticide applications). In the refined risk
assessment, the population models suggest that soil invertebrate
populations would likely recover within 1 year after pesticide
application, regardless of application method. The population modeling
for both soil organisms also illustrated that a lower predicted average
environmental concentration in soil (PECsoil) could potentially lead to
greater effects at the population level, depending on the spatial
heterogeneity of the pesticide and the behavior of the soil organisms.
Population-level effects of spatial-temporal variations in exposure were
elucidated in the refined risk assessment, using ABMs and
population-level endpoints while yielding outputs that directly address
the protection goals. We recommend choosing model outputs that are
closely related to specific protection goals, using available toxicity
data and accepted fate models to the extent possible in parameterizing
models to minimize additional data needs and testing, evaluating, and
documenting models following recent guidance. Integr Environ Assess
Manag 2016; 12: 58-66. (C) 2015 SETAC
Tags
Pesticides
ecology
systems
Energy
Populations
Earthworms