Integrating chemical fate and population-level effect models for pesticides at landscape scale: New options for risk assessment
Authored by Hans Baveco, den Brink Paul J Van, Andreas Focks, Horst Mechteld ter, den Berg Erik van
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmode1.2013.09.023
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Any attempt to introduce more ecological realism into ecological risk
assessment of chemicals faces the major challenge of integrating
different aspects of the chemicals and species of concern, for example, spatial scales of emissions, chemical exposure patterns in space and
time, and population dynamics and dispersal in heterogeneous landscapes.
Although these aspects are not considered in current risk assessment
schemes, risk assessors and managers are expressing increasing interest
in learning more about both the exposure to and the effects of chemicals
at landscape level. In this study, we combined the CASCADE-TOXSWA fate
model, which predicts the fate of pesticides in an interconnected system
of water bodies with variable hydrological characteristics, with the
MASTEP mechanistic effect model, which simulates population dynamics and
effects of pesticides on aquatic species at the scale of individual
water bodies. To this end, we extrapolated MASTEP to the scale of
realistic landscapes and linked it to dynamic exposure patterns. We
explored the effects of an insecticide on the water louse Asellus
aquaticus for a typical Dutch landscape covering an area of about 10
km(2) containing 137 water bodies (drainage ditches) with a total length
of about 65 km and different degrees of connectivity. Pesticide
treatments used in potato crop were assumed to result in a spray-drift
input of 5\% (non-mitigated) and 1\% (mitigated) of the amount of
pesticide applied into parts of the water body network. These treatments
resulted in highly variable exposure patterns both in space and time.
The effects of the pesticide on the species were investigated by
comparing two scenarios with low and high individual-level sensitivity.
We found that downstream transport of the pesticide led to exposure of
water bodies that did not receive direct spray-drift input, even though
this particular pesticide was assumed to dissipate rapidly from water.
The observed differences in population-level effects and recovery
patterns ranged from no observable effects in the low spray-drift and
low sensitivity scenario to severe reduction of abundances in the high
spray-drift and high sensitivity scenario. These results illustrate the
sensitivity of our modelling approach, but also show the need for
precise calculations of pesticide inputs and model parameterisation. Our
study demonstrates the potential of coupled fate-and-effect to explore
realistic scenarios at the scale of heterogeneous landscapes. Such
scenarios could include the application of multiple pesticides to one or
more crop types. Spatial realism of the landscape represented in the
model ensures realistic consideration of population growth and dispersal
as the two main recovery mechanisms. Future options for the
landscape-scale fate-and-effect simulation approach include exploring
the effects of mitigation measures on the risk estimates at landscape
scale and hence represent a step towards risk management. (C) 2013
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Biodiversity
Ecotoxicology
growth
Life-history
Field
Potential application
Asellus-aquaticus l
Lambda-cyhalothrin
Invertebrates
Isopoda