Main Content

The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 7139

Mazhar Iqbal Zafar, Rene P.A. Van Wijngaarden, Ivo Roessink, and Paul J. Van Den Brink; Effects of Time-variable Exposure Regimes of the Insecticide Chlorpyrifos on Freshwater Invertebrate Communities in Microcosms. Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry 30(6):1383-1394, 2011

Reprint

In File

Notes

The present study compared the effects of different time-variable exposure regimes having the same time-weighted average (TWA) concentration of the organophosphate insecticide chlorpyrifos on freshwater invertebrate communities to enable extrapolation of effects across exposure regimes. The experiment was performed in outdoor microcosms by introducing three different regimes: a single application of 0.9 µg active ingredients (a.i.)/L; three applications of 0.3 µg a.i/L, with a time interval of 7 days; and continuous exposure to 0.1 ug a.i./L for 21 days. Measurements showed that the TWA(21 day) concentration in the continuous-exposure treatment (0.098 µg/L) was slightly lower than in the three-application (0.116 µg/L) and single-application (0.126 µg/L) treatments. The application of chlorpyrifos resulted in decreased abundances in the anthropod community, with the largest adverse effects reported for the mayfly Cloeon dipterum and cladocerans Daphnia gr. longispina and Alona sp., while smaller effects were observed for other insects, copepods, and amphipods. At the population level, however, the mayfly C. dipterum only responded to the single-application treatment, which could be explained by the toxicokinetics of chlorpyrifos in this species. At the end of the experimental period the invertebrate community showed approximately the same effect magnitude for all treatment regimes. These results suggest that for this combination of concentrations and duration of the TWA, the TWA concentration is more important for most species than the peak concentration for the assessment of long-term risks of chlorpyrifos.