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Pesticides are the dominant stressors for vulnerable insects in lowland streams

•Pesticides drive composition of lowland streams invertebrate communities.•Most agricultural streams have a reduced number of vulnerable species.•The current authorisation of pesticides underestimates the ecological risk.•Ecosystem monitoring enables a protective and validated risk assessment. Despi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Water research (Oxford) 2021-08, Vol.201, p.117262-117262, Article 117262
Main Authors: Liess, Matthias, Liebmann, Liana, Vormeier, Philipp, Weisner, Oliver, Altenburger, Rolf, Borchardt, Dietrich, Brack, Werner, Chatzinotas, Antonis, Escher, Beate, Foit, Kaarina, Gunold, Roman, Henz, Sebastian, Hitzfeld, Kristina L., Schmitt-Jansen, Mechthild, Kamjunke, Norbert, Kaske, Oliver, Knillmann, Saskia, Krauss, Martin, Küster, Eberhard, Link, Moritz, Lück, Maren, Möder, Monika, Müller, Alexandra, Paschke, Albrecht, Schäfer, Ralf B., Schneeweiss, Anke, Schreiner, Verena C., Schulze, Tobias, Schüürmann, Gerrit, von Tümpling, Wolf, Weitere, Markus, Wogram, Jörn, Reemtsma, Thorsten
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Language:English
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Summary:•Pesticides drive composition of lowland streams invertebrate communities.•Most agricultural streams have a reduced number of vulnerable species.•The current authorisation of pesticides underestimates the ecological risk.•Ecosystem monitoring enables a protective and validated risk assessment. Despite elaborate regulation of agricultural pesticides, their occurrence in non-target areas has been linked to adverse ecological effects on insects in several field investigations. Their quantitative role in contributing to the biodiversity crisis is, however, still not known. In a large-scale study across 101 sites of small lowland streams in Central Europe, Germany we revealed that 83% of agricultural streams did not meet the pesticide-related ecological targets. For the first time we identified that agricultural nonpoint-source pesticide pollution was the major driver in reducing vulnerable insect populations in aquatic invertebrate communities, exceeding the relevance of other anthropogenic stressors such as poor hydro-morphological structure and nutrients. We identified that the current authorisation of pesticides, which aims to prevent unacceptable adverse effects, underestimates the actual ecological risk as (i) measured pesticide concentrations exceeded current regulatory acceptable concentrations in 81% of the agricultural streams investigated, (ii) for several pesticides the inertia of the authorisation process impedes the incorporation of new scientific knowledge and (iii) existing thresholds of invertebrate toxicity drivers are not protective by a factor of 5.3 to 40. To provide adequate environmental quality objectives, the authorisation process needs to include monitoring-derived information on pesticide effects at the ecosystem level. Here, we derive such thresholds that ensure a protection of the invertebrate stream community. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0043-1354
1879-2448
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2021.117262