Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4428568 Science of The Total Environment 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We studied the effects of imazalil and diazinon on freshwater organisms associated with leaf breakdown.•Pesticides altered sporulation and fungal community composition.•Invertebrate death rates increased and body condition decreased under the effect of pesticides.•Pesticides can disrupt organic matter processing and energy cycling in streams.•Longer exposure times can lead to stronger alterations of freshwater ecosystems.

The intensification of agriculture has promoted the use of pesticides such as fungicides and insecticides. Many pesticides readily leach into natural water bodies and affect both organisms and ecosystem processes such as leaf breakdown, a crucial process in headwater streams. As leaf breakdown in streams involves sequential steps by different groups of organisms (first microbial conditioning, then invertebrate shredding), pesticides targeting different organisms are likely to affect one or the other step, and a mixture of contaminants might have interactive effects. Our objective was to evaluate the effect of a fungicide (imazalil) and an insecticide (diazinon) on stream fungal and invertebrate activities, and their effects on leaf consumption. After an initial assay to define ‘effective concentration’ of both pesticides in a laboratory experiment, we manipulated pesticide presence/absence during the conditioning and shredding phases. Both pesticides affected fungal community and reduced the performance of the shredding amphipod Echinogammarus berilloni, and leaf consumption. The impact of pesticides on fungal sporulation depended on the length of the exposure period. In addition, pesticides seemed to cause an energetic imbalance in the amphipod, affecting body condition and mortality. The combined effect of both pesticides was similar to those of the fungicide. Overall, our results show that the effects of pesticide mixtures on leaf breakdown are hard to predict from those observed in either fungi or macroinvertebrate performance.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
Authors
, , , , , , , ,