Title of article :
Water quality and macroinvertebrate community response following
pesticide applications in a banana plantation, Limon, Costa Rica
Author/Authors :
Luisa Eugenia Castillo a، نويسنده , , b، نويسنده , , c، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Eduardo Mart?nez a، نويسنده , , Clemens Ruepert a، نويسنده , , Candida Savage c، نويسنده , , f، نويسنده , , Michael Gilek، نويسنده , , d، نويسنده , , Margareth Pinnock a، نويسنده , , Efrain Solis e، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Pesticides used in banana production may enter watercourses and pose ecological risks for aquatic ecosystems. The occurrence
and effects of pesticides in a stream draining a banana plantation was evaluated using chemical characterization, toxicity testing and
macrobenthic community composition. All nematicides studied were detected in the surface waters of the banana plantation during
application periods, with peak concentrations following applications. Toxicity tests were limited to the carbofuran application and
no toxicity was observed with the acute tests used. However, since pesticide concentrations were generally below the lowest LC50
value for crustaceans but above calculated aquatic quality criteria, there remains a risk of chronic toxicity. Accurate ecological
assessments of pesticide use in banana plantations are currently limited by the lack of local short-term chronic toxicity tests and
tests using sensitive native species. Relatively constant levels of four pesticides (imazalil, thiabendazole, chlorpyrifos and
propiconazole), which had toxic effects according to the 96h hydra and 21d daphnia chronic test, were recorded in the effluent of
the packing plant throughout the study, indicating that the solid waste trap used in this facility was not effective in eliminating toxic
chemicals. Certain taxa, such as Heterelmis sp. (Elmidae), Heteragrion sp. (Megapodagrionidae, Odonata), Caenis sp. (Caenidae,
Ephemerotera), and Smicridea sp. (Hidropsychidae, Trichoptera), were more abundant at reference sites than in the banana farm
waters, and may be good candidates for toxicity testing. Multivariate analyses of the macroinvertebrate communities clearly
showed that the banana plantation sites were significantly different from the reference sites. Moreover, following the pesticide
applications, all the banana plantation sites showed significant changes in community composition, with the same genera being
affected at all sites and for all pesticides (terbufos, cadusafos and carbofuran). Consequently, the results presented here show that
multivariate analysis of community composition was more sensitive in distinguishing pesticide effects than the toxicity tests and
richness and composition measures used. We conclude that monitoring macroinvertebrate communities can be a powerful tool in
the assessment of ecological effects of banana production.
Keywords :
pesticides , toxicity tests , Macroinvertebrates , Banana plantations , Aquatic ecosystems , multivariate analysis
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment