Lasier Peter J, Urich Matthew L, Hassan Sayed M, Jacobs Whitney N, Bringolf Robert B, Owens Kathleen M
United States Geological Survey, Athens, GA, USA.
The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.
Environ Monit Assess. 2016 Dec;188(12):672. doi: 10.1007/s10661-016-5691-7. Epub 2016 Nov 15.
Agricultural practices pose threats to biotic diversity in freshwater systems with increasing use of glyphosate-based herbicides for weed control and animal waste for soil amendment becoming common in many regions. Over the past two decades, these particular agricultural trends have corresponded with marked declines in populations of fish and mussel species in the Upper Conasauga River watershed in Georgia/Tennessee, USA. To investigate the potential role of agriculture in the population declines, surface waters and sediments throughout the basin were tested for toxicity and analyzed for glyphosate, metals, nutrients, and steroid hormones. Assessments of chronic toxicity with Ceriodaphnia dubia and Hyalella azteca indicated that few water or sediment samples were harmful and metal concentrations were generally below impairment levels. Glyphosate was not observed in surface waters, although its primary degradation product, aminomethyl phosphonic acid (AMPA), was detected in 77% of the samples (mean = 509 μg/L, n = 99) and one or both compounds were measured in most sediment samples. Waterborne AMPA concentrations supported an inference that surfactants associated with glyphosate may be present at levels sufficient to affect early life stages of mussels. Nutrient enrichment of surface waters was widespread with nitrate (mean = 0.7 mg NO-N/L, n = 179) and phosphorus (mean = 275 μg/L, n = 179) exceeding levels associated with eutrophication. Hormone concentrations in sediments were often above those shown to cause endocrine disruption in fish and appear to reflect the widespread application of poultry litter and manure. Observed species declines may be at least partially due to hormones, although excess nutrients and herbicide surfactants may also be implicated.
随着基于草甘膦的除草剂越来越多地用于杂草控制以及动物粪便用于土壤改良在许多地区变得普遍,农业实践对淡水系统中的生物多样性构成了威胁。在过去二十年中,这些特定的农业趋势与美国佐治亚州/田纳西州上科纳萨uga河流域的鱼类和贻贝物种数量显著下降相对应。为了调查农业在种群数量下降中可能扮演的角色,对整个流域的地表水和沉积物进行了毒性测试,并分析了其中的草甘膦、金属、营养物质和类固醇激素。用大型蚤(Ceriodaphnia dubia)和墨西哥跳虾(Hyalella azteca)进行的慢性毒性评估表明,很少有水样或沉积物样本具有危害性,金属浓度一般低于损害水平。地表水中未检测到草甘膦,但其主要降解产物氨甲基膦酸(AMPA)在77%的样本中被检测到(平均值 = 509 μg/L,n = 99),并且在大多数沉积物样本中都检测到了一种或两种化合物。水中AMPA的浓度支持了这样一种推断,即与草甘膦相关的表面活性剂可能以足以影响贻贝早期生命阶段的水平存在。地表水的营养物质富集现象普遍存在,硝酸盐(平均值 = 0.7 mg NO-N/L,n = 179)和磷(平均值 = 275 μg/L,n = 179)超过了与富营养化相关的水平。沉积物中的激素浓度常常高于那些已被证明会导致鱼类内分泌紊乱的水平,这似乎反映了家禽粪便和 manure 的广泛应用。观察到的物种数量下降可能至少部分归因于激素,尽管过量的营养物质和除草剂表面活性剂也可能有影响。