| Literature DB >> 30343370 |
Kosuke Nakanishi1, Hiroyuki Yokomizo2, Takehiko I Hayashi2.
Abstract
Neonicotinoids and fipronil are the most widely used insecticides in the world. Previous studies showed that these compounds have high toxicity to a wide taxonomic range of non-target invertebrates. In rice cultivation, they are frequently used for nursery-box treatment of rice seedlings. The use of fipronil and neonicotinoid imidacloprid is suspected to be the main cause of population declines of red dragonflies, in particular Sympetrum frequens, because they have high lethal toxicity to dragonfly nymphs and the timing of the insecticides' introduction in Japan (i.e., the late 1990s) overlapped with the sharp population declines. However, a causal link between application of these insecticides and population declines of the dragonflies remains unclear. Therefore, we estimated the amount of the insecticides applied for nursery-box treatment of rice seedlings and analyzed currently available information to evaluate the causality between fipronil and imidacloprid usage and population decline of S. frequens using Hill's causality criteria. Based on our scoring of Hill's nine criteria, the strongest lines of evidence were strength, plausibility, and coherence, whereas the weakest were temporality and biological gradient. We conclude that the use of these insecticides, particularly fipronil, was a major cause of the declines of S. frequens in Japan in the 1990s, with a high degree of certainty. The existing information and our analyses, however, do not allow us to exclude the possibility that some agronomic practices (e.g., midsummer drainage or crop rotation) that can severely limit the survival of aquatic nymphs also played a role in the dragonfly's decline.Entities:
Keywords: Agrochemicals; Neonicotinoid; Nursery box; Odonata; Paddy fields; Pesticides; Phenylpyrazole; Rice fields
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30343370 PMCID: PMC6280840 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-018-3440-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223
Fig. 1Annual life cycle of Sympetrum frequens and the timing of insecticide application and other main management practices in typical rice cultivation in central Japan. The times noted vary regionally to some extent
Fig. 2Estimated usage ratios of insecticides in nursery-box treatment of rice seedlings and density of Sympetrum frequens in a Toyama Prefecture, b Ishikawa Prefecture, and c Shizuoka Prefecture. Dragonfly data were from Futahashi (2012) for Toyama, Uéda (2012) for Ishikawa, and Fukui (2012) for Shizuoka. Because dragonfly census methods differed among these surveys, the density could not be standardized across prefectures
Summary of the best-fit model selected based on Akaike’s information criterion testing the statistical association between the annual increase of usage ratio of each insecticide and population growth of Sympetrum frequens from 1993 to 2004 in Toyama Prefecture
| Variable | Estimate | SE | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 0.077 | 0.108 | 0.715 | 0.502 |
| Fipronil | − 0.055 | 0.014 | − 3.874 | 0.008* |
| Imidacloprid | 0.069 | 0.035 | 1.986 | 0.094 |
| Cartap | 0.033 | 0.018 | 1.811 | 0.120 |
| Carbosulfan | 0.050 | 0.011 | 4.633 | 0.004* |
*P < 0.01
Fig. 3Scores of Hill’s nine causality criteria evaluating the association between fipronil and imidacloprid usage and population declines of Sympetrum frequens in Japan in the 1990s
Studies on the effects of fipronil and imidacloprid on Sympetrum species
| Insecticide | Species | Methoda | Systemb | Application | Effectc | Effect details | Yeard | Locality | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fipronil | TT | LYS | NBAe | LN | Increase mortality of nymphs; no adult emerged | 2007 | Akita, Japan | Jinguji et al. ( | |
| TT | ERF | NBA | LN | Decreased number of emerged adults | 2008 | Miyagi, Japan | Jinguji et al. ( | ||
| TT | LYS | NBA | LN | Increased mortality of nymphs; no adult emerged | 2010 | Miyagi, Japan | Jinguji and Uéda ( | ||
| TT | IV | 10 mg/Lf | LN | Lethal effect | 2001, 2002 | Saitama, Japan | Shimada et al. ( | ||
| FO | LYS | NBA | NE | No effect detected | 2010, 2011 | Ibaraki, Japan | Hayasaka et al. ( | ||
| FO | ERF | NBA | LN | Decreased number of emerged | 2008 | Miyagi, Japan | Jinguji et al. ( | ||
| TT | LYS | NBA | LN | Increased mortality of nymphs; no adult emerged | 2008 | Miyagi, Japan | Jinguji et al. ( | ||
| FO | LYS | NBA | LN | Decreased number of nymphs; no adult emerged | 2001 | Iwate, Japan | Suga et al. ( | ||
| FO | ERF | NBA | LN | Decreased number of nymphs | 2002 | Miyagi, Japan | Oyama and Kidokoro ( | ||
| TT | LYS | NBA | LN | Increased mortality of nymphs; no adult emerged | 2002 | Miyagi, Japan | Oyama and Kidokoro ( | ||
| Imidacloprid | TT | LYS | NBA | SN | Increased mortality of nymphs; increased abnormal emergence | 2007 | Akita, Japan | Jinguji et al. ( | |
| TT | LYS | NBA | LN | Increased mortality of nymphs; no adult emerged | 2010 | Miyagi, Japan | Jinguji and Uéda ( | ||
| TT | IV | 100 mg/Lf | SN | Lethal effect | 2001, 2002 | Saitama, Japan | Shimada et al. ( | ||
| FO | LYS | NBA | NE | No effect detected | 2004 | Ibaraki, Japan | Sánchez-Bayo and Goka ( | ||
| FO | LYS | NBA | NE | No effect detected | 2010, 2011 | Ibaraki, Japan | Hayasaka et al. ( | ||
| TT | LYS | NBA | LN | Increased mortality of nymphs | 2008 | Miyagi, Japan | Jinguji et al. ( | ||
| TT | ERF | NBA | NE | No effect detected | 2007 | Tokyo, Japan | Motobayashi et al. ( | ||
| FO | ERF | NBA | SN | Decreased number of nymphs | 2002 | Miyagi, Japan | Oyama and Kidokoro ( | ||
| TT | LYS | NBA | SN | Increased mortality of nymphs | 2002 | Miyagi, Japan | Oyama and Kidokoro ( | ||
| FO | ERF | NBA | SN | Decreased number of nymphs; reduced adult emergence | 1998 | Akita, Japan | Konno ( | ||
| Neonicotinoids and fipronil (unidentified) | FO | CRF | NBA | SN | Decreased number of emerged adults | 2012 | Niigata, Japan | Aoda et al. ( |
aTT toxicity test, FO field observation
bIV in vitro, LYS lysimeter, ERF experimental rice field, CRF commercial rice field
cLN large negative effects, SN small negative effects, NE no effect detected
dStudy year or the year of publication
eNursery-box application at the recommended dose for commercial rice fields
fConcentration of significant lethal effect