| Literature DB >> 31574132 |
Rosie J Lennon1, Nick J B Isaac2, Richard F Shore3, Will J Peach4, Jenny C Dunn5, M Glória Pereira3, Kathryn E Arnold1, David Garthwaite6, Colin D Brown1.
Abstract
Over the last 20 years, a new group of systemic insecticides-the neonicotinoids-has gained prominence in arable systems, and their application globally has risen year on year. Previous modelling studies using long-term data have suggested that neonicotinoid application has had a detrimental impact on bird populations, but these studies were either limited to a single species or neglected to analyse specific exposure pathways in conjunction with observed population trends. Using bird abundance data, neonicotinoid usage records and cropping data for England at a 5x5 km resolution, generalised linear mixed models were used to test for spatio-temporal associations between neonicotinoid use and changes in the populations of 22 farmland bird species between 1994 and 2014, and to determine whether any associations were explained by dietary preferences. We assigned farmland bird species to three categories of dietary exposure to neonicotinoids based on literature data for species diets and neonicotinoid residues present in dietary items. Significant estimates of neonicotinoid-related population change were obtained for 13 of the 22 species (9 positive effects, 4 negative effects). Model estimates for individual species were not collectively explained by dietary risk categories, so dietary exposure to neonicotinoids via ingestion of treated seeds and seedlings could not be confirmed as a causal factor in farmland bird declines. Although it is not possible to infer any generic effect of dietary exposure to neonicotinoids on farmland bird populations, our analysis identifies three species with significant negative estimates that may warrant further research (house sparrow Passer domesticus, skylark Alauda arvensis and red-legged partridge Alectoris rufa). We conclude that there was either no consistent effect of dietary exposure to neonicotinoids on farmland bird populations in England, or that any over-arching effect was not detectable using our study design. The potential for indirect effects of insecticide use on bird populations via reduced food availability was not considered here and should be a focus for future research.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31574132 PMCID: PMC6772096 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Change in NN application and change in farmland bird abundance for the UK between 1970 and 2014.
Bars: Pesticide Usage Survey data for annual weight (kg) of NN applied, moderated by a toxicity equivalency factor (TEF) to account for differences in the acute (Fig 1A) or chronic (Fig 1B) toxicity of each NN compound to birds (see Methods for details) [9]. Lines: breeding bird index for farmland birds based on 19 farmland indicator species (solid: unsmoothed trend; dotted: smoothed trend), reproduced from the Defra report ‘Wild bird populations in the UK, 1970 to 2014: Annual statistical release’ (Fig 2) [12]. NN: neonicotinoid.
Fig 2Overview of the manipulation process used to combine independent data sources to build the final model data frame.
AgC: EDiNA agcensus; BBS: breeding bird survey; BTO: British Trust for Ornithology; CTD: clothianidin; IMI: imidacloprid; JSA: June Survey of Agriculture; NN: neonicotinoid; PUS: Pesticide Usage Survey; TEF: toxicity equivalency factor (used to adjust for the differences in toxicity of each compound to birds); THX: thiamethoxam.
Relative quantity of high-level residue food items in species diet and dietary exposure groups assigned to each species.
| Bird species | Latin name | Plant families treated with NN that are present in species diet | Relative value | Exposure group | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chaffinch | 44 | 25 | n/a | Medium | ||
| Corn Bunting | 44 | 75 | 16 | High | ||
| Goldfinch | None | 0 | 0 | n/a | Low | |
| Greenfinch | 16 | 11 | 21 | Medium | ||
| Grey Partridge | 12 | 28 | 21 | Medium | ||
| House Sparrow | 37 | 23 | ^24 | Medium | ||
| Jackdaw | (Cereal grain) | n/a | n/a | (11) | Medium | |
| Kestrel | None | (0) | (0) | (0) | Low | |
| Lapwing | None | (0) | (0) | (0) | Low | |
| Linnet | 0 | 0 | 71 | High | ||
| Red-legged Partridge | n/a | 44 | ^29 | Medium | ||
| Reed Bunting | 0 | 69 | ^0 | High | ||
| Rook | 38 | 58 | 34 | High | ||
| Skylark | #22 | 36 | ^2 | Medium | ||
| Starling~ | (Grain) | (0) | (51) | (0) | Medium | |
| Stock Dove | 61 | 22 | 5 | High | ||
| Tree Sparrow | 22 | 36 | ^15 | Medium | ||
| Turtle Dove | 99 | n/a | 70 | High | ||
| Whitethroat | None | (0) | (0) | (0) | Low | |
| Woodpigeon | 50 | 45 | ^47 | High | ||
| Yellow Wagtail | None | (0) | (0) | (0) | Low | |
| Yellowhammer | 92 | 32 | 4 | High | ||
*Extracted from Holland et al., 2006 [38], with the exception of
Values in brackets extracted from: (+) Birds of the Western Palearctic [39] and (~) Tait et al., 1973 [40].
Values estimated from Holland et al., 2006 [38] are indicated as follows: (#)Breeding value extrapolated from non-breeding value based on percentage of plant material in breeding vs. non-breeding season; (^) chick value extrapolated from available adult diet data based on percentage of plant material in breeding vs. non-breeding season ().
+Adult skylark are also known to feed on leaves of cereal plants (Poaceae) [41], but representative mean proportions are not shown here.
(O): Data includes percentage occurrence, as well as percentage items and percentage biomass.
AV: average; BR: breeding; NB: non-breeding.
Availability of EDINA agcensus data for each crop type in England.
| Crop | Genus | Missing Years | Interpolation method for missing years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sugar beet | 1998;1999;2001;2002;2006–2009; 2011–2014 | Linear | |
| Oilseed rape | 1998;1999;2001;2002;2006–2009; 2011–2014 | Linear, Regional JSA | |
| Wheat | 1998;1999;2001;2002;2006–2009; 2011–2014 | Regional JSA | |
| Winter Barley | 1998;1999;2001;2002;2006–2009; 2011–2014 | Regional JSA | |
| Linseed | 1998;1999;2001;2002;2006–2009;2011–2014 | Regional JSA, National JSA | |
| Oats | 1998;1999;2001;2002;2006–2009; 2011–2014 | Regional JSA | |
| Rye | 1998–2014 | None: excluded from analysis |
*No interpolation for 1998 due to non-availability of JSA and agcensus data across all crop types.
JSA: June Survey of Agriculture (Defra).
Reported concentrations of NN residues in avian dietary components.
| Dietary component | Data source | Residue of NN (ng/g) | Compound | Residue level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crop seed | RSPB ( | 555,600 | CTD | High |
| Crop seedlings | RSPB ( | 3,425 | CTD | High |
| Exposed birds (<50g) | Lopez-Antia | 56 | IMI | Low |
| Eggs (exposed bird) | Bro | 28 | IMI | Low |
| Wild plants (at field margins) | Biotas | 0.51 | CTD | Low |
| Invertebrates | Chauzat | 0.3–11.1 | IMI | Low |
*Concentrations recorded in field-sampled honeybees (Apis mellifera) [30]; see ).
CTD: clothianidin; IMI: imidacloprid; NN: neonicotinoids.