van_der_sluijs_et_al_(2015).pdf (162.65 kB)
Conclusions of the Worldwide Integrated Assessment on the risks of neonicotinoids and fipronil to biodiversity and ecosystem functioning
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 20:13 authored by J P van der Sluijs, V Amaral-Rogers, L P Belzunces, M F I J Bijleveld van Lexmond, J-M Bonmatin, M Chagnon, C A Downs, L Furlan, D W Gibbons, C Giorio, V Girolami, Dave GoulsonDave Goulson, D P Kreutzweiser, C Krupke, M Liess, E Long, M McField, P Mineau, E A D Mitchell, C A Morrissey, D A Noome, L Pisa, J Settele, N Simon-Delso, J D Stark, A Tapparo, H Van Dyck, J van Praagh, P R Whitehorn, M WiemersThe side effects of the current global use of pesticides on wildlife, particularly at higher levels of biological organization: populations, communities and ecosystems, are poorly understood (Köhler and Triebskorn 2013). Here, we focus on one of the problematic groups of agrochemicals, the systemic insecticides fipronil and those of the neonicotinoid family. The increasing global reliance on the partly prophylactic use of these persistent and potent neurotoxic systemic insecticides has raised concerns about their impacts on biodiversity, ecosystem functioning and ecosystem services provided by a wide range of affected species and environments. The present scale of use, combined with the properties of these compounds, has resulted in widespread contamination of agricultural soils, freshwater resources, wetlands, non-target vegetation and estuarine and coastal marine systems, which means that many organisms inhabiting these habitats are being repeatedly and chronically expose...
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
Environmental Science and Pollution ResearchISSN
0944-1344Publisher
Springer VerlagExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
22Page range
148-154Department affiliated with
- Biology and Environmental Science Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes