Indirect effects of herbicides on biota in terrestrial edge-of-field habitats: A critical review of the literature

⿢Reviewed literature on indirect effect of herbicides in terrestrial habitats.⿢The majority of studies investigated the effect on invertebrates (23 out of 29).⿢Few studies exposed edge-of-field habitats to relevant application rates.⿢No studies attempted to quantify herbicide exposure to terrestrial...

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Veröffentlicht in:Agriculture, ecosystems & environment ecosystems & environment, 2016-09, Vol.232, p.59-72
Hauptverfasser: Prosser, Ryan S., Anderson, Julie C., Hanson, Mark L., Solomon, Keith R., Sibley, Paul K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:⿢Reviewed literature on indirect effect of herbicides in terrestrial habitats.⿢The majority of studies investigated the effect on invertebrates (23 out of 29).⿢Few studies exposed edge-of-field habitats to relevant application rates.⿢No studies attempted to quantify herbicide exposure to terrestrial habitats.⿢Few incorporated quantitative link between effect on plant and non-plant community. This manuscript reviews the current understanding of indirect effects of herbicides in agricultural edge-of-field habitats, with the goal of identifying key uncertainties and critical knowledge gaps. Indirect effects are defined as those observed in animal species as a result of direct effects of exposure to an herbicide on the plant community. Following an extensive search of the literature, the review focuses on 29 studies that specifically addressed some aspect of the indirect effects of herbicides in edge-of-field habitats. The bulk of work has focused on invertebrate and bird species, with few studies investigating small mammals, amphibians, or reptiles (riparian field margins were not included, where amphibians and reptiles are more likely to occur). Key knowledge gaps identified in the review include: (1) a lack of studies incorporating exposures to edge-of-field habitats that would be relevant based on current agronomic practices; (2) few studies attempt to quantify the herbicide exposure within edge-of-field habitats and consider the influence of methods of herbicide application on exposure; (3) few studies incorporate quantitative linkages between direct effects on the plant community, indirect effects on animal species, and population-level effects; and (4) the majority of studies have been conducted in Europe, with a distinct lack of research investigating the indirect effects of herbicides on field margin fauna under agricultural practices in other regions of the world. Of the studies reviewed, many lack one or more key components of a robust experimental design that would be necessary to quantify exposure to and/or effects of herbicides. Adequate quantification of exposure of the plant community is often lacking, including poor representation of exposure scenarios that adequately mimic spray drift. Further, there is a dearth of studies that even attempt to investigate ecologically-relevant linkages between direct effects on plants and associated indirect effects on plant-dependent communities and population-level effects. The state of knowledge pertaining
ISSN:0167-8809
1873-2305
DOI:10.1016/j.agee.2016.07.009