Featured Photo

Oscar (Astronotus ocellatus). Image credit, Jón Helgi Jónsson.

Funding Board Highlights

Attn: Funders - Post to the funding board with our online form


   Funding Board: click here

Announcements

Seeking photos -Contact us, if you have photos or videos to share. We will feature them in our video library and featured photo section.

Sign up for our newsletter - We profile the latest conservation studies from over 100 journals plus new funding opportunities... straight to your email.

Featured Comments

Jason on Does land conservation affect the local housing supply? The paper does not seem to consider the affect on prices. The prices are more... Mar 3, 2010


Guest on Not all species are created equal (in the eyes of scientific study) Dan that is true if you subscribe to the idea that only top-down... Mar 2, 2010


Eddie on Land conservation not strategically targeting projects to control growth This is not surprising. Much land conservation is... Feb, 26, 2010


markjordahl on When wildlife avoids perfectly good habitat: the perceptual trap Given that many toxins are endocrine disruptors and affect... Feb 24, 2010


Dr Dan on Snakes interrupted: roads causing genetic decline Wow!! This could be appropriate for thousands of species. For example I know... Feb 18, 2010


Michele Deakin on Can animal rights activists and conservationists find comon ground? It would be nice to think that the two groups can find... Jan 26, 2010


Julie on When an invasive species becomes media hype I completely agree. While both non-native Lonicera and Rhamnus have lots of... Oct 29, 2009

Friday
20Nov2009

The impact of pesticides on salmon populations

Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha). Image credit, National Park Service.Findings from a new study in the journal Ecological Applications indicate that short-term pesticide exposure in juvenile Chinook salmon is likely reducing population growth rates and impeding recovery of the species.

David Baldwin and fellow researchers from NOAA developed a complex model that links the impacts of pesticides on individual fish with the overall trajectory of Chinook salmon populations.

Their model projects that seasonal exposures to four-day pulses of organophosphate insecticides over 20 years are sufficient to reduce the population of return spawners by 73% relative to an unexposed control population.

Extensive research over the years has documented that pesticide exposure can cause damage to salmon individuals. Exposure to organophosphates and carbamate insecticides can cause non-fatal impacts to fish by inhibiting activity in the nervous system. This in turn can impede the growth of juveniles.

While past research has shown that juvenile growth affects their survival rate in marine and freshwater environments, few studies have looked at how the toxic effects of pesticide exposure on individuals translate to impacts at the population level.

To help build our understanding of this issue, Baldwin and fellow researchers developed a model that considers two types of existing data:

1) Laboratory studies on the effects of pesticide exposure in juveniles on nervous system inhibition, feeding behavior, and growth.

2) Field studies linking relative size at migration to survival.

The researchers ran the model based on several exposure scenarios reflecting the transport of pesticides to salmon habitats via drift, surface runoff, and irrigation return flows.

The study authors warn that the model is probably overly simplistic given the lack of complete data and may overstate or understate the actual impacts somewhat.  Nevertheless, the output from the model will help with the conservation of threatened and endangered populations. The authors write:

Establishing toxicological linkages across biological scales is necessary to (1) identify which chemicals in salmon habitats should be a priority for toxic reduction strategies; (2) place water quality in the appropriate context for relative risk comparisons with physical and biological forms of habitat degradation; (3) estimate the population-scale benefits of restoration projects that improve water quality; and (4) provide a basis for more sophisticated modeling analyses that focus on specific population segments and incorporate indirect effects (e.g., via food webs) and interactions between chemical and nonchemical stressors.


--Reviewed by Rob Goldstein

Baldwin, D., Spromberg, J., Collier, T., & Scholz, N. (2009). A fish of many scales: extrapolating sublethal pesticide exposures to the productivity of wild salmon populations Ecological Applications, 19 (8), 2004-2015 DOI: 10.1890/08-1891.1

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.