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Community ecology theory predicts the effects of agrochemical mixtures on aquatic biodiversity and ecosystem properties
Ecology Letters (2014)
  • Neal T. Halstead, University of South Florida
  • Taegan A. McMahon, University of South Florida
  • Steve A. Johnson, University of Florida
  • Thomas R. Raffel, Oakland University
  • John M. Romansic, Oregon State University
  • Patrick W. Crumrine, Rowan University
  • Jason R. Rohr, University of South Florida
Abstract
Ecosystems are often exposed to mixtures of chemical contaminants, but the scientific community lacks a theoretical framework to predict the effects of mixtures on biodiversity and ecosystem properties. We conducted a freshwater mesocosm experiment to examine the effects of pairwise agrochemical mixtures [fertiliser, herbicide (atrazine), insecticide (malathion) and fungicide (chlorothalonil)] on 24 species- and seven ecosystem-level responses. As postulated, the responses of biodiversity and ecosystem properties to agrochemicals alone and in mixtures was predictable by integrating information on each functional group's (1) sensitivity to the chemicals (direct effects), (2) reproductive rates (recovery rates), (3) interaction strength with other functional groups (indirect effects) and (4) links to ecosystem properties. These results show that community ecology theory holds promise for predicting the effects of contaminant mixtures on biodiversity and ecosystem services and yields recommendations on which types of agrochemicals to apply together and separately to reduce their impacts on aquatic ecosystems.
Disciplines
Publication Date
January 8, 2014
DOI
10.1111/ele.12295
Citation Information
Neal T. Halstead, Taegan A. McMahon, Steve A. Johnson, Thomas R. Raffel, et al.. "Community ecology theory predicts the effects of agrochemical mixtures on aquatic biodiversity and ecosystem properties" Ecology Letters Vol. 17 Iss. 8 (2014) p. 932 - 941
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/patrick-crumrine/4/