4.7 Article

Chronic toxicity of technical atrazine to the fatheadminnow (Pimephales promelas) during a full life-cycle exposure and an evaluation of the consistency of responses

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 755, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142589

Keywords

Pesticides; Risk assessment; Consistency; Fish; Toxicity; Uptake

Funding

  1. Syngenta Crop Protection, LLC (Greensboro, North Carolina, USA) [TK0023326]

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The continuous exposure of fathead minnows to atrazine did not significantly impact hatching success or reproduction in the F0 generation, but did affect growth and survival at higher concentrations. The F1 generation showed reduced embryo hatchability but no significant difference in survival compared to control. Bioconcentration factors varied across life stages but overall indicated low bioconcentration of atrazine in the fish tissues. Consistency analysis supports the conclusion that atrazine poses no significant chronic risk to freshwater fish up to at least 100 μg/L.
Fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) were continuously exposed to the herbicide atrazine (0.15, 0.25, 0.46, 0.99, and 2.0 mg a.i./L, plus dilution water and solvent controls) for a complete life cycle (274 days). Concentrations of atrazine up to 2.0 mg a.i./L did not significantly reduce hatching success, larval survival at 30 or 60 days post-hatch, or reproduction (eggs/spawn, total eggs, spawns/female, or eggs/female) in the F0 generation. However, at 60 days of exposure, total length and total survival to study completion were significantly reduced in >= 0.46 mg a.i./L and >= 0.99 mg a.i./L treatments, respectively. In the F1 generation, hatchability of embryos at >= 0.25 mg a.i./L (range 74-82%) was significantly less than that of pooled control organisms (86%). Following 30 days' post-hatch exposure, F1 survival was not significantly different from pooled control for any treatment. Finally, tissues representing major life stages had bioconcentration factors ranging from 3.7x (F1 embryos, <24 h) to 8.5x (F0 adults), indicating little to no evidence of bioconcentration. We developed a series of questions to assess the consistency of observed responses in order to place the data in context with the wider available and relevant literature (e.g., Observed between studies? Observed between species? Observed at lower levels of biological organization?). The analysis for consistency supports the conclusion that atrazine does not pose a significant chronic risk to freshwater fish in terms of growth, reproduction, or survivorship at concentrations of up to at least 100 mu g/L. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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