4.5 Article

Field Availability and Avoidance of Imidacloprid-Treated Soybean Seeds and Cotyledons by Birds

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
Volume 42, Issue 5, Pages 1049-1060

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/etc.5597

Keywords

Avian toxicity; Ecotoxicology; Insecticide; Pesticide risk assessment; Wildlife toxicology

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Treated seeds and their cotyledons pose toxicological risks to seed-eating birds. The study found that the density of untreated seeds and the damage to seedlings were higher than those treated with imidacloprid. Additionally, the abundance and richness of birds decreased after sowing, suggesting a deterrent effect of imidacloprid-treated seeds on birds.
Treated seeds and their cotyledons can present a toxicological risk to seed-eating birds. To assess whether avoidance behavior limits exposure and consequently the risk to birds, three fields were sown with soybeans. Half of the surface of each field was sown with seeds treated with 42g/100kg seed of insecticide imidacloprid (T plot, treated) and the other half with seeds without imidacloprid (C plot, control). Unburied seeds were surveyed in C and T plots at 12 and 48h post-sowing. Damaged seedlings were surveyed in C and T plots at 12 days post-sowing. The abundance and richness of birds was surveyed at the field level (without distinguishing between C and T plots) before, during, and after sowing, and 12 days post-sowing. Unburied seed density was higher in the headlands of the T plots than in the C plots, but did not differ between 12 and 48h. The damage to cotyledons of seedlings was 15.4% higher in C plots than in T plots. The abundance and richness/ha of birds that eat seeds and cotyledons were lower after sowing, indicating a deterrent effect on birds by sowing imidacloprid-treated seeds. Although the variation in seed density over time does not allow solid conclusions to be drawn about the avoidance of seeds treated by birds, the seedling results suggest an aversive effect of imidacloprid-treated soybeans on birds. The dominant species was the eared dove (Zenaida auriculata), whose risk of acute poisoning by imidacloprid in soybean seeds and cotyledons was low, according to its toxicity exposure ratio, foraged area of concern, and foraged time of concern. Environ Toxicol Chem 2023;42:1049-1060. (c) 2023 SETAC

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