Neonicotinoids disrupt aquatic food webs and decrease fishery yields
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See all authors and affiliations
Abstract
How the world’s most widely used insecticide led to a fishery collapse
Neonicotinoids wiped out plankton and fish in a Japanese lake, and are likely harming aquatic ecosystems worldwide, new research suggests.
In 1993, farmers in Shimane Prefecture, Japan began using
neonicotinoids in their rice paddies and agricultural fields.
Kilograms of neonicotinoids sold annually in Shimane Prefecture
May 1993
Start of neonicotinoid use
in Shimane Prefecture
Runoff containing neonicotinoids from fields and paddies was
linked to a dropoff of zooplankton biomass in Lake Shinji.
Monthly measurement of zooplankton in micrograms carbon per liter
present in water from Lake Shinji
May 1993
Start of neonicotinoid use
in Shimane Prefecture
Populations of commercial smelt and eel in Lake Shinji, which
were reliant on zooplankton and benthos as a source of food,
began to collapse.
Tons of smelt and eel, caught annually in Lake Shinji
SMELT
EEL
May 1993
Start of neonicotinoid use
in Shimane Prefecture
SMELT
EEL
JOHN KAPPLER, NG STAFF.
SOURCE: MASUMI YAMAMURO ET AL., SCIENCE, 2019
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