Final Bulk Sediment Concentrations of Bifenthrin from Mesocosms

Direct and indirect ecological effects of the widely used insecticide bifenthrin on stream ecosystems are largely unknown. To investigate such effects, a manipulative experiment was conducted in stream mesocosms that were colonized by aquatic insect communities and exposed to bifenthrin-contaminated sediment; implications for natural streams were interpreted through comparison of mesocosm results to a survey of 100 Midwestern streams, USA. In the mesocosm experiment, direct effects of bifenthrin exposure included reduced larval macroinvertebrate abundance, richness, and biomass at concentrations (EC50s ranged 197.6 – 233.5 ng bifenthrin/ g organic carbon) previously thought safe for aquatic life. Indirect effects included a trophic cascade in which periphyton abundance increased after macroinvertebrate scrapers decreased. Adult emergence dynamics and corresponding terrestrial subsidies were altered at all bifenthrin concentrations tested. Extrapolating these results to the Midwestern stream assessment suggests pervasive ecological effects, with altered emergence dynamics likely in 40% of streams and a trophic cascade in 7% of streams. This study provides new evidence that a common pyrethroid might alter aquatic and terrestrial ecosystem function at the regional scale.
This data file contains information about the bifenthrin concentrations measured in sediment collected from mesocosms at the end of the experiment.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
accessLevel public
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identifier USGS:5797dffde4b0589fa1c61b9f
metadata_type geospatial
modified 20200826
old-spatial -98.014248381, 36.711622775, -81.815544901, 44.902384649
publisher U.S. Geological Survey
publisher_hierarchy Department of the Interior > U.S. Geological Survey
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 6ec327805e94e5021a3321c5688b4f178c0ce7b5
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spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-98.014248381, 36.711622775], [-98.014248381, 44.902384649], [ -81.815544901, 44.902384649], [ -81.815544901, 36.711622775], [-98.014248381, 36.711622775]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • adult-emergence
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • aquatic-insect-communities
  • aquatic-terrestrial-linkages
  • bifenthrin
  • ckan
  • contaminants
  • geo
  • geoss
  • illinois
  • indiana
  • iowa
  • kansas
  • kentucky
  • mesocosm
  • michigan
  • midwest-united-states
  • minnesota
  • missouri
  • national
  • nebraska
  • north-america
  • ohio
  • pesticides
  • sediment-quality
  • south-dakota
  • suspended-sediment
  • trophic-cascade
  • united-states
  • usgs-5797dffde4b0589fa1c61b9f
  • water-quality
  • wisconsin
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer Travis S. Schmidt
maintainer_email tschmidt@usgs.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-19T16:46:48.174488
metadata_modified 2025-11-19T16:46:48.174496
notes Direct and indirect ecological effects of the widely used insecticide bifenthrin on stream ecosystems are largely unknown. To investigate such effects, a manipulative experiment was conducted in stream mesocosms that were colonized by aquatic insect communities and exposed to bifenthrin-contaminated sediment; implications for natural streams were interpreted through comparison of mesocosm results to a survey of 100 Midwestern streams, USA. In the mesocosm experiment, direct effects of bifenthrin exposure included reduced larval macroinvertebrate abundance, richness, and biomass at concentrations (EC50s ranged 197.6 – 233.5 ng bifenthrin/ g organic carbon) previously thought safe for aquatic life. Indirect effects included a trophic cascade in which periphyton abundance increased after macroinvertebrate scrapers decreased. Adult emergence dynamics and corresponding terrestrial subsidies were altered at all bifenthrin concentrations tested. Extrapolating these results to the Midwestern stream assessment suggests pervasive ecological effects, with altered emergence dynamics likely in 40% of streams and a trophic cascade in 7% of streams. This study provides new evidence that a common pyrethroid might alter aquatic and terrestrial ecosystem function at the regional scale. This data file contains information about the bifenthrin concentrations measured in sediment collected from mesocosms at the end of the experiment.
num_resources 2
num_tags 33
title Final Bulk Sediment Concentrations of Bifenthrin from Mesocosms