Fishery collapse ‘confirms Silent Spring pesticide prophecy'
Common
pesticides found to starve fish ‘astoundingly fast’ by killing aquatic insects
The
Silent Spring prophecy that pesticides could “still the leaping of fish” has
been confirmed, according to scientists investigating the collapse of fisheries
in Japan. They say similar impacts are likely to have occurred around the
world.
The
long-term study showed an immediate plunge in insect and plankton numbers in a
large lake after the introduction of neonicotinoid pesticides to rice paddies.
This was rapidly followed by the collapse of smelt and eel populations, which
had been stable for decades but rely on the tiny creatures for food.
The
analysis shows a strong correlation but cannot prove a causal link between the
insecticides and the collapse. However, independent scientists said other
possibilities had been ruled out and that the work provided “compelling
evidence”.
The
research is the first to reveal the knock-on effects of insecticides on fish.
Harm to bees is
well known, but previous studies in Europe have linked neonicotinoids
to die-offs
in other freshwater species including mayflies, dragonflies and snails
and also to falling populations of farmland
bird that feed on insects, including starlings and swallows. The
insecticide has also been shown to make migrating
songbirds lose their way.
Rachel
Carson wrote Silent
Spring, her seminal book on the dangers of pesticides in 1962. In
their report, the Japanese researchers said: “She wrote: ‘These sprays, dusts
and aerosols are now applied almost universally to farms, gardens, forests and
homes – nonselective chemicals that have the power to kill every insect, the
‘good’ and the ‘bad’, to still the song of birds and the leaping of fish in the
streams.’ The ecological and economic impact of neonicotinoids on the inland
waters of Japan confirms Carson’s prophecy.”
“This
disruption likely also occurs elsewhere, as neonicotinoids are currently the
most widely used class of insecticides globally,” worth more than $3bn year,
they said.
Prof
Olaf Jensen, at Rutgers University in the US and not part of the research team,
said: “This study, although observational, presents compelling evidence. A
fishery that was sustainable for decades collapsed within a year after farmers
began using neonicotinoids. This is a large and astoundingly fast response.”
The
research, published
in the journal Science, looked at data from Lake Shinji spanning the decade
before and the period after the introduction of neonicotinoids in 1993, from
which point the pesticides started running off into the lake. They found
neonicotinoid concentrations in the water frequently exceeded levels that are
toxic to aquatic invertebrates.
The
midge Chironomus plumosus, an important food source for smelt, was
one of the worst affected. It vanished completely from all 39 locations sampled
in 2016, despite being abundant in 1982. Another important food source, an
abundant zooplankton species, Sinocalanus tenellus, fell by 83%.
The
researchers found annual catches of smelt fell 90% in the decade after
neonicotinoids were introduced, compared with the decade before. Catches of
eels dropped by 74% over the same time period.
“Several
alternative explanations for the collapse were evaluated and rejected: invasive
species, hypoxia, or changes in fish stocking cannot plausibly explain the
observations,” said Jensen. Furthermore, catches of icefish, which do not rely
on the affected invertebrates for food, remained unchanged.
The
research shows neonicotinoid pesticides can affect entire food webs, he said. On
the lack of other reports of similar collapses, Jensen said: “There is the
issue of not seeing a problem if we don’t look for it.”
Matt
Shardlow, from the charity Buglife, said: “Japan has had a tragic experience
with nerve-agent insecticides. In the paddy fields, where the air once thrummed with the
clatter of billions of dragonfly wings, these insecticides have imposed
near silence.”
“The
annihilation of humble flies and the knock on effects on fish serve as further
testament to the dreadful folly of neonicotinoids,” he said. “Let’s hope this
is a wake-up call for Asian countries and they move to quickly ban the
chemicals from paddyfields.”
“It
is also extremely worrying that the levels of neonicotinoids in rivers in
eastern England, as
recently reported by Buglife, are very similar to the levels reported in this
research,” Shardlow said. “Unfortunately, while it is clear that harm must have
been done to UK river health, the exact impact of neonicotinoids has yet to be
quantified.”
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