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Modelling global distribution of agricultural insecticides in surface waters

Academic article
Year of publication
2015
Journal
Environmental Pollution (1987)
External websites
Cristin
Doi
Contributors
Alessio Ippolito, Mira Kattwinkel, Jes Jessen Rasmussen, Ralf B Schäfer, Riccardo Fornaroli, Matthias Liess

Summary

Agricultural insecticides constitute a major driver of animal biodiversity loss in freshwater ecosystems. However, the global extent of their effects and the spatial extent of exposure remain largely unknown. We applied a spatially explicit model to estimate the potential for agricultural insecticide runoff into streams. Water bodies within 40% of the global land surface were at risk of insecticide runoff. We separated the influence of natural factors and variables under human control determining insecticide runoff. In the northern hemisphere, insecticide runoff presented a latitudinal gradient mainly driven by insecticide application rate; in the southern hemisphere, a combination of daily rainfall intensity, terrain slope, agricultural intensity and insecticide application rate determined the process. The model predicted the upper limit of observed insecticide exposure measured in water bodies (n = 82) in five different countries reasonably well. The study provides a global map of hotspots for insecticide contamination guiding future freshwater management and conservation efforts.