An ecological risk assessment for spinosad use on cotton
- 18 December 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Pest Management Science
- Vol. 58 (1) , 70-84
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.424
Abstract
Spinosad is a reduced-risk insecticide with a novel mode of action that provides an alternative to older classes of insecticides such as organophosphates, carbamates and pyrethroids. A comprehensive ecological risk assessment for spinosad use in US cotton crops is presented within a framework of tiered levels of refinement following the guidelines of the US EPA for ecological risk assessments. Toxicity information for a variety of species is documented and utilized, environmental concentrations estimated, and risk characterizations in the form of risk quotients are quantified. Results indicate that spinosad use in cotton does not exceed the most conservative Tier I levels of concern (LOC) values for groundwater, mammals and birds or acute risk to aquatic organisms. Use of very conservative Tier I screening methods resulted in exceeding LOC values for chronic exposure for some aquatic organisms, thus prompting further refinement. When the exposure prediction was refined using less conservative, Tier II mechanistic environmental fate transport models to predict off-site transport and environmental concentrations, chronic risk was not predicted for these species. Spinosad is acutely toxic to bees under laboratory conditions, but toxicity of residue studies and field studies indicate that under actual use conditions the impact on bees is minimal. © 2001 Society of Chemical IndustryKeywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regional sensitivity analysis using a fractional factorial method for the USDA model GLEAMSEnvironmental Modelling & Software, 1999
- Studies on the Mode of Action of Spinosad: Insect Symptoms and Physiological CorrelatesPesticide Biochemistry and Physiology, 1998
- Studies on the Mode of Action of Spinosad: The Internal Effective Concentration and the Concentration Dependence of Neural ExcitationPesticide Biochemistry and Physiology, 1998
- Physical and Biological Properties of the Spinosyns: Novel Macrolide Pest-Control Agents from FermentationPublished by American Chemical Society (ACS) ,1997
- The aerobic soil degradation of spinosad ? a novel natural insect control agentJournal of Environmental Science and Health, Part B, 1996
- Literature review and evaluation of the EPA food‐chain (Kenaga) nomogram, an instrument for estimating pesticide residues on plantsEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1994
- Discovery, Isolation, and Structure Elucidation of a Family of Structurally Unique, Fermentation-Derived Tetracyclic MacrolidesPublished by American Chemical Society (ACS) ,1992
- Asymmetric synthesis of the macrolide (+)-A83543A (lepicidin) aglyconJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1992
- A83543A-D, unique fermentation-derived tetracyclic macrolidesTetrahedron Letters, 1991
- Saccharopolyspora spinosa sp. nov. Isolated from Soil Collected in a Sugar Mill Rum StillInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1990