Skip to content

Code and data repository for Van Meter, R.J.; Glinski, D.; Henderson, Purucker, S. T., 2016. Soil organic matter content effects on pesticide bioconcentration in American toads (Anaxyrus americanus) Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 35(11):2734-2741.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

amphibian-exeff/vanmeter_soilom_etc2016

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

30 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

vanmeter_soilom_etc2016

Code and date repository for Van Meter, R.J.; Glinski, D.; Henderson, Purucker, S. T., 2016. Soil organic matter content effects on pesticide bioconcentration in American toads (Anaxyrus americanus) Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 35(11):2734-2741. https://doi.org/10.1002/etc.3439

DOI

Abstract: Pesticides have been implicated as a major factor in global amphibian declines and may pose great risk to terrestrial phase amphibians moving to and from breeding ponds on agricultural landscapes. Dermal uptake from soil is known to occur in amphibians, but predicting pesticide availability and bioconcentration across soil types is not well understood. The present study was designed to compare uptake of 5 current-use pesticides (imidacloprid, atrazine, triadimefon, fipronil, and pendimethalin) in American toads (Bufo americanus) from exposure on soils with significant organic matter content differences (14.1% = high organic matter and 3.1% = low organic matter). We placed toads on high- or low-organic matter soil after applying individual current-use pesticides on the soil surface for an 8-h exposure duration. Whole body tissue homogenates and soils were extracted and analyzed using liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry to determine pesticide tissue and soil concentration, as well as bioconcentration factor in toads. Tissue concentrations were greater on the low-organic matter soil than the high-organic matter soil across all pesticides (average ± standard error; 1.23 ± 0.35 ppm and 0.78 ± 0.23 ppm, respectively), and bioconcentration was significantly higher for toads on the low-organic matter soil (analysis of covariance p = 0.002). Soil organic matter is known to play a significant role in the mobility of pesticides and bioavailability to living organisms. Agricultural soils typically have relatively lower organic matter content and serve as a functional habitat for amphibians. The potential for pesticide accumulation in amphibians moving throughout agricultural landscapes may be greater and should be considered in conservation and policy efforts.

About

Code and data repository for Van Meter, R.J.; Glinski, D.; Henderson, Purucker, S. T., 2016. Soil organic matter content effects on pesticide bioconcentration in American toads (Anaxyrus americanus) Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 35(11):2734-2741.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages