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Sub-lethal effects of neonicotinoid pesticides on aquatic wildlife

In recent years, neonicotinoid use has been linked to collapses of honey bee colonies; however, relatively little is known about their impacts on vertebrate wildlife. Amphibians in particular are excellent vertebrate bioindicator organisms because they are sensitive to environmental stressors and their dual aquatic/terrestrial life cycle may leave them more vulnerable to neonicotinoid exposure. Our preliminary work suggests wood frogs (Lithobates sylvaticus) are sensitive to environmentally relevant concentrations of neonicotinoids. Our proposed project builds on our previous studies and is two-fold: 1) to examine the direct effects of neonicotinoids on frogs using laboratory and mesocosm exposures and, 2) to determine the concentrations of neonicotinoids in the environment using sensitive time-integrating samplers (POCIS) and assess the effects of neonicotinoids on amphipods exposed in situ.

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Metadata Record Information

File Identifier
da20c6ac-c572-4016-a728-0ec22b125a93 XML
Date Stamp
2022-01-05T20:30:17
Metadata language

eng; CAN

Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy Level
Dataset
Author
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Environment and Climate Change Canada ( Public inquiries centre)

Fontaine Building 12th floor, 200 Sacré-Coeur Blvd, Gatineau, Quebec, K1A 0H3,
1-800-668-6767

http://ec.gc.ca
 

Data identification

Title

Sub-lethal effects of neonicotinoid pesticides on aquatic wildlife

Date (Publication)
2016-09-15
Date (Creation)
2016-09-15
Status
On going
Metadata language

eng; CAN

Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Biota
  • Environment
  • Farming
  • Health
Maintenance and Update Frequency
As needed
Spatial representation type
Vector
Author
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Stacey A Robinson ( Research Scientist)

1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, K1S5B6, Canada
613-990-9749

613-998-0458

Custodian
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Pamela Martin ( Section Chief)

867 Lakeshore Road, Burlington, Ontario, L7S1A1, Canada
905-336-4879

Keywords

Theme
  • frogs, neonicotinoids, atrazine, passive samplers

Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

  • Amphibians

  • Pesticides

ECCC Information Category EN

  • Nature and Biodiversity - Contaminants

Geography

  • Ontario (ON)

Business Functions

  • Assess Toxicity, Manage and Monitor for Environmental Presence of Hazardous Substances and Waste

  • Assess Toxicity of Substance

external.theme.EC_Branch

  • Science and Technology Branch

external.theme.EC_Directorate

  • Wildlife and Landscape Science

external.theme.GC_Security_Level

  • Unclassified

 
Use Limitation

Open Government Licence - Canada ( http://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada)

Access Constraints
Copyright
Use Constraints
Copyright
Begin Date
2016-09-15

Extent

N
S
E
W
thumbnail




 
 

Ref. system Reference Systems

Reference system identifier
EPSG / EPSG: 4326 /
 

Distribution

Distribution Formats

Distribution format
  • XLS ( Unknown)

 
Distributor
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Environment and Climate Change Canada ( Public inquiries centre)

Fontaine Building 12th floor, 200 Sacré-Coeur Blvd, Gatineau, Quebec, K1A 0H3,
1-800-668-6767

http://ec.gc.ca
 
 

Overviews

N
S
E
W
thumbnail




Keywords

frogs, neonicotinoids, atrazine, passive samplers
Business Functions

Assess Toxicity of Substance Assess Toxicity, Manage and Monitor for Environmental Presence of Hazardous Substances and Waste
ECCC Information Category EN

Nature and Biodiversity - Contaminants
Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

Amphibians Pesticides
external.theme.EC_Branch

Science and Technology Branch
external.theme.EC_Directorate

Wildlife and Landscape Science
external.theme.GC_Security_Level

Unclassified


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