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Assessing the effects of MACADAMIA ORCHARD pesticide inputs on recipient aquatic ecosystems

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dc.contributor.advisor Dalu, Tatenda
dc.contributor.advisor Mugwedi Lutendo
dc.contributor.advisor Wasserman, Ryan J.
dc.contributor.author Mutshekwa, Thendo
dc.date 2022
dc.date.accessioned 2023-10-17T10:53:59Z
dc.date.available 2023-10-17T10:53:59Z
dc.date.issued 2023-10-05
dc.identifier.citation Mutshekwa, T. (2022). Assessing the effects of MACADAMIA ORCHARD pesticide inputs on recipient aquatic ecosystems. University of Venda, Thohoyandou, South Africa.<http://hdl.handle.net/11602/2560>.
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11602/2560
dc.description PhDENV en_ZA
dc.description Department of Geography and Environmental Sciences
dc.description.abstract Aquatic environments, while not the target of many pesticide applications, often receive chemicals through catchment runoff dynamics. In this regard, the use of pesticides in agricultural systems may have deleterious effects on aquatic ecosystems within the same catchment area. Here using a series of in–situ and ex–situ experiments, the study assessed (a) pesticide concentrations of acetamiprid and chlorpyrifos across MACADAMIA ORCHARD and communal area reservoirs using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS), (b) the behavioural responses of Mozambique tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus, following exposure to three commonly used macadamia pesticides (i.e., Karate Zeon 10 CS, Mulan 20 SP, Pyrinex 250 CS at different concentrations, (c) macadamia Macadamia integrifolia leaf litter decomposition and mosquito colonisation following pesticide exposure, and (d) macroinvertebrate colonisation associated with introduced stone substrates in cages within the MACADAMIA ORCHARD and control reservoirs to explore whether macadamia pesticides affected on macroinvertebrate colonisation dynamics. Firstly, analysis of acetamiprid and chlorpyrifos associated with sediments in MACADAMIA ORCHARD reservoirs revealed mean pesticide concentrations of 14.48 μg L–1 and 5.67 μg L–1, respectively, whereas, in communal area reservoirs outside of agricultural catchments, both pesticides were not detected. Acetamiprid was not detected across reservoir water, whereas the mean pesticide concentration of chlorpyrifos of 6.51 μg L–1 (MACADAMIA ORCHARD) and 0.13 μg L–1 (communal area) were detected. Secondly, O. mossambicus demonstrated different onset behavioural responses, i.e., swimming erratically, surfacing, vertical positioning, loss of equilibrium, being motionless and mortality with high mortality at increased mortality. Thirdly, macadamia leaf litter tended to decompose faster when exposed to pesticide treatments, whereas chlorophyll–a were reduced. Furthermore, pesticide treatments seemed to promote mosquito (i.e., Culex spp.) and pupal abundances. Finally, a total of 644 macroinvertebrate individuals were recorded across macadamia and communal reservoirs, mostly dominated by Chironominae (55.1 %), Ostracoda (14.4 %), Trithemis sp. (5.2 %), Anax sp. (5.2 %) and Radix natalensis (5.0 %). The results indicate that MACADAMIA ORCHARD reservoirs are highly contaminated by acetamiprid and chlorpyrifos and that these contaminants have implications for the ecological functioning of aquatic ecosystems. Reduction of species diversity adjusted community structure and altered energy flow and nutrient recycling were all demonstrated. The results of the study collectively show how common pesticides used in the macadamia plantation may be exert pressure on adjacent freshwater ecosystems. Future studies should examine effects on trophic interactions, pesticide accumulation in faunal groups and allochthonous trophic transfer dynamics to terrestrial environments. Such information would be useful for managers tasked with mitigation plans for the region. en_ZA
dc.description.sponsorship National Research Foundation (NRF) en_ZA
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvi, 127 leaves) : color illustrations, color maps
dc.language.iso en en_ZA
dc.rights University of Venda
dc.subject Pesticides en_ZA
dc.subject Reservoirs en_ZA
dc.subject LC-MS/MS en_ZA
dc.subject Behaviour traits en_ZA
dc.subject Environmental stressor en_ZA
dc.subject Freshwater Fishes en_ZA
dc.subject Neonicotinoids en_ZA
dc.subject Organophosphate en_ZA
dc.subject Pyrethroid en_ZA
dc.subject Mosquito larvae en_ZA
dc.subject Allochthorious inputs en_ZA
dc.subject Macadamia Stone substrates en_ZA
dc.subject Macadamia orchards en_ZA
dc.subject Pesticides macroinvertebrate community en_ZA
dc.subject Macroinvertebrate diversity metrics en_ZA
dc.subject.ddc 632.7
dc.subject.lcsh Agricultural pests
dc.subject.lcsh Orchards -- Disease and pests
dc.subject.lcsh Pesticides
dc.subject.lcsh Pesticides -- Environmental aspects
dc.subject.lcsh Macadamia nut
dc.subject.lcsh Macadamia nut -- Disease and pests
dc.subject.lcsh Aquatic pests
dc.subject.lcsh Pests
dc.title Assessing the effects of MACADAMIA ORCHARD pesticide inputs on recipient aquatic ecosystems en_ZA
dc.type Thesis en_ZA


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