Abstract

Neomysis mercedis were exposed to the rice herbicides molinate and thiobencarb, which have been detected in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Continuous-flow acute and chronic toxicity studies were performed. For thiobencarb, the 4-, 7- and 14-day LC sos were 304, 214 and 91 μg/liter, respectively. For molinate, these values were 9910, 2530, and 820 μg/liter, respectively. Mortality stabilized after 18 and 28 days exposure, respectively, for thiobencarb and molinate. The incipient lethal concentrations were 53 and 230 μg/liter, respectively. Joint toxicity studies indicated additive toxicity for the two chemicals. Chronic no observable effects concentrations (NOECs) were estimated at 3·2 and 25·6 μg/liter for thiobencarb and molinate, with measurable effects occurring at 6·2 and 45·2 μg/liter, respectively. Environmental monitoring data suggests that concentrations of these chemicals in the Delta prior to 1985 may have exceeded the threshold for chronic toxicity, under conditions of joint exposure. However, due to continued improvements in pesticide management practices, environmental concentrations decreased to approximately 30 percent of the chronic threshold for joint toxicity by 1988. Baseline data on growth and reproduction relevant to toxicity tests are also presented for this species.

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