Abstract

Earthworms are important organisms in soil communities and so are used as model organisms in environmental risk assessments of chemicals. However current risk assessments of soil invertebrates are based on short-term laboratory studies, of limited ecological relevance, supplemented if necessary by site-specific field trials, which sometimes are challenging to apply across the whole agricultural landscape. Here, we investigate whether population responses to environmental stressors and pesticide exposure can be accurately predicted by combining energy budget and agent-based models (ABMs), based on knowledge of how individuals respond to their local circumstances. A simple energy budget model was implemented within each earthworm Eisenia fetida in the ABM, based on a priori parameter estimates. From broadly accepted physiological principles, simple algorithms specify how energy acquisition and expenditure drive life cycle processes. Each individual allocates energy between maintenance, growth and/or reproduction under varying conditions of food density, soil temperature and soil moisture. When simulating published experiments, good model fits were obtained to experimental data on individual growth, reproduction and starvation. Using the energy budget model as a platform we developed methods to identify which of the physiological parameters in the energy budget model (rates of ingestion, maintenance, growth or reproduction) are primarily affected by pesticide applications, producing four hypotheses about how toxicity acts. We tested these hypotheses by comparing model outputs with published toxicity data on the effects of copper oxychloride and chlorpyrifos on E. fetida. Both growth and reproduction were directly affected in experiments in which sufficient food was provided, whilst maintenance was targeted under food limitation. Although we only incorporate toxic effects at the individual level we show how ABMs can readily extrapolate to larger scales by providing good model fits to field population data. The ability of the presented model to fit the available field and laboratory data for E. fetida demonstrates the promise of the agent-based approach in ecology, by showing how biological knowledge can be used to make ecological inferences. Further work is required to extend the approach to populations of more ecologically relevant species studied at the field scale. Such a model could help extrapolate from laboratory to field conditions and from one set of field conditions to another or from species to species.

Highlights

  • Earthworms are significant contributors to the ecosystem services provided by arable soils (Daily et al, 1997; Keith and Robinson, 2012; Blouin et al, 2013) and they respond rapidly to alterations in soil quality (Fraser et al, 1996), tillage (Chan, 2001) and exposure to chemical toxicants (Vorphal et al, 2009)

  • These results show the importance of temperature for earthworm population dynamics

  • Key aspects of earthworm population ecology have been realistically simulated using the simple energy budget-driven agent-based models (ABMs) developed and evaluated in this paper

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Summary

Introduction

Earthworms are significant contributors to the ecosystem services provided by arable soils (Daily et al, 1997; Keith and Robinson, 2012; Blouin et al, 2013) and they respond rapidly to alterations in soil quality (Fraser et al, 1996), tillage (Chan, 2001) and exposure to chemical toxicants (Vorphal et al, 2009). They are focal organisms for environmental risk assessments of agricultural chemicals in Europe (OECD, 1984). This approach has the potential to act as a refinement option for chemical risk assessments if it can accurately predict population-level responses to the agricultural uses of plant protection products (PPPs) under a range of different conditions (Thorbek et al, 2010)

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