Abstract

The effects of aerial spraying of an insecticide were investigated in a mountain stream using a drift net. The concentration of fenitrothion (organophosphorus insecticide) in the river water increased to ca. 20 μg liter −1 3 hr after the spraying and decreased exponentially to half the peak value after 2 hr. A large number of aquatic insects were found drifting after the spraying. The total number of individuals which drifted in the daytime after spraying reached nine times the number found the previous night. The total number of species which drifted during the 24 hr following the spray increased to 43 from 17 on the previous day. Before the insecticide spraying, the drifting benthos were almost entirely made up of three species of Baetis (Ephemeroptera). However, many individuals of several species of Heptageniidae (Ephemeroptera), Apsilochorema sutshanum (Trichoptera), and Chironomidae (Diptera) drifted in addition to Baetis after the spray. A large number of young Baetis, which had not been seen in the natural night drift samples, were found drifting due to the insecticide. Natural night drift almost disappeared from the day folowing insecticide spraying. At the second insecticide spraying, conducted 20 days after the first, the number of individuals which drifted during the 24 hr following spraying decreased to only 0.85% of that in the first spraying although changes in insecticide concentration showed a similar pattern. Several species of Ephemeroptera were dominant among the fauna in the studied stream, and the causal relationships of this are discussed.

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