Abstract

Agricultural pesticide use and its associated environmental harms is widespread throughout much of the world. Efforts to mitigate this harm have largely been focused on reducing pesticide contamination of the water and air, as runoff and pesticide drift are the most significant sources of offsite pesticide movement. Yet pesticide contamination of the soil can also result in environmental harm. Pesticides are often applied directly to soil as drenches and granules and increasingly in the form of seed coatings, making it important to understand how pesticides impact soil ecosystems. Soils contain an abundance of biologically diverse organisms that perform many important functions such as nutrient cycling, soil structure maintenance, carbon transformation, and the regulation of pests and diseases. Many terrestrial invertebrates have declined in recent decades. Habitat loss and agrichemical pollution due to agricultural intensification have been identified as major driving factors. Here, we review nearly 400 studies on the effects of pesticides on non-target invertebrates that have egg, larval, or immature development in the soil. This review encompasses 275 unique species, taxa or combined taxa of soil organisms and 284 different pesticide active ingredients or unique mixtures of active ingredients. We identified and extracted relevant data in relation to the following endpoints: mortality, abundance, biomass, behavior, reproduction, biochemical biomarkers, growth, richness and diversity, and structural changes. This resulted in an analysis of over 2,800 separate “tested parameters,” measured as a change in a specific endpoint following exposure of a specific organism to a specific pesticide. We found that 70.5% of tested parameters showed negative effects, whereas 1.4% and 28.1% of tested parameters showed positive or no significant effects from pesticide exposure, respectively. In addition, we discuss general effect trends among pesticide classes, taxa, and endpoints, as well as data gaps. Our review indicates that pesticides of all types pose a clear hazard to soil invertebrates. Negative effects are evident in both lab and field studies, across all studied pesticide classes, and in a wide variety of soil organisms and endpoints. The prevalence of negative effects in our results underscores the need for soil organisms to be represented in any risk analysis of a pesticide that has the potential to contaminate soil, and for any significant risk to be mitigated in a way that will specifically reduce harm to soil organisms and to the many important ecosystem services they provide.

Highlights

  • Soils are arguably the most complex and biodiverse ecosystems on earth, containing nearly a quarter of the planet’s diversity (Ram, 2019)

  • Considering the key ecosystem services performed by soil invertebrates and the increase in the use of seed- and soil-applied pesticides, one of our objectives is to understand the overall hazard that pesticides pose to soil invertebrates to inform whether they should be included in regulatory ecotoxicological risk assessment to ensure that environmental harm is adequately estimated

  • The impact of pesticide mixtures depended on the type; of the 49 mixtures, those consisting of insecticides negatively affected tested parameters 83.7% of the time compared to 61.5, 38.6, and 49.5% caused by herbicide mixtures, fungicide mixtures, and cross pesticide mixtures, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Soils are arguably the most complex and biodiverse ecosystems on earth, containing nearly a quarter of the planet’s diversity (Ram, 2019). Soil invertebrates form up to half of all soil aggregates by breaking down litter and releasing organically rich casts and feces (Stork and Eggleton, 1992). The formation of these large soil aggregates allows for greater soil carbon sequestration, these ecosystem engineers play a role in offsetting fossil fuel emissions and combating climate change (Lal, 2004a,b; Lavelle et al, 2006; Dirzo et al, 2014)

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