Abstract

BackgroundSemi-natural plant communities such as field boundaries play an important ecological role in agricultural landscapes, e.g., provision of refuge for plant and other species, food web support or habitat connectivity. To prevent undesired effects of herbicide applications on these communities and their structure, the registration and application are regulated by risk assessment schemes in many industrialized countries. Standardized individual-level greenhouse experiments are conducted on a selection of crop and wild plant species to characterize the effects of herbicide loads potentially reaching off-field areas on non-target plants. Uncertainties regarding the protectiveness of such approaches to risk assessment might be addressed by assessment factors that are often under discussion. As an alternative approach, plant community models can be used to predict potential effects on plant communities of interest based on extrapolation of the individual-level effects measured in the standardized greenhouse experiments. In this study, we analyzed the reliability and adequacy of the plant community model IBC-grass (individual-based plant community model for grasslands) by comparing model predictions with empirically measured effects at the plant community level.ResultsWe showed that the effects predicted by the model IBC-grass were in accordance with the empirical data. Based on the species-specific dose responses (calculated from empirical effects in monocultures measured 4 weeks after application), the model was able to realistically predict short-term herbicide impacts on communities when compared to empirical data.ConclusionThe results presented in this study demonstrate an approach how the current standard greenhouse experiments—measuring herbicide impacts on individual-level—can be coupled with the model IBC-grass to estimate effects on plant community level. In this way, it can be used as a tool in ecological risk assessment.

Highlights

  • Semi-natural plant communities such as field boundaries play an important ecological role in agricultural landscapes, e.g., provision of refuge for plant and other species, food web support or habitat connectivity

  • To characterize the effects of herbicide loads potentially reaching off-field areas on plants, standardized individual-level greenhouse experiments are conducted on a selection of crop and wild plant species [4,5,6,7]

  • In the case of C. cristatus, the predicted and observed biomasses were significantly different; all empirical data are within the range of the model predictions

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Summary

Introduction

Semi-natural plant communities such as field boundaries play an important ecological role in agricultural landscapes, e.g., provision of refuge for plant and other species, food web support or habitat connectivity. Standardized individual-level greenhouse experiments are conducted on a selection of crop and wild plant species to characterize the effects of herbicide loads potentially reaching off-field areas on non-target plants. To characterize the effects of herbicide loads potentially reaching off-field areas on plants, standardized individual-level greenhouse experiments are conducted on a selection of crop and wild plant species [4,5,6,7]. To account for uncertainties associated with extrapolating from testing plant individuals in the greenhouse to plant communities in the field, an assessment factor may be applied. Additional data are needed to reduce uncertainty associated with predicting the potential longterm impacts on non-target terrestrial plant communities from short-term individual-level greenhouse studies

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