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Herbicide leakage into seawater impacts primary productivity and zooplankton globally

Nature Communications 2024 40 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Liqiang Yang, Xiaotong He, Shaoguo Ru, Yongyu Zhang

Summary

Researchers analyzed herbicide contamination at 661 coastal stations worldwide and found that at 25% of sites, weed-killing chemicals are already suppressing ocean plant (phytoplankton) productivity by more than 5%, while also shifting the types of tiny animals that feed on those plants. As agricultural herbicide use continues to grow, this chemical runoff poses an increasing threat to the stability of coastal marine food chains.

Predicting the magnitude of herbicide impacts on marine primary productivity remains challenging because the extent of worldwide herbicide pollution in coastal waters and the concentration-response relationships of phytoplankton communities to multiple herbicides are unclear. By analyzing the spatiotemporal distribution of herbicides at 661 bay and gulf stations worldwide from 1990 to 2022, we determined median, third quartile and maximum concentrations of 12 triazine herbicides of 0.18 nmol L<sup>-1</sup>, 1.27 nmol L<sup>-1</sup> and 29.50 nmol L<sup>-1</sup> (95%Confidence Interval: CI 1.06, 1.47), respectively. Under current herbicide stress, phytoplankton primary productivity was inhibited by more than 5% at 25% of the sites and by more than 10% at 10% of the sites (95%CI 3.67, 4.34), due to the inhibition of highly abundant sensitive species, community structure/particle size succession (from Bacillariophyta to Dinophyceae and from nano-phytoplankton to micro-phytoplankton), and resulting growth rate reduction. Concurrently, due to food chain cascade effects, the dominant micro-zooplankton population shifted from larger copepod larvae to smaller unicellular ciliates, which might prolong the transmission process in marine food chain and reduce the primary productivity transmission efficiency. As herbicide application rates on farmlands worldwide are correlated with residues in their adjacent seas, a continued future increase in herbicide input may seriously affect the stability of coastal waters.

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