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Relative chronic sensitivity of neonicotinoid insecticides to Ceriodaphnia dubia and Daphnia magna.

Neonicotinoid insecticides are a group of plant protectants frequently detected in surface waters at low concentrations. Aquatic invertebrates therefore have the potential to be exposed chronically to low concentrations of neonicotinoids. The cladocerans Daphnia magna and Ceriodaphnia dubia are among the most commonly used invertebrate test species in aquatic toxicology. Both species are known to be acutely insensitive to neonicotinoids, and while chronic toxicity has been characterized for D. magna, little research has been conducted with C. dubia. In the present study we conducted 7-d static-renewal life cycle tests for 6 neonicotinoids (acetamiprid, clothianidin, dinotefuran, imidacloprid, thiacloprid, and thiamethoxam) with C. dubia, and a 21-d test with imidacloprid with D. magna. 7-d LC50s for C. dubia ranged from 8.42 mg L-1 for imidacloprid to > 100 mg L-1 for clothianidin; 7-d reproduction EC50s were 2.98 for thiacloprid, to > 67 mg L-1 for dinotefuran. D. magna were less sensitive than C. dubia to imidacloprid, by 4-fold for lethality and 1.5-fold for reproduction; however, acute-to-chronic ratios (ACRs) were similar. ACRs, based on 48-h acute LC50s and 7- or 21-d chronic reproduction EC10s, ranged from 5.4 for acetamiprid to 53.0 for imidacloprid (mean 36.6, CV = 51%). Chronic toxicity values for both species were orders of magnitude greater than concentrations reported in the environment, and thus hazard to these cladocerans is negligible.

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