Mj. Faber et al., IMPACT OF GLUFOSINATE-AMMONIUM AND BIALAPHOS ON THE PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY OF A SMALL EUTROPHIC NORTHERN LAKE, Environmental toxicology and chemistry, 17(7), 1998, pp. 1282-1290
The impact of glufosinate-ammonium and bialaphos on the phytoplankton
community in a shallow eutrophic lake ecosystem was investigated using
in situ enclosures. Flow cytometry was used to size phytoplankton cel
ls and sort them as live or dead, depending upon their chlorophyll a a
utofluorescence intensity. Flow cytometric analyses provided significa
ntly (p < 0.001) higher abundance estimates as compared to conventiona
l microscopic analyses. At the highest treatment levels (10 mg/L), bot
h herbicides caused a significant but transient reduction in live phyt
oplankton cells (days 3-14, which was particularly apparent in the sma
ll (1-2 and 2-3 mu m) classes. Transient impacts on phytoplankton live
cell abundances were mirrored by depression in dissolved oxygen conte
nt in the treated enclosures. At an application rate of 10 mg/L, abund
ance of smaller phytoplankton in the bialaphos-treated enclosures reco
vered more rapidly (14 d) than those in the glufosinate-ammonium-treat
ed enclosures (49 d). For days of maximal impact, estimated median eff
ect concentrations (EC50) for reduction of phytoplankton abundance ran
ged from 2.5 to 3.4 mg/L for glufosinate-ammonium and 3.3 to 8.1 mg/L
for bialaphos. whereas estimates of concentration inducing 20% reducti
ons in abundance (EC20; 0.9-1.2 and 1.6-4 mg/L, respectively) more clo
sely approximated the expected environmental concentration (1 mg/L), a
ssuming direct overspray into water bodies of 15-cm depth.