Lack of acute toxicity of an anthraquinone bird repellent to non-target crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) associated with rice-crayfish crop rotations |
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Authors: | Gary C. Barbee Michele M. Santer W. Ray McClain |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Life, Earth and Environmental Sciences, West Texas A&M University, Box 60808, Canyon, TX 79016-0001, USA;2. Arkion Life Sciences, LLC, New Castle, DE 19720, USA;3. Rice Research Station, Louisiana State University Agricultural Center, Rayne, LA 70578, USA |
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Abstract: | Aeroz™ (9,10-anthraquinone (AQ)), a chemical rice seed treatment that effectively deters birds from depredating newly planted fields, could be an important management tool that enables rice producers to plant earlier in the season and increase yields. This bird repellent, while non-lethal to birds, has unknown toxicity to crayfish that often are closely integrated with rice production in southern regions of the USA. This study was conducted to assess if AQ, the active ingredient in Aeroz™, could be acutely toxic to the red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii (Girard), the crayfish species most often associated with rice cultivation, via seed ingestion and/or through their contact with chemical in pond water. Mortality data from a 96 h feeding study indicate that AQ-treated (1.76% by wt) rice seed was not acutely toxic to juvenile (∼3 mo.) crayfish through the ingestion exposure route. In addition, a 96 h aquatic acute toxicity test showed that the LC50 of AQ in juvenile crayfish is >85 μg L−1 and above the water solubility limit of AQ. These results indicate that very minimal, if any, acute toxicity would be observed in juvenile crayfish if exposed to AQ via ingestion or dissolved or suspended in the water column. |
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Keywords: | Crawfish Procambarus clarkii Aeroz&trade AV-1011 Bird repellent Bird depredation LC50 Rice seed treatment Blackbirds Louisiana |
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