Research shows the adverse effects of a drug
commonly administered to livestock, ivermectin, on populations of a key
dung beetle in Mediterranean ecosystems.
FULL STORY
Dung beetles on dung pile.
Credit: Image courtesy of RUVID
Research led by the University of
Alicante's Ibero-American Centre for Biodiversity shows the adverse
effects of a drug commonly administered to livestock, ivermectin, on
populations of a key dung beetle in Mediterranean ecosystems.
A multidisciplinary research team made up of researchers from the
Spanish universities of Alicante, Jaen and Granada, the French
universities of Montpellier and Paul-Valéry Montpellier, CSIC's National
Museum of Natural Sciences and the IUCN Centre for Mediterranean
Cooperation has analysed the impact of ivermectin on Scarabaeus
cicatricosus populations in the Mediterranean. Led by José R. Verdú from
the Ibero-American Centre for Biodiversity (CIBIO) at the Universidad
de Alicante (University of Alicante, UA), this research shows that
arthropods that ingest this substance, even in low doses, become unable
to interact with their surroundings since it affects both their
olfactory and locomotor capacity. This fact may explain the population
decline observed for this dung beetle.
The article "Low doses of Ivermectin cause sensory and musculoskeletal disorders in dung beetles" was published in Scientific Reports in September.
Ivermectin is a very effective anti-parasitic drug that has been used
as a preventative in livestock since its discovery in 1981. Since then
its use has increased exponentially to become a standard drug in the
treatment and prevention of common parasites, including in human beings.
Considered by the World Health Organization as an essential medication,
Verdú points out that, although this drug has proven very effective,
its widespread use comes at a price.
The issue, researchers have found, is that the ivermectin molecule
can survive its journey through the animal and be excreted unchanged.
Also, once on the ground, residues can remain active in animal dung for
at least a month. This means the drug hits the arthropod populations as
hard as it does the parasites it is intended to prevent. It is in this
context that Verdú's team draws attention to the declining beetle
populations, reporting that the ingestion of ivermectin affects even
mature dung beetles, seriously compromising their mobility, orientation
and reproductive capacities.
These findings contradict international veterinary manuals and yet
offer an explanation for thedecline in population levels reported in
other research.
For this study, researchers used electroantennography, olfactometry
and muscle force tests for the first time to obtain measures of the
insects' sensory and muscle power. It was carried out in the Doñana
Natural Park in southern Spain, testing specimens taken from protected,
ivermectin-free sites and land where ivermectin is used. Different rates
of decomposition of dung were observed between the two sites, rates
being some 30 percent lower in the sites where ivermectin was used. This
can be ascribed to the absence of dung beetles as, without them, dung
accumulates in the field unprocessed. With populations of beneficial
dung feeder species declining over the past 20 to 30 years, "the
difference between land with beetles and land without is the difference
between roughly 350 kilograms of dung per hectare per year that is not
being buried in areas affected by ivermectin," the researcher said.
So aside from the lethal and sub-lethal effects of ivermectin on dung
feeders, the use of this drug has a knock-on effect on the quality of
the pasture for livestock, not to mention the irreparable loss of
biodiversity in Mediterranean ecosystems. A further consequence is the
growth of highly nitrophilous plants, which again are no good for
livestock grazing. Researchers also speculate that ivermectin may be
present in the food chain, pointing to the insectivorous birds that feed
on dung beetles.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
RUVID.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- José R. Verdú, Vieyle Cortez, Antonio J. Ortiz, Estela
González-Rodríguez, Juan Martinez-Pinna, Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Jorge M.
Lobo, Catherine Numa, Francisco Sánchez-Piñero. Low doses of ivermectin cause sensory and locomotor disorders in dung beetles. Scientific Reports, 2015; 5: 13912 DOI: 10.1038/srep13912
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