Storm runoff and sewage treatment outflow contaminated with household pesticides

The combined flow of Chicken Ranch and Strong Ranch Sloughs as they enter the Am
The combined flow of Chicken Ranch and Strong Ranch Sloughs as they enter the American River (in background) in Sacramento, Calif. Water in the sloughs at the time of this photo contained 10 times the concentration of pyrethroids necessary to kill the test organism used for monitoring
BERKELEY — Pyrethroids, among the most widely-used home pesticides, are winding up in California rivers at levels toxic to some stream-dwellers, possibly endangering the food supply of fish and other aquatic animals, according to a new study by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, and Southern Illinois University (SIU). The combined flow of Chicken Ranch and Strong Ranch Sloughs as they enter the American River (in background) in Sacramento, Calif. Water in the sloughs at the time of this photo contained 10 times the concentration of pyrethroids necessary to kill the test organism used for monitoring (Donald Weston/UC Berkeley) Pyrethroid insecticides, commonly used in California to kill ants and other insect pests around the home, have been found in street runoff and in the outflow from sewage treatment plants in the Sacramento area. The insecticide ended up in two urban creeks, the San Joaquin River and a 20-mile stretch of the American River, traditionally considered to be one of the cleanest rivers in the region. "These indicator organisms are 'lab rat' species that are very sensitive, but if you find something that is toxic to them, it should be a red flag that there could be potential toxicity to resident organisms in the stream," said study leader Donald P. Weston, UC Berkeley adjunct professor of integrative biology. Weston first began looking at pyrethroid levels in streams bordering farm fields in 2004, and reported levels in some creek sediments high enough to kill the shrimp-like amphipod, an organism used by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as an indicator of the health of freshwater sediment.
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