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      End of season

      Posted on October 23, 2008 09:32 by Ben

      I went for a walk last night with the spotlight and was startled by the number of wrigglers in the dam. It's easy to see a few during the day but at night the water is thick with them. The pond is fine. I think the mosquito numbers have been building up and they are now going crazy with the warm weather.

      That means the season has to end for the dam. We live so close to it that we just can't risk having so many mosquitoes over summer. It has been a bit of a stretch sending all of the grey water there with no rain too - I'd been hoping we might have had a crop-saving 25mm or so that might also have filled the dam and given us a chance to use the greywater on the garden. The last decent rain was 2mm in early October and there was very little in September, so if we are going to garden we need to start using that water.

      So I've started pumping the greywater (the dam will still get the occasional overflow) and this morning I've sprayed out the grass in the dam (glyphosate). I'm hoping the dead grass will act as a bit of a mulch until we get some vegies started on what's left of the water - there'll be heaps of water stored in the clay under the dam. There will be plenty of seed left to get the grasses going next year.

      Hopefully the glyphosate won't have too much impact on the frogs. For people who are interested in these things, this is one paper that reports a tests of glyphosate on frogs at various stages:

      Mann and Bidwell(1999)

      The species they tested included Limnodynastes dorsalis, the WA version of the Pobblebonk, (which we have in the dam as an adult).  

      I estimate that I put 50ml of 450g/l glyphosate on - 23g of active ingredient. Most of that was over the dry part of the dam. If 5% ended up in the water, that would be 1.2g. Mann and Bidwell's lowest threshold for tadpoles was 8 mg/l, which I would have exceeded if the 1.2g was dissolved in less than 150l of water. That's probably about as much water as is there, but I doubt that 5% of the total glyphosate applied made it into the water. The threshold for adults and metamorphs is much higher - if there are tadpoles there I hope that's the stage they're at by now.

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      Comments

      April 10. 2009 22:59

      It is the surfactant used with the glyphosate that kills frogs not the chemical itself.

      By law manufactures only have to show the active ingredient on labels- not other ingredients- although surfactant may have killed millions of frogs.

      michael angel au

      May 24. 2009 21:59

      Well the glyphosate we use contains about 10% surfactant, so about 5ml of surfactant across the dam as a whole, and perhaps 0.25ml with the 150l+ of water in the dam.
      I'll have to do a bit of research on the effects of the surfactant - but my guess is that if any surfactant was going to be bad for the frogs, it would be the surfactant in the shampoo and washing powder that goes into the greywater.
      It would be an interesting exercise to figure out how much we add (in those products), compared to what I sprayed on. I think that if anything was going to kill the frogs, it would be the greywater, but they did seem to survive that at least to the point of reproduction. Running out of water altogether was also bad for them!!!

      Ben

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