November 27, 2019

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On balance, some neonicotinoid pesticides could benefit bees: study

A buff-tailed bumblebee collects pollen and nectar from a red clover flower. Credit: American Chemical Society
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A buff-tailed bumblebee collects pollen and nectar from a red clover flower. Credit: American Chemical Society

The story of neonicotinoids is growing more nuanced. Europe has banned outdoor use of three of these insecticides to protect bee populations. Two other neonicotinoids are still permitted, but little is known about their impact on bees. New research reported in ACS' Environmental Science & Technology on one of the permitted neonicotinoids indicates it effectively controls pests and might even help bees.

Neonicotinoids are widely used to defend crops from insects that can destroy them. Some of these crops benefit from pollination, but pesticide treatment can expose bees and other beneficial insects to residues in pollen and nectar. The exposure can kill bees or impair them—for example, by diminishing their foraging abilities—contributing to declines in . This outcome led to the ban of three high-risk insecticides in Europe. Maj Rundlöf and Ola Lundin wanted to know if bees and the flowering crops they use for food would be better off with or without the use of one of the less-harmful neonicotinoids.

In a , the researchers found that applying the neonicotinoid thiacloprid on red clover had no observable negative effects on bumblebees. The thiacloprid treatment effectively controlled pests and increased bumblebee crop visitation. However, if this neonicotinoid weren't available, farmers might replace red clover with other nonflowering crops less sensitive to pest infestations, the researchers reasoned. So the team also examined bee performance in landscapes lacking red clover. They found that bumblebee colonies near thiacloprid-treated red clover fields grew heavier (with more larvae, bees and food stores in them) compared to colonies in landscapes without red clover. According to the researchers, the study indicates that certain neonicotinoid insecticides still permitted in the European Union might benefit bumblebees by presenting a low risk to the bees while protecting flowering crops as an important food source.

The researchers also say that neonicotinoid insecticides should not be considered as a homogeneous group when conducting risk assessments.

More information: "Can Costs of Pesticide Exposure for Bumblebees Be Balanced by Benefits from a Mass-Flowering Crop?" Environmental Science & Technology (2019). pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.9b02789

Journal information: Environmental Science & Technology

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