4.7 Review

Bees and pesticides: the research impact and scientometrics relations

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 25, Pages 32282-32298

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-14224-7

Keywords

Pollination; Environmental; Honey bee; Toxicity; Insecticide; CiteSpace

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)
  2. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq)
  3. Universidade Tecnologica Federal do Parana (UTFPR)

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The study found a significant increase in research on pesticides and bees in the past 15 years in influential scientific journals, with the USA and France having the highest number of publications. Furthermore, research on the negative effects of pesticide contamination on bees is common, but most studies focus on bees of the Apis genus.
Bees are fundamental insects in agroecosystems, mainly due to pollination. However, its decline has been observed in recent years, and the contamination by pesticides is suspected to be responsible. This relationship is the objective of our research, which is the first scientometric study on this subject. The data were obtained from the Web of Science database (1231) and were analyzed using Microsoft Office Excel and CiteSpace. The results point to a significant increase in pesticide and bee reseach in the last 15 years in the most influential scientific journals. The USA and France have the largest number of publications and a moderade relationship between this trait and GDP (gross domestic product) was observed (r = 0.80; r(2) = 0.60). There is no correlation between the use of pesticides and studies of the effects on pollinators and the use of pesticides and the countries' GDP. In general, studies have shown the negative effects of the contamination by pesticides on bees; however, most publications are with bees of the Apis genus, and therefore it is necessary to explore the action of pesticides on bumble bees and wild bees, as well furthur as studies are needed regarding the sublethal effects of these products on bees as the number of molecules used in the management of agricultural crops is vast.

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