4.6 Article

Weighing Risk Factors Associated With Bee Colony Collapse Disorder by Classification and Regression Tree Analysis

期刊

JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY
卷 103, 期 5, 页码 1517-1523

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1603/EC09429

关键词

colony collapse disorder; epidemiology; classification and regression tree analysis; pathogens; Apis mellifera

资金

  1. National Honey Board
  2. USDA-ARS
  3. Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture
  4. Penn State Hatch funds
  5. North Carolina Agriculture Foundation
  6. North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
  7. National Research Initiative of the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service [2007-02281]
  8. University of Liege Belgium

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Colony collapse disorder (CCD), a syndrome whose defining trait is the rapid loss of adult worker honey bees, Apis mellifera L., is thought to be responsible for a minority of the large overwintering losses experienced by U.S. beekeepers since the winter 2006-2007. Using the same data set developed to perform a monofactorial analysis (PloS ONE 4: e6481, 2009), we conducted a classification and regression tree (CART) analysis in an attempt to better understand the relative importance and interrelations among different risk variables in explaining CCD. Fifty-five exploratory variables were used to construct two CART models: one model with and one model without a cost of misclassifying a CCD-diagnosed colony as a non-CCD colony. The resulting model tree that permitted for misclassification had a sensitivity and specificity of 85 and 74%, respectively. Although factors measuring colony stress (e.g., adult bee physiological measures, such as fluctuating asymmetry or mass of head) were important discriminating values, six of the 19 variables having the greatest discriminatory value were pesticide levels in different hive matrices. Notably, coumaphos levels in brood (a miticide commonly used by beekeepers) had the highest discriminatory value and were highest in control (healthy) colonies. Our CART analysis provides evidence that CCD is probably the result of several factors acting in concert, making afflicted colonies more susceptible to disease. This analysis highlights several areas that warrant further attention, including the effect of sublethal pesticide exposure on pathogen prevalence and the role of variability in bee tolerance to pesticides on colony survivorship.

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