4.7 Article

Social disruption: Sublethal pesticides in pollen lead to Apis mellifera queen events and brood loss

期刊

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2021.112105

关键词

Apis mellifera; Pesticide; Fungicide; Toxicity; Brood; Queen loss

资金

  1. NIFA ELI postdoctoral fellowship from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2015-03505]
  2. NE SARE project [LNE19-392R-3324]

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The study revealed that queens and broods exposed to sublethal doses of pesticides experienced decreased resilience, with impacts including reduced pollen consumption, increased brood loss, and changes in protein acquisition. Additionally, colonies exposed to pesticides showed a higher proportion of pollen foragers and increased queen reproductive loss after fungicide exposure.
Eusocial Apis mellifera colonies depend on queen longevity and brood viability to survive, as the queen is the sole reproductive individual and the maturing brood replenishes the shorter-lived worker bees. Production of many crops rely on both pesticides and bee pollination to improve crop quantity and quality, yet sublethal impacts of this pesticide exposure is often poorly understood. We investigated the resiliency of queens and their brood after one month of sublethal exposure to field relevant doses of pesticides that mimic exposure during commercial pollination contracts. We exposed full size colonies to pollen contaminated with field-relevant doses of the fungicides (chlorothalonil and propicanizole), insecticides (chlorypyrifos and fenpropathrin) or both, noting a significant reduction in pollen consumption in colonies exposed to fungicides compared to control. While we found no difference in the total amount of pollen collected per colony, a higher proportion of pollen to nonpollen foragers was detected in all pesticide exposed colonies. After ceasing treatments, we measured brood development, discovering a significant increase in brood loss and/or cannibalism across all pesticide exposed groups. Sublethal pesticide exposure in general was linked to reduced production of replacement workers and a change in protein acquisition (pollen vs. non-pollen foraging). Fungicide exposure also resulted in increased loss of the reproductive queen.

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