Impact of controlled neonicotinoid exposure on bumblebees in a realistic field setting
Autor: | Arce, AN, David, TI, Randall, E, Ramos Rodrigues, A, Colgan, TJ, Wurm, Y, Gill, RJ |
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Přispěvatelé: | Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), The Royal Society |
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Biodiversity & Conservation
field setting SEED-TREATED CANOLA Environmental Sciences & Ecology Bombus terrestris audax clothianidin POLLINATORS HONEY-BEES PESTICIDE EXPOSURE BOMBUS-TERRESTRIS foraging ecology colony growth pesticide Science & Technology Ecology 0602 Ecology ecotoxicological guidelines POLLEN neonicotinoid WILD BEES bumblebees 0501 Ecological Applications APIS-MELLIFERA Biodiversity Conservation 0502 Environmental Science And Management Life Sciences & Biomedicine |
Popis: | 1. Pesticide exposure has been implicated as a contributor to insect pollinator declines. In social bees, which are crucial pollination service providers, the effect of low-level chronic exposure is typically non-lethal leading researchers to consider whether exposure induces sub-lethal effects on behaviour and whether such impairment can affect colony development. 2. Studies under laboratory conditions can control levels of pesticide exposure and elucidate causative effects, but are often criticised for being unrealistic. In contrast, field studies can monitor bee responses under a more realistic pesticide exposure landscape; yet typically such findings are limited to correlative results, and can lack true controls or sufficient replication. We attempt to bridge this gap by exposing bumblebees to known amounts of pesticides when colonies are placed in the field. 3. Using 20 bumblebee colonies, we assess the consequences of exposure to the neonicotinoid clothianidin, provided in sucrose at a concentration of five parts per billion, over five weeks. We monitored foraging patterns and pollen collecting performance from 3282 bouts using either a non-invasive photographic assessment, or by extracting the pollen from returning foragers. We also conducted a full colony census at the beginning and end of the experiment. 4. In contrast to studies on other neonicotinoids, showing clear impairment to foraging behaviours, we detected only subtle changes to patterns of foraging activity and pollen foraging during the course of the experiment. However, our colony census measures showed a more pronounced effect of exposure, with fewer adult workers and sexuals in treated colonies after five weeks. 5. Synthesis and applications. Pesticide induced impairments on colony development and foraging could impact on the pollination service that bees provide. Therefore our findings, that bees show subtle changes in foraging behaviour and reductions in colony size after exposure to a common pesticide, has important implications and helps to inform the debate over whether the benefits of systemic pesticide application to flowering crops outweigh the costs. We propose that our methodology is an important advance to previous semi-field methods and should be considered when considering improvements to current ecotoxicological guidelines for pesticide risk assessment. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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