2 research outputs found
Pan-european assessment, monitoring, and mitigation of stressors on the health of bees
Within the PoshBee Project we have tested three bee species – honey bees Apis mellifera, bumble
bees Bombus terrestris and solitary bees Osmia bicornis – for their sensitivity to pesticides and
analysed the clearance of pesticides from bees. For each species, all castes and sexes were studied.
We synthesised the mortality data (LD50 or results of limit tests) with the toxicokinetic patterns and
analysed this against the background of inter- and intraspecific variation in life-histories of the tested
bees.
The clearance of sulfoxaflor is relatively similar across all bee species tested and in females after
contact treatment it tends to be retained. The toxicity increases over time independently of the
clearance from the body. The clearance of azoxystrobin was rapid in Osmia and bumble bees, as well
as in honey bee queens, but in honey bee workers there was very little clearance. Similar to sulfoxaflor
the toxicity increased over time, although the residues were detected at very low levels. Glyphosate
tended to be retained in bumble bees after contact treatment but cleared rapidly after oral treatment.
For Osmia bees only in males after contact treatment was the glyphosate almost lost.
The toxicity of a pesticide is dependent on the exact dosage, but also the exposure route and time, as
well as the speed of detoxification and clearance from a body. The assessment for the hazard that a
less toxic pesticide might pose, can be largely dependent on the exposure route. The effects of
pesticide toxicity can increase even after the molecules have been cleared out of the body.Prepared under contract from the European Commission; Grant agreement No. 773921; EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation action.Prepared under contract from the European Commission; Grant agreement No. 773921; EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation action
Pan-european assessment, monitoring, and mitigation of stressors on the health of bees
Inter-individual differences in pesticide sensitivity may trigger variability in the risk posed by
pesticides. Therefore, to better inform pesticide risk assessment for bees, we studied the variability
of responses to several pesticides based on endogenous (developmental stage, genetic background,
caste) and exogenous factors (pesticide co-exposure). We mainly investigated the toxicity of the
insecticide sulfoxaflor, the fungicide azoxystrobin and the herbicide glyphosate. We first used LD50
tests to determine the acute oral and contact toxicity of these pesticides across the different bee
species, developmental stages (larva vs adult in honey bees), castes (honey bee and bumble bee
workers, queens and drones), and genetic backgrounds (honey bee subspecies). We then considered
the risks posed by chronic and sublethal exposures to pesticides by implementing behavioural and
reproductive endpoints in the screening of pesticide toxicity.
Data showed that azoxystrobin and glyphosate under the test conditions were mildly toxic to bees.
However, a large variability in bee sensitivity to sulfoxaflor was found, especially across species and
individuals of different castes or sex. This variability is therefore important to consider for increasing
the safety margin of the risk posed by insecticides in bees. Several effects induced by sublethal
concentrations or doses of pesticides are also described, such as the occurrence of a Non-Monotonic
Dose-Response (NMDR) and delayed effects in honey bees, impairment of reproductive performances
in bumble bees, and a decreased longevity of Osmia adult females (although no effects were found
on larval development). Finally, an interaction between pesticides was found when exposure was by
contact, but not under oral exposure. In conclusion, the range of effects described here provides very
useful insights for better understanding the toxicity of pesticides and therefore the risks they might
pose to bees.Prepared under contract from the European Commission; Grant agreement No. 773921; EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation action.Prepared under contract from the European Commission; Grant agreement No. 773921; EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation action