By attacking queen bumblebee, pesticide threatens colony: study
PARIS: A common pesticide used on crops compromises a queen bumblebee’s ability to lay eggs, threatening her colony with extinction, according to a study released last Monday.
Lab experiments used doses of thiamethoxam – one of the controversial neonicotinoid family – that corresponded to what a queen bee might encounter in the wild.
Exposure to the chemical shifted the timing of colony formation and reduced the number of eggs by more than quarter, the researchers said.
“This showed that the impacts of neonicotinoids on colony founding – by itself – significantly increases the risk of an exposed bumblebee population going extinct,” Mark Brown, a professor at the University of London and coauthor of the study, told AFP.
The chance of colony collapse is at least 28 per cent, he said.
Neonicotinoid pesticides are widely used in agriculture, but recent studies have suggested a strong link with declining bee populations, especially over the last decade. As a result, in 2013 the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) imposed a partial, temporary moratorium on their use, pending the result of a review scheduled for completion later this year.
But scientists are still trying to pinpoint how the insecticide affects bees, which are crucial for the pollination of crops ranging from almonds and apples to peaches and plums.
The new findings, published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, highlight a plausible scenario.
“Previous studies have ignored a key aspect of the bumblebee life-cycle, which is the colony founding stage,” Brown said.
“As successful colony founding is key to the size of bumblebee populations, and bumblebee queens feed on crops and plants that can be contaminated by neonicotinoids, this lifecycle stage could be key in understanding the impacts of neonicotinoids.” Bumblebee queens already face a multiple hurdles in starting a new colony.
If they manage to survive the winter – during which that can shed 80 per cent of their fat reserves – they must still confront parasites, predators, bad weather and a lack of food.
Coping with insecticides may be a threat too many, the researchers said. — AFP