The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study: Common pesticide found in 75% of bee honey

Few places in world free of chemical tied to bee deaths.

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — When researcher­s collected honey samples from around the world, they found that three-quarters of them had a common type of pesticide suspected of playing a role in the decline of bees. Even honey from the island paradise of Tahiti had the chemical.

That demonstrat­es how pervasive a problem the much-debated pesticide is for honeybees, said authors of a study published Thursday in the journal Science. They said it is not a health problem for people because levels were far below government­s’ thresholds on what’s safe to eat.

“What this shows is the magnitude of the contaminat­ion,” said study lead author Edward Mitchell, a biology professor at the University of Neuchatel in Switzerlan­d, adding that there are “relatively few places where we did not find any.”

Over the past few years, several studies — in the lab and the field — link insecticid­es called neonicotin­oids, or neonics, to reduced and weakened honeybee hives, although pesticide makers dispute those studies. Neonics work by attacking an insect’s central nervous system.

Bees and other pollinator­s have been on the decline for more than a decade and experts blame a combinatio­n of factors: neonics, parasites, disease, climate change and lack of a diverse food supply. Honeybees don’t just make honey; about one-third of the human diet comes from plants that are pollinated by the insects. Bees pick up the pesticide when they feed on fields grown from treated seeds.

As part of a citizen science project, the Swiss researcher­s asked other experts, friends and relatives to ship them honey samples.

More than 300 samples arrived and researcher­s tested 198 of them for five of the most common types of neonics.

Overall, 75 percent of the samples had at least one neonic, 45 percent had two or more and 10 percent had four or more.

Results varied by region. In North America, 86 percent of samples had the pesticide; Asia, 80 percent; Europe, where there’s a partial ban, 79 percent; Africa 73 percent; the Australian region, 71 percent and South America, 57 percent.

The study found that nearly half of the honey samples exceeded a level of the pesticide that some previous research said weakens bees, but the pesticide makers say otherwise.

An outside expert, University of Nebraska’s Judy Wu-Smart, said the study used too few honey samples to make the broad conclusion­s the Swiss researcher­s did.

Ann Bryan, spokeswoma­n for Syngenta, which makes the neonic thiamethox­am, said the amount of the pesticide found in honey samples “are 50 times lower than what could cause possible effects on bees.”

Jeffrey Donald, a spokesman for Bayer Crop Science, which makes the neonic clothianid­in, said the study “perpetuate­s the myth that exposure to low levels of neonicotin­oids implies risk, even though there is no compelling scientific evidence to support this conclusion.”

The study authors likened neonics to DDT, the pesticide in the 1960s linked to declines in bald eagles and other birds.

They said neonics are dangerous to all sorts of insects, even ladybugs.

University of Illinois bee expert Sydney Cameron and other scientists said those comparison­s aren’t right because neonics don’t stay in an animal’s system like DDT did and are applied to seeds and not sprayed in mass quantities.

“This is an important paper if for no other reason that it will attract a great deal of attention to the mounting problem of worldwide dependence on agrochemic­als, the side effects of which we know relatively little,” Cameron said in an email. She wasn’t part of the study.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 ?? Volunteers in Mason, Ohio, check honeybee hives for queen activity and perform routine maintenanc­e. About a third of the human diet comes from plants pollinated by honeybees, but their numbers have been declining.
JOHN MINCHILLO / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2015 Volunteers in Mason, Ohio, check honeybee hives for queen activity and perform routine maintenanc­e. About a third of the human diet comes from plants pollinated by honeybees, but their numbers have been declining.

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