AI Article Synopsis

  • Some harmful substances, like pesticides and heavy metals, can be bad for honey bees.
  • This study looked at how a heavy metal called chromium and two chemicals (a pesticide and a fungicide) affect honey bees.
  • The results showed that chromium doesn't seem to make honey bees die more when mixed with the other chemicals, and it may even help a little bit when combined with one of them.

Article Abstract

Several anthropogenic contaminants, including pesticides and heavy metals, can affect honey bee health. The effects of mixtures of heavy metals and pesticides are rarely studied in bees, even though bees are likely to be exposed to these contaminants in both agricultural and urban environments. In this study, the lethal toxicity of Cr alone and in combination with the neonicotinoid insecticide clothianidin and the ergosterol-biosynthesis-inhibiting fungicide propiconazole was assessed in Apis mellifera adults. The LD and lowest benchmark dose of Cr as Cr(NO), revealed a low acute oral toxicity on honey bee foragers (2049 and 379 mg L, respectively) and the Cr retention (i.e. bee ability to retain the heavy metal in the body) was generally low compared to other metals. A modified method based on the binomial proportion test was developed to analyse synergistic and antagonistic interactions between the three tested contaminants. The combination of an ecologically-relevant field concentration of chromium with clothianidin and propiconazole did not increase bee mortality. On the contrary, the presence of Cr in mixture with propiconazole elicited a slight antagonistic effect.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.10.068DOI Listing

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