AI Article Synopsis

  • Honey bees are often exposed to pesticides like the fungicide captan and the insecticide thiamethoxam during pollination, and their effects were studied both individually and in combination.
  • Laboratory tests showed that captan significantly increases larvae mortality, while the combination of both pesticides showed some synergistic effects only at high doses.
  • In field tests with whole colonies exposed to low doses, the pesticides had minimal impact on colony health, suggesting bees might compensate for toxicity, but further research is needed to understand long-term effects and implications for other pollinators.

Article Abstract

Honey bees are commonly co-exposed to pesticides during crop pollination, including the fungicide captan and neonicotinoid insecticide thiamethoxam. We assessed the impact of exposure to these two pesticides individually and in combination, at a range of field-realistic doses. In laboratory assays, mortality of larvae treated with captan was 80-90% greater than controls, dose-independent, and similar to mortality from the lowest dose of thiamethoxam. There was evidence of synergism (i.e., a non-additive response) from captan-thiamethoxam co-exposure at the highest dose of thiamethoxam, but not at lower doses. In the field, we exposed whole colonies to the lowest doses used in the laboratory. Exposure to captan and thiamethoxam individually and in combination resulted in minimal impacts on population growth or colony mortality, and there was no evidence of synergism or antagonism. These results suggest captan and thiamethoxam are each acutely toxic to immature honey bees, but whole colonies can potentially compensate for detrimental effects, at least at the low doses used in our field trial, or that methodological differences of the field experiment impacted results (e.g., dilution of treatments with natural pollen). If compensation occurred, further work is needed to assess how it occurred, potentially via increased queen egg laying, and whether short-term compensation leads to long-term costs. Further work is also needed for other crop pollinators that lack the social detoxification capabilities of honey bee colonies and may be less resilient to pesticides.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11231156PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-66248-xDOI Listing

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