Literature DB >> 21373182

Sub-lethal effects of pesticide residues in brood comb on worker honey bee (Apis mellifera) development and longevity.

Judy Y Wu1, Carol M Anelli, Walter S Sheppard.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Numerous surveys reveal high levels of pesticide residue contamination in honey bee comb. We conducted studies to examine possible direct and indirect effects of pesticide exposure from contaminated brood comb on developing worker bees and adult worker lifespan. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: Worker bees were reared in brood comb containing high levels of known pesticide residues (treatment) or in relatively uncontaminated brood comb (control). Delayed development was observed in bees reared in treatment combs containing high levels of pesticides particularly in the early stages (day 4 and 8) of worker bee development. Adult longevity was reduced by 4 days in bees exposed to pesticide residues in contaminated brood comb during development. Pesticide residue migration from comb containing high pesticide residues caused contamination of control comb after multiple brood cycles and provided insight on how quickly residues move through wax. Higher brood mortality and delayed adult emergence occurred after multiple brood cycles in contaminated control combs. In contrast, survivability increased in bees reared in treatment comb after multiple brood cycles when pesticide residues had been reduced in treatment combs due to residue migration into uncontaminated control combs, supporting comb replacement efforts. Chemical analysis after the experiment confirmed the migration of pesticide residues from treatment combs into previously uncontaminated control comb.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This study is the first to demonstrate sub-lethal effects on worker honey bees from pesticide residue exposure from contaminated brood comb. Sub-lethal effects, including delayed larval development and adult emergence or shortened adult longevity, can have indirect effects on the colony such as premature shifts in hive roles and foraging activity. In addition, longer development time for bees may provide a reproductive advantage for parasitic Varroa destructor mites. The impact of delayed development in bees on Varroa mite fecundity should be examined further.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21373182      PMCID: PMC3044129          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014720

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Losses associated with colony collapse disorder (CCD) represent a continuation in sudden and often catastrophic population crashes in honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies that have become commonplace since the mid 1980s, when two species of parasitic mites were discovered in the United States [1]. Over 60 contributing factors of CCD have been identified, including Varroa destructor mites, poor nutrition, exposure to both agrochemicals and beekeeper-applied pesticides, and various other pests and pathogens [2]. Honey bee health decline and colony losses have not been limited to the U.S. Many studies in Europe have examined potential correlations between major recent bee losses and pesticide exposure, particularly, the class of neonicotinoid insecticides [3], [4], [5]. Studies from Spain have focused mainly on the effects of Nosema ceranae, a microsporidian pathogen that targets the honey bee midgut and deprives infected bees of nutrients [6]. There is a lack of agreement about which factors are more important in colony collapse and some researchers have focused on interaction effects of combined factors. For example, pesticide exposure increases honey bee susceptibility to Nosema ceranae spore infection and vice versa [7], [8]. Honey bee colony health can be affected by many factors including hygienic behavior, innate immunity, pesticide sensitivity, nutrition, adult age, and temperature. As social insects, honey bees have evolved various traits, such as grooming or other hygienic behaviors (including removal of mites and dead or diseased brood) that protects the colony against pests and pathogens. Social immunity provides significant protection for honey bee colonies and it has been suggested that this may explain why, compared to non-social insects, honey bees are relatively immunologically deficient (i.e., express fewer immune response proteins) [9]. Honey bees have about half as many detoxifying enzymes as pesticide resistant insects [10]. This deficiency increases the sensitivity of honey bees to pesticide exposure and can further reduce their ability to fight bacterial or viral infections. Pesticide sensitivity and physiological condition may also vary due to bee age and nutritional status, which can affect overall colony health [11]. Older bees (foragers) are more susceptible to pesticide exposure due to foraging activity than younger bees that remain in the hive [12], [13]. Honey bees fed high quality pollen are less susceptible to pesticide exposure than bees fed protein-deficient pollen or pollen substitutes [12]. Migratory commercial beekeepers typically provide pollen substitute to colonies during transport and seasonal dearth to maximize brood production prior to and during pollination services. Adult honey bees are also more susceptible to pesticides when reared at lower temperatures (33°C) [14], a potential added stress factor associated with the commonly employed transportation of honey bee colonies. In this study we examined the sub-lethal effects of developmental exposure to pesticide residues on worker bees. Worker bees were reared in brood comb containing high levels of known pesticide residues or in brood comb relatively free of pesticide residues. We discuss implications of sub-lethal and indirect effects of pesticide residues in brood comb on colony health and structure.

Materials and Methods

Experimental combs

Frames of treatment brood comb originated from migratory Pacific Northwest beekeeping operations that used miticides and from colonies provided by the USDA- ARS honey bee laboratory, Beltsville, MD that were suspected to have died from Colony Collapse Disorder. Pesticide residue analyses were performed on brood comb samples and thirteen frames of brood combs positive for high levels of pesticide residues were cut into treatment blocks (11×11-cm), each containing roughly 450 cells. Control brood combs were newly drawn out from a single colony or sampled from feral colonies that tested negative for pesticide residue contamination.

Experimental design

Standard Langstroth frames, with the center area (22×11-cm) of the frame removed, were used as frame supports for a pair of comb blocks, i.e., one low pesticide residue control comb placed next to a treatment comb block containing high pesticide residue levels (n = 17). Three colonies of similar strength were used from May through August of 2008 and 2009 to host experimental frames supporting paired comb blocks. Placing control and treatment combs within the same colony during larval development equalized possible effects of colony activity and quality of resources fed to brood. Laying sister queens from each colony were caged for 24 hours over experimental frames, allowing access to both control and treatment comb blocks. Queens were released the following day and excluded to the bottom box for the duration of the experiment. Frames containing a patch of 224 eggs on control and treatment blocks were photographed and frames with insufficient number of eggs were removed from the experiment. Egg patches were monitored for larval mortality on days 4, 8,12, and 19 of development, and photographs taken of larvae developing in control and treatment comb were mapped using Microsoft Paint 2007. On day 19, experimental frames containing pupae reared in control and treatment comb were incubated at 33±1°C. Push-in cages were used to isolate treatment and control blocks. Emergence of adult bees was recorded daily and bees were counted, tagged with Testor’s enamel, and placed in a 3.2 mm mesh metal cage (11×9×5-cm). Bees reared in treatment blocks were placed in the same cage with bees reared in corresponding control blocks from the same frame. Worker bees were fed water, 50% sucrose syrup, and pollen supplement ad libitum and mortality was recorded daily. Some experimental frames (n = 9) containing a pair of control and treatment comb blocks were reused up to three times during the experiment. Experimental frame supports containing comb blocks that had not yet been used in the experiment (Rep 1) were introduced to host colonies at the same time as other frames that had gone through multiple brood cycles (Rep 2 & 3) to minimize seasonal foraging and thermal effects on larval survival. A total of twenty-eight replicates were completed in this study between May and August 2008 and 2009.

Chemical analysis

Brood comb samples were sent to Roger Simonds USDA-AMS-National Science Laboratory, Gastonia, NC to be analyzed using QuEChERS method. Pesticide residue extraction and analysis was accomplished using liquid chromatography combined with tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS - Agilent 1100 LC equipped with a Thermo Quantum Discovery Max Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer or equivalent), gas chromatography coupled with mass selective detection in electron impact mode (GC/MS-EI - Agilent 6890 GC equipped with a Agilent 5975 Mass Selective Detector in EI mode or equivalent), and gas chromatography coupled with mass selective detection in negative chemical ionization mode (GC/MS-NCI - Agilent 6890 GC equipped with a Agilent 5975 Mass Selective Detector in NCI mode or equivalent). Pesticide residues extracted from comb samples were quantified using matrix matched calibration standards of known concentrations prepared from neat standard reference material. Measurements were reported in nanograms of active ingredient per gram of wax (ng/g) or parts per billion (ppb). Identification of extracted residues was achieved through mass spectral comparison of ion ratios with standards, 171 of the most commonly used pesticides and their metabolites, of known identity. Limits of detection were in the low parts per billion (ppb).

Measurements

To assess the sub-lethal effects of exposure to pesticide residues, biologically meaningful parameters were measured throughout the main stages of the honey bee life cycle. Egg eclosion, or successful hatching was measured at day 4; larval mortality and development time from egg to pupa were recorded at day 8; pupation was recorded at day 12 and 19; adult emergence rate was recorded on day 20 and continued daily until emergence was no longer observed; and adult longevity was recorded daily until all caged bees were dead. Observations of abnormal larval development and signs of disease or pest infection were also recorded. Taken together, these life cycle parameters enabled assessment of the health effects of exposure to sub-lethal pesticide residues in brood comb.

Statistical analysis

Pairwise comparisons with repeated measures were performed on larval mortality, adult longevity, and adult emergence rate of worker bees reared in relatively uncontaminated brood comb and brood comb containing high levels of pesticide residues. Comparisons of both treatments were made by sample day (4, 8, 12 and 19) and by the number of brood cycles (Rep 1, 2, 3). Differences in pesticide analyses, specifically the number of pesticide residues and the levels detected in control and treatment comb used multiple times, were compared before and after the experiment. Normality assumptions were accepted for bee mortality on day 4, 9, 12, and 19 in both control and treatment combs (Shapiro-Wilk W = 0.844 and 0.929, respectively). Statistical differences were detected by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by paired two-tailed t-tests on control and treatment combs with significance determined at p≤0.025.

Results

Chemical analysis of brood combs

The number of different pesticide residues detected in treatment combs ranged from 4 to 17, averaging 10. The total number of pesticides detected in all treatments was 39 including 7 fungicides, 2 herbicides, 23 insecticides (miticides included) and 7 metabolites (Table 1). The three most frequently detected pesticide residues in treatment combs were the beekeeper applied miticides fluvalinate, coumaphos, and coumaphos oxon metabolite. Fluvalinate, a pyrethroid pesticide, was detected in treatment combs at levels as high as 24,340 ppb and averaged 6,712 ppb. Coumaphos and its oxon metabolite were detected at levels as high as 22,100 ppb and 3,140 ppb, averaging 8,079 ppb and 596 ppb, respectively. Coumaphos was the only residue detected in newly drawn out control combs (21 ppb).
Table 1

Pesticide residues detected in treatment combs (n = 13) used to rear worker bees in experiments.

Active ingredientChemical FamilyPurpose of useToxicity honey beeAverage (ng/g)% detectedminmaxLOD
2,4 Dimethylphenyl formamide (DMPF)metabolite145151421474
3-hydroxycarbofuranmetabolite238*234
AldicarbCarbamateINSECTHigh208*204
AzoxystrobinStrobilurinFUNG19385292
BoscalidCarboxamideFUNG351535644
Carbendazim (MBC)metabolite21314485
CarbofuranCarbamateINSECTHigh328*325
ChlorothalonilChloronitrileFUNG17624661
ChlorpyrifosOgranophosphateINSECTHigh8623151
ClothianidinNeonicotinoidINSECTHigh358*3520
CoumaphosOgranophosphateINSECTMod8079100281221001
Coumaphos oxonmetabolite5961001031401
CyfluthrinPyrethroidINSECTLow43178792
CypermethrinPyrethroidINSECTHigh28*22
CyprodinilAnilinopyrimidineFUNG2731136116
DiazinonOgranophosphateINSECTHigh115121
DicofolOrganochlorineINSECTLow623481
DinotefuranNeonicotinoidINSECTHigh978*9730
DiphenylamineAmineINSECT15123202811
Endosulfan IOrganochlorineINSECTMod254141
Endosulfan IIOrganochlorineINSECTMod238151
Endosulfan sulfatemetabolite131121
EsfenvaleratePyrethroidINSECTHigh5461121
FenhexamidHydroxyanilideFUNG468*466
FenpropathrinPyrethroidINSECTHigh78*71
FluvalinatePyrethroidINSECTHigh6712100164243401
ImidaclopridNeonicotinoidINSECTHigh458*4520
IprodioneDicarboximdeFUNG2838*28320
Malathion oxonmetabolite228*224
NorflurazonFluorinated pyridazinoneHERB58*56
OxamylCarbamateINSECTHigh228*225
OxyfluorfenDiphenyl etherHERB223121
Permethrin totalPyrethroidINSECTHigh1038*10310
PhosaloneOgranophosphateINSECTMod328*3210
PyrethrinsPyrethroidINSECTHigh2298*22950
ThiaclopridNeonicotinoidINSECTLow1138*1138
ThiamethoxamNeonicotinoidINSECTHigh388*3820
THPImetabolite9615939950
VinclozolinDicarboximdeFUNG18*11

Toxicity category for honey bee: High; LD50 ≤2 µg/bee = highly toxic; Mod; LD50 2–11 µg/bee = moderately toxic; minimum and maximum ranges of pesticides detected, LOD; limit of detection.

Toxicity category for honey bee: High; LD50 ≤2 µg/bee = highly toxic; Mod; LD50 2–11 µg/bee = moderately toxic; minimum and maximum ranges of pesticides detected, LOD; limit of detection.

Brood effects

There was no statistical difference in total larval mortality between bees reared in control and treatment combs (26 and 33%, respectively; p = 0.059) (Fig. 1). Delayed development at day 4 and 8 was observed in bees reared from four different combs with high levels of pesticide residues originating from colonies suspected to have CCD (Fig. 2A–C).
Figure 1

Percent larval mortality for bees reared in control and treatment comb at each sample date and overall total.

Significance denoted with different letters.

Figure 2

Larval development of worker bees from day 1 (egg stage) through day 19 (late pupal stage).

(A) Normal larval development of bees reared in relatively uncontaminated control brood comb. (B) Larval development of bees reared in brood comb containing 17 different pesticides, expressing delayed development at day 4 and day 8. (C) Worker brood reared in brood comb containing 17 different pesticides at day 8 of development. Left: delayed growth. Right: normal development.

Percent larval mortality for bees reared in control and treatment comb at each sample date and overall total.

Significance denoted with different letters.

Larval development of worker bees from day 1 (egg stage) through day 19 (late pupal stage).

(A) Normal larval development of bees reared in relatively uncontaminated control brood comb. (B) Larval development of bees reared in brood comb containing 17 different pesticides, expressing delayed development at day 4 and day 8. (C) Worker brood reared in brood comb containing 17 different pesticides at day 8 of development. Left: delayed growth. Right: normal development. Brood mortality in bees reared from control comb was significantly greater on day 4 of development than on days 8, 12, and 19 (p = 0.0243; p = 0.0005; p<0.0001, respectively). In contrast, brood mortality in bees reared in treatment combs was not significantly different between days 4 and 8, although mortality was significantly higher on days 4 and 8 than on days 12 and 19 (p≤0.017 and p = 0.0001, respectively). The repeated use of experimental frames over several replicates may have allowed the migration of pesticide residues from treatment to control blocks, reducing the difference in residue levels between treatment and control combs and treatment effect differences (Table 2). Mortality was significantly higher in control bees reared from frames that were used in the experiment more than once and had experienced multiple brood cycles (Fig. 3). Total larval mortality increased with the repeated use of experimental frames in control combs from 13% through the first brood cycle (Rep 1) to 28% and 39% through the second (Rep 2) and third (Rep 3) brood cycles, respectively (Fig. 3). Brood mortality in bees reared through the third brood cycle in control comb was significantly higher than in the first and second brood cycles (p = 0.023; p = 0.048, respectively). In treatment comb blocks containing high levels of pesticide residues, overall mean larval mortality increased from 17% to 37% then decreased to 22% for the first, second, and third brood cycles, respectively (Fig. 3). Brood mortality in treatment combs was significant only between the first and second brood cycles (p = 0.013).
Table 2

Total amount of pesticide residues detected in five pairs of control and treatment combs before & after experiments.

Frame 1Frame 2Frame 3Frame 4Frame 5
ControlTreatmentControlTreatmentControlTreatmentControlTreatmentControlTreatment
ChemicalClassbefore After before after before after before after before after before after before after before after before after before after
BoscalidCarboxamideF35
ChlorothalonilChloronitrileF466 2
CyprodinilAnilinopyrimidineF61 72 58
FenhexamidHydroxyanilideF46
IprodioneDicarboximideF 432 283 1030 463
MyclobutanilDithiocarbamateF 31
THPIPhthalimideF9399
OxyfluorfenDiphenyl etherH12
DiphenylamineAmineI281
AldicarbCarbamateI20
CarbofuranCarbamateI32
OxamylCarbamateI22
ClothianidinNeonicotinoidI35
DinotefuranNeonicotinoidI97
ImidaclopridNeonicotinoidI45
ThiaclopridNeonicotinoidI113
ThiamethoxamNeonicotinoidI38
Endosulfan 1OrganochlorineI112
Endosulfan IIOrganochlorineI2
Endosulfan sulfateOrganochlorineI 3
ChlorpyrifosOrganophosphateI8 9 59 13
CoumaphosOrganophosphateI 703 22100 9920 21 4550 281 859 451 3140 1580 21 2830 8200 14300 21 669 7230 7090
PhosaloneOrganophosphateI32
CyfluthrinPyrethroidI79
EsfenvaleratePyrethroidI12 6
FluvalinatePyrethroidI 43 164 159 1400 11280 2330 998 24340 14500 1420 9850 7130 2250 6800 3980
Permethrin totalPyrethroidI103
PyrethrinsPyrethroidI229
ParadichlorobenzeneHalogenated organicI 104 104 310 54 109 188 62 184 174
2,4 Dimethylphenyl formamide (DMPF)Amidinem147 39 142
3-hydroxycarbofuranCarbamatem23
ChlorferoneOrganophosphatem 944 511 602 255 2160 785
Coumaphos oxonOrganophosphatem 99 1850 617 276 10 101 64 3140 112 335 474 438 92 231 246
Malathion oxonOrganophosphatem22
Total # compounds 0 5 17 5 1 5 7 3 0 4 9 9 1 6 7 7 1 4 10 9

Results reported in ng/g or parts per billion. (F = fungicide; H =  herbicide; I = insecticide; m = metabolite).

Figure 3

Percent mortality in larvae reared in control and treatment comb over multiple replications (Rep 1, 2, and 3; n = 28).

Significance denoted with different letters.

Percent mortality in larvae reared in control and treatment comb over multiple replications (Rep 1, 2, and 3; n = 28).

Significance denoted with different letters. Results reported in ng/g or parts per billion. (F = fungicide; H =  herbicide; I = insecticide; m = metabolite).

Chemical analysis of comb

Comparisons of chemical analyses, performed on five paired control and treatment combs before and after the experiment (n = 10), confirmed pesticide residue transfer and contamination of control combs over a 3-month period. Four additional new pesticide residues were detected in control comb, on average, compared to a reduction of 3 pesticide residues in treatment combs after the experiment (Fig. 4). The quantity or concentration of active ingredients also increased in control combs and decreased in treatment combs after the experiment, further supporting the transfer of pesticide residue from areas of comb contaminated with high levels of pesticide residues to uncontaminated areas with low levels of residues. Insecticides, including the 3 most frequently detected compounds (coumaphos, coumaphos oxon, and fluvalinate) initially in treatment combs, increased in concentration in control combs and decreased in treatment combs after the experiment. Concentrations for coumaphos oxon, fluvalinate and combined insecticides were significantly higher in control comb after the experiment than before (p<0.025; p<0.01; p<0.025; respectively). High levels of metabolites were also detected in control combs after the experiment suggesting possible metabolism of active compounds as a result of pesticide residue migration. Fluvalinate residue levels were significantly lower in treatment combs after the experiment than before (p<0.025). The majority of new compounds found in control combs after the experiments were compounds previously detected in treatment combs at higher levels before the experiment than after (Table 2). Fungicides were the only pesticide group that was detected at higher concentrations in treatment combs after the experiment than before the experiment, an increase that was not statistically significant (averaging 280 ppb). These results illustrate that pesticide residues quickly diffuse through wax or across comb surface in an active honey bee colony.
Figure 4

Average difference in quantity (ppb) of pesticide residues detected between pre- and post-experimental analyses for control and treatment brood combs after 2 or 3 replicates.

Adult emergence and longevity

Worker bees reared in relatively uncontaminated brood comb lived an average of 4 days longer than bees reared in comb containing high levels of pesticide residues (Fig. 5, p = 0.005). Emergence time was also affected by contamination of control comb after multiple brood cycles, resulting in a shift in the proportion of worker bees that emerged on days 20, 21 and 22 (Fig. 6A–C). During the first brood cycle (Rep 1), a significantly higher proportion of bees emerged from control combs on days 20 and 21 of development compared to emergence on day 22. Of worker brood reared in control combs, 42% and 53% emerged as adults on days 20 and 21, respectively, while only 5% emerged on day 22 (p<0.0007). In contrast, by the third brood cycle (Rep 3) adult emergence from control comb on day 22 was much higher (18%) than emergence on day 22 during the first brood cycle (Rep 1) (5%). In addition, only 2% of worker brood reared in control comb on the third replicate emerged as adults on day 20 compared to 42% of brood that emerged on day 20 during the first brood cycle. The majority (80%) of brood from replicate 3 emerged on day 21 of development (Fig. 6A–C). These data suggest a shift in the occurrence of adult emergence from day 20–21 to 21–22 and delayed emergence for developing worker bees as a result of pesticide residue exposure to contaminated brood comb.
Figure 5

Adult emergence and longevity of bees reared in control and treatment brood comb over first brood cycle.

(A) Percent emergence and survivorship of caged control and treatment bees over 50 days. (B) Average adult longevity of caged control and treatment bees. Adult bees reared in control combs lived an average of 4 days longer than adult bees reared in combs containing high levels of pesticides (p = 0.005).

Figure 6

Adult emergence of bees reared in control and treatment brood comb over multiple replications.

(A) First brood cycle emergence (Rep 1). (B) Second brood cycle emergence (Rep 2). (C) Third brood cycle emergence (Rep 3). Different capital letters denote significant differences in emergence of control bees on different days; different lower case letters denote significant differences in emergence of treatment bees on different days.

Adult emergence and longevity of bees reared in control and treatment brood comb over first brood cycle.

(A) Percent emergence and survivorship of caged control and treatment bees over 50 days. (B) Average adult longevity of caged control and treatment bees. Adult bees reared in control combs lived an average of 4 days longer than adult bees reared in combs containing high levels of pesticides (p = 0.005).

Adult emergence of bees reared in control and treatment brood comb over multiple replications.

(A) First brood cycle emergence (Rep 1). (B) Second brood cycle emergence (Rep 2). (C) Third brood cycle emergence (Rep 3). Different capital letters denote significant differences in emergence of control bees on different days; different lower case letters denote significant differences in emergence of treatment bees on different days.

Discussion

Honey bees of all ages and castes are susceptible to effects from pesticide exposure [13]. Older adult bees may be exposed to pesticides during flight and foraging, while younger adults remain in the hive but may be exposed to incoming contaminated pollen and nectar. They may also be exposed to beekeeper-applied pesticides commonly used in-hive to control Varroa destructor mites, serious external parasites that infect honey bee brood. Prior to adult emergence, eggs and developing bees may be exposed to pesticide residues through contaminated comb cell walls or food sources. Queen bees can be exposed to pesticides by contact with contaminated bees, wax, and food. Sub-lethal pesticide exposure through wax can have adverse reproductive consequences such as reduced egg laying, early supercedure, increased queen cell rejection, and reduced ovarian weight in queen bees [15], [16]. In this study, worker bees reared in comb containing high levels of pesticide residues had lower survivorship than bees reared in relatively uncontaminated comb. Comb age may have been a factor as well, given that brood mortality was higher in newly drawn control comb than in older control comb sampled from feral colonies. Newly drawn comb lacks exuviae (molted larval cuticles), which contain brood pheromone cues that indicate brood presence to nurse bees and increase larval survivorship [14]. However, while initial larval survivability can be lower in bees reared in new comb, overall colony health in hives using old brood comb is compromised by higher incidences of pests and pathogens [17]. The paired-block setup allowed pests or pathogens from older treatment combs to migrate or transfer (via nurse bees) over to larvae reared in new control comb. While this design was intended to help reduce differences due to pathogen loads, we cannot exclude the possibility that some pathogens, exuviae and brood pheromones embedded in the cell walls of the comb would not have been transferrable. For economic reasons, beekeepers typically reuse wax foundation, but pesticide residues accumulate in wax and may persist for years [18]–[20]. Contamination of reused control brood combs in this experiment illustrated how quickly pesticide residues could penetrate and migrate through or across brood comb wax. The presence of additional pesticide residues in control combs detected after the experiment confirmed pesticide residue transfer and contamination of control combs. Incoming pesticides brought back by foragers from external sources would have been detected in both control and treatment combs, because the experimental frames were housed in the same colony. High levels of pesticide metabolites detected in control combs after the experiment also suggest possible metabolism of active compounds during migration. Metabolites can be more harmful to organisms than parent compounds and can have delayed effects [11], [21]. In the paired comb blocks, detection of increasing mortality for bees reared in control blocks and decreasing mortality for treatment blocks, over time, confirms toxicological consequences from pesticide residue migration.

Brood effects of pesticide exposure

Sub-lethal effects of pesticides on bees, including delayed adult emergence, may seem inconsequential but may provide a reproductive advantage for Varroa mites. A gravid foundress mite can invade a cell occupied by a developing bee larva and lay four eggs in 30 hour intervals. The first egg results in a male, with subsequent eggs developing into multiple daughter mites [22]–[24]. The most injurious effects of Varroa mites occur when the foundress and her multiple offspring feed on the hemolymph of a pupating bee, causing reductions in emergence weight and metabolic reserves and physical deformities in host bees [25], [26]. Normally, the third daughter mite only has a 13% chance of reaching maturity before the pupating bee emerges from the cell after 20 to 21 days of development [27]. However, with delayed adult bee emergence the likelihood that the third daughter mite will successfully reach maturity and mate increases. In this study, delayed development occurred in bees reared in treatment comb containing 17 different pesticides, including 9 systemic compounds and 5 neonicotinoid insecticides (Table 3). As the queen in these experiments laid eggs in both control and treatment comb within a 24 hour period, the normal growth pattern was expected to be uniform. However, by day 4, 23% of eggs were unhatched in the treatment comb and by day 8, over 46% of remaining larvae reared in the contaminated treatment comb were small and their development visually stunted or delayed (Figs. 6A–C). Another three treatment combs, sampled from colonies suspected to have colony collapse disorder (CCD), had similar patterns of egg hatch and development. An average of 19% of eggs laid in comb sampled from CCD colonies containing high levels of pesticides remained unhatched on day 4, and 60%–90% of unhatched eggs were removed by bees before the next sampling date. Inefficiencies in brood production place energetic stresses on honey bee colonies. Nurse bees must remove unhatched eggs rather than tend to developing brood, and high brood mortality increases the demand for egg-laying by the queen. Egg-laying efficiency is further reduced when queen bees are unable to deposit eggs in a general area but, instead, must seek empty cells scattered throughout the brood nest [28].
Table 3

Pesticide residues contained in treatment brood comb with observed delayed development of worker honey bees.

PesticidesChemical familySystemicToxicity honey bee(ng/g) ppbLOD
3-hydroxy-carbofuranmetaboliteSystemic234
AldicarbCarbamateSystemicHigh204
CarbofuranCarbamateSystemicHigh325
ChlorothalonilFungicide---41
ClothianidinNeonicotinoidSystemicHigh3520
CoumaphosOrganophosphateModerate221001
Coumaphos oxonmetabolite18505
CyfluthrinPyrethroidHigh7.92
DinotefuranNeonicotinoidSystemicHigh9730
DiphenylamineAmine---2811
Endosulfan 1OrganochlorineModerate11
FluvalinatePyrethroidHigh1641
ImidaclopridNeonicotinoidSystemicHigh4520
Malathion Oxonmetabolite224
OxamylCarbamateSystemicHigh225
ThiaclopridNeonicotinoidSystemicHigh1138
ThiamethoxamNeonicotinoidSystemicHigh3820

Toxicity category for honey bee: High; LD50 ≤2 µg/bee = highly toxic; Mod; LD50 2–11 µg/bee = moderately toxic; LOD; limit of detection.

Toxicity category for honey bee: High; LD50 ≤2 µg/bee = highly toxic; Mod; LD50 2–11 µg/bee = moderately toxic; LOD; limit of detection.

Adult longevity

Worker bees reared in treatment comb containing high levels of pesticide residues lived an average of 4 days less than bees reared in relatively uncontaminated control combs in cage trials (Fig. 5). To place this in context, the mean lifespan of honey bees after entering the ranks of foragers is less than 8 days [29]. Reduced adult longevity within the ranks of foraging bees can lead to precocious foraging by “under-aged” replacement bees. Over the long term, this activity could affect an entire cascade of hive activities including brood care, food processing and storage, queen care, hygienic behavior and foraging efficiency, disrupting age-based polyethism and its role in colony homeostasis. Precocious foraging has been reported to have a major impact on colony size and viability, through reduction of the “younger” nurse bee population from which replacement foragers are derived [30]. In fact, in their model of induced precocious foraging, Thompson and co-workers [30] found that to simulate the “sublethal” effect caused by the reduction in nurse bee capabilities (the mean number of larvae that can be reared per nurse bee), the mortality rate of foragers would have to be increased by 500%.

Conclusion

Combined effects from honey bee exposure to pesticide residue in brood comb, such as reduced adult longevity, increased brood mortality, higher fecundity of Varroa mites (due to delayed development and emergence of adult bees) and increased susceptibility to pathogens, may contribute to reduced honey bee colony health, as affected queens and worker bees are unable to meet the demand for brood production and resources needed to sustain large colony populations. Honey bees are biological indicators, picking up chemicals and other pollutants from their environment both external and internal to their hives. Our findings suggest that one of the underlying commonalities in the worldwide reports of a decline in honey bee health and observations of Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) may be exposure of honey bees and bee products to pesticides. Developmental exposure of honey bees to pesticide contaminated brood comb may appear subtle and indirect, but can lead to sub-lethal effects that actually have serious consequences.
  15 in total

1.  Influence of pollen feeding and physiological condition on pesticide sensitivity of the honey bee Apis mellifera carnica.

Authors:  O Wahl; K Ulm
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2004-09-13       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Comparative toxicity of chlorpyrifos, diazinon, malathion and their oxon derivatives to larval Rana boylii.

Authors:  D W Sparling; G Fellers
Journal:  Environ Pollut       Date:  2007-01-09       Impact factor: 8.071

3.  Discrepancy between acute and chronic toxicity induced by imidacloprid and its metabolites in Apis mellifera.

Authors:  S Suchail; D Guez; L P Belzunces
Journal:  Environ Toxicol Chem       Date:  2001-11       Impact factor: 3.742

4.  Effects of fluvalinate and coumaphos on queen honey bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in two commercial queen rearing operations.

Authors:  Timothy Haarmann; Marla Spivak; Daniel Weaver; Binford Weaver; Tom Glenn
Journal:  J Econ Entomol       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 2.381

5.  High levels of miticides and agrochemicals in North American apiaries: implications for honey bee health.

Authors:  Christopher A Mullin; Maryann Frazier; James L Frazier; Sara Ashcraft; Roger Simonds; Dennis Vanengelsdorp; Jeffery S Pettis
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-03-19       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Honeybee colony collapse due to Nosema ceranae in professional apiaries.

Authors:  Mariano Higes; Raquel Martín-Hernández; Encarna Garrido-Bailón; Amelia V González-Porto; Pilar García-Palencia; Aranzazu Meana; María J Del Nozal; R Mayo; José L Bernal
Journal:  Environ Microbiol Rep       Date:  2009-02-16       Impact factor: 3.541

7.  A deficit of detoxification enzymes: pesticide sensitivity and environmental response in the honeybee.

Authors:  C Claudianos; H Ranson; R M Johnson; S Biswas; M A Schuler; M R Berenbaum; R Feyereisen; J G Oakeshott
Journal:  Insect Mol Biol       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 3.585

8.  Interactions between Nosema microspores and a neonicotinoid weaken honeybees (Apis mellifera).

Authors:  Cédric Alaux; Jean-Luc Brunet; Claudia Dussaubat; Fanny Mondet; Sylvie Tchamitchan; Marianne Cousin; Julien Brillard; Aurelie Baldy; Luc P Belzunces; Yves Le Conte
Journal:  Environ Microbiol       Date:  2009-12-27       Impact factor: 5.491

9.  Colony collapse disorder: a descriptive study.

Authors:  Dennis Vanengelsdorp; Jay D Evans; Claude Saegerman; Chris Mullin; Eric Haubruge; Bach Kim Nguyen; Maryann Frazier; Jim Frazier; Diana Cox-Foster; Yanping Chen; Robyn Underwood; David R Tarpy; Jeffery S Pettis
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-08-03       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Insights into social insects from the genome of the honeybee Apis mellifera.

Authors: 
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2006-10-26       Impact factor: 49.962

View more
  86 in total

1.  Formetanate toxicity and changes in antioxidant enzyme system of Apis mellifera larvae.

Authors:  Martin Staroň; Rastislav Sabo; Anna Sobeková; Lucia Sabová; Jaroslav Legáth; Ľuboslava Lohajová; Peter Javorský
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2017-04-13       Impact factor: 4.223

2.  Disruption of quercetin metabolism by fungicide affects energy production in honey bees (Apis mellifera).

Authors:  Wenfu Mao; Mary A Schuler; May R Berenbaum
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-02-13       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Effects of tannery wastewater exposure on adult Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Felipe Dos Santos Moysés; Karine Bertoldi; Gisele Lovatel; Sabrina Vaz; Kelly Ferreira; Juliana Junqueira; Pamela Brambilla Bagatini; Marco Antônio Siqueira Rodrigues; Léder Leal Xavier; Ionara Rodrigues Siqueira
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2017-09-25       Impact factor: 4.223

4.  Insecticide exposure during brood or early-adult development reduces brain growth and impairs adult learning in bumblebees.

Authors:  Dylan B Smith; Andres N Arce; Ana Ramos Rodrigues; Philipp H Bischoff; Daisy Burris; Farah Ahmed; Richard J Gill
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2020-03-04       Impact factor: 5.349

5.  Lethality of synthetic and natural acaricides to worker honey bees (Apis mellifera) and their impact on the expression of health and detoxification-related genes.

Authors:  Hanan A Gashout; Paul H Goodwin; Ernesto Guzman-Novoa
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2018-10-15       Impact factor: 4.223

6.  Biochemical and histological biomarkers in the midgut of Apis mellifera from polluted environment at Beheira Governorate, Egypt.

Authors:  Ahmed M Abu El-Saad; Dalia A Kheirallah; Lamia M El-Samad
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2016-11-18       Impact factor: 4.223

7.  Early life stress affects mortality rate more than social behavior, gene expression or oxidative damage in honey bee workers.

Authors:  Olav Rueppell; Babak Yousefi; Juan Collazo; Daniel Smith
Journal:  Exp Gerontol       Date:  2017-01-22       Impact factor: 4.032

8.  Acetylcholinesterase in honey bees (Apis mellifera) exposed to neonicotinoids, atrazine and glyphosate: laboratory and field experiments.

Authors:  Monique Boily; Benoit Sarrasin; Christian Deblois; Philippe Aras; Madeleine Chagnon
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2013-02-27       Impact factor: 4.223

9.  Exposure to multiple cholinergic pesticides impairs olfactory learning and memory in honeybees.

Authors:  Sally M Williamson; Geraldine A Wright
Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  2013-02-07       Impact factor: 3.312

10.  Neonicotinoid clothianidin adversely affects insect immunity and promotes replication of a viral pathogen in honey bees.

Authors:  Gennaro Di Prisco; Valeria Cavaliere; Desiderato Annoscia; Paola Varricchio; Emilio Caprio; Francesco Nazzi; Giuseppe Gargiulo; Francesco Pennacchio
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-10-21       Impact factor: 11.205

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.