| Literature DB >> 33289922 |
Chia-Hua Lin1, Douglas B Sponsler1, Rodney T Richardson1, Harold D Watters2, Donna A Glinski3, W Matthew Henderson4, Jeffrey M Minucci5, E Henry Lee6, S Thomas Purucker5, Reed M Johnson1.
Abstract
Most corn (Zea mays) seeds planted in the United States in recent years are coated with a seed treatment containing neonicotinoid insecticides. Abrasion of the seed coating generates insecticide-laden planter dust that disperses through the landscape during corn planting and has resulted in many "bee-kill" incidents in North America and Europe. We investigated the linkage between corn planting and honey bee colony success in a region dominated by corn agriculture. Over 3 yr we consistently observed an increased presence of corn seed treatment insecticides in bee-collected pollen and elevated worker bee mortality during corn planting. Residues of seed treatment neonicotinoids, clothianidin and thiamethoxam, detected in pollen positively correlated with cornfield area surrounding the apiaries. Elevated worker mortality was also observed in experimental colonies fed field-collected pollen containing known concentrations of corn seed treatment insecticides. We monitored colony growth throughout the subsequent year in 2015 and found that colonies exposed to higher insecticide concentrations exhibited slower population growth during the month of corn planting but demonstrated more rapid growth in the month following, though this difference may be related to forage availability. Exposure to seed treatment neonicotinoids during corn planting has clear short-term detrimental effects on honey bee colonies and may affect the viability of beekeeping operations that are dependent on maximizing colony size in the springtime. Environ Toxicol Chem 2021;40:1212-1221.Entities:
Keywords: Apis mellifera; Clothianidin; Fugitive dust; Glycine max; Pollinators; Seed treatment; Thiamethoxam
Year: 2021 PMID: 33289922 PMCID: PMC8048971 DOI: 10.1002/etc.4957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Toxicol Chem ISSN: 0730-7268 Impact factor: 3.742
Figure 1Seed treatments are applied to seeds as flowable solids that dry to form a coating. In corn, this coating results in visibly patchy coverage of the seed (A). The seed treatment forms particles of varying size on the surface of the seed as captured using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), (B). The striated surface visible in the center of the micrograph is the seed surface. Particles of the seed treatment coating are then emitted as planter dust during the sowing process (C). Macrophotography was performed by M. Spring and SEM preparation by K. Kaszas.
Figure 2Honey bee worker daily mortality index and neonicotinoid (clothianidin and thiamethoxam) concentrations detected in pollen samples collected during planting and nonplanting periods. Whiskers represent 1 standard error around the means.
Figure 3Temporal variation in worker bee mortality and concentrations of clothianidin and thiamethoxam detected in pollen over the sampling periods in 2013 to 2015. The solid lines depict the daily mortality index (ranging 0–1) averaging across sites for each year. Bars depict average neonicotinoid concentrations in pollen sampled on given dates. Gray blocks indicate the corn‐planting periods identified for each year.
Figure 4The number of dead worker bees in closed‐colony assays increased with the concentration of clothianidin in pollen fed to bees.
Figure 5The relative change in the number of frames occupied by bees plotted against neonicotinoid content over the periods of late April to late May (A), late May to late June (B), and late June to mid‐August (C). Significant relationships are represented by blue regression lines and associated R 2 values.