| Literature DB >> 33420177 |
Matthias Schott1,2, Maximilian Sandmann3, James E Cresswell4, Matthias A Becher5, Gerrit Eichner6, Dominique Tobias Brandt7, Rayko Halitschke8, Stephanie Krueger9, Gertrud Morlock9, Rolf-Alexander Düring10, Andreas Vilcinskas1, Marina Doris Meixner3, Ralph Büchler3, Annely Brandt11.
Abstract
Sublethal doses of pesticides affect individual honeybees, but colony-level effects are less well understood and it is unclear how the two levels integrate. We studied the effect of the neonicotinoid pesticide clothianidin at field realistic concentrations on small colonies. We found that exposure to clothianidin affected worker jelly production of individual workers and created a strong dose-dependent increase in mortality of individual larvae, but strikingly the population size of capped brood remained stable. Thus, hives exhibited short-term resilience. Using a demographic matrix model, we found that the basis of resilience in dosed colonies was a substantive increase in brood initiation rate to compensate for increased brood mortality. However, computer simulation of full size colonies revealed that the increase in brood initiation led to severe reductions in colony reproduction (swarming) and long-term survival. This experiment reveals social regulatory mechanisms on colony-level that enable honeybees to partly compensate for effects on individual level.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33420177 PMCID: PMC7794607 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-79660-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379