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Tuesday, 18 September 2018

An alternative to controversial pesticides still harms bumblebees

alternative to controversial pesticides still harms bumblebees
Exposure to a sulfoximine-based pesticide has substantial adverse effects on bumblebee colonies. This finding suggests that concerns over the risks of exposing bees to insecticides should not be limited to neonicotinoids.


Agricultural intensification has increased our reliance on pesticides, including insecticides. Although insecticides are useful for controlling crop damage caused by insect pests, they can also affect beneficial insects, potentially impairing their ability to control pests and pollinate crops1 — qualities on which farmers rely. Indeed, increases in insecticide use are one of several major factors implicated in the worldwide declines of insect pollinators2. A commonly used class of insecticide called neonicotinoids has hit the headlines because of its impacts on bees. In a paper in Nature, Siviter et al.3 report that a potential neonicotinoid replacement, the sulfoximine-based insecticide sulfoxaflor, also harms these crucial pollinators.

Insect pollinators that forage on neonicotinoid-treated plants can be exposed to small amounts of insecticide each time they or their larvae feed on pollen and nectar4,5. Although such chronic neonicotinoid exposure typically does not kill bees, it can have sublethal effects — impairing a range of behaviours such as learning and foraging4–8, affecting nesting success, colony development and reproduction7–12, and reducing pollination levels13. Because of this, substantial restrictions on neonicotinoid use have been introduced in some regions of the world, particularly Europe. Such restrictions might seem to be good news for bee health — but only if the insecticides that replace neonicotinoids are less harmful to insect pollinators.

Similar to neonicotinoids, sulfoximine-based insecticides are absorbed and systemically distributed throughout the plant. Sulfoxamines are one candidate to replace neonicotinoids14, and have already been widely approved for use. Siviter and colleagues set out to assess the sublethal effects of sulfoxaflor on the agriculturally important pollinator Bombus terrestris. This bumblebee is common in the wild, and is also reared commercially for crop pollination. Although it is convenient to use commercially reared colonies for experiments, the authors chose to use wild colonies — a decision that should be lauded because it enhances the ecological realism of their study.

Siviter et al. collected 332 wild queen bumblebees, assessed them for parasites and used 249 uninfected individuals to start colonies in the laboratory. The authors succeeded in rearing colonies from 52 queens, providing a robust sample size for their experiment. They then randomly allocated pairs of size-matched bee colonies to either control or insecticide-exposure groups. The colonies fed at will for two weeks on either sugar water alone or sugar water containing five parts per billion of sulfoxaflor (a concentration found in the nectar of crops sprayed with sulfoxaflor), before being moved outdoors, so that the researchers could monitor bee behaviour and colony development under field conditions.

The team found that sulfoxaflor exposure had substantial and consistent effects on the rate of colony growth, which became apparent after just two to three weeks in the field. Sulfoxaflor-exposed colonies produced fewer female workers than did control colonies. They also produced 54% fewer reproductive offspring. This substantial difference was predominantly driven by a decrease in the total number of males produced, but also reflects the fact that all of the 36 new queens produced came from just 3 of the control colonies. Such strong variation in queen production among control colonies is not unexpected, but the lack of queen production by any of the insecticide-exposed colonies is concerning, because queens are needed to start new colonies in the following year.

These impairments in colony growth and reproduction are similar to those observed in comparable neonicotinoid-exposure studies8–10,12,15,16. This similarity might be expected, given that both insecticide classes affect insects by binding to the same neurotransmitter receptors14. But whereas the effects on bumblebee colonies exposed to neonicotinoids seem to be driven by impaired pollen foraging7,8 (leading to limited nutrition for larvae), the authors found no evidence that sulfoxaflor exposure caused significant differences in foraging performance. Perhaps early-stage colony growth and subsequent reproductive output were affected by sulfoxaflor toxicity to developing larvae, or by some other indirect mechanism — either way, the timing of declines in colony growth rate suggests that chronic sublethal stress at an early stage resulted in substantially reduced colony reproduction15.

Correctly determining the effects of insecticides relies on accurate assessments of exposure, which varies depending on whether chemicals are applied by spray, soil drench or seed treatment (Fig. 1). For example, spray applications can lead to relatively high levels of exposure for a few days, whereas seed treatments can result in low-level, chronic exposure through residues in nectar and pollen4,5. The authors based exposure to sulfoxaflor in their experiment on a scenario in which bees ingest nectar from crop flowers following a spray application — currently, the most common mode of application for this insecticide class.

However, this scenario discounts any exposure from contact with plant tissues or dietary exposure from crop pollen, and assumes that bees forage only on sulfoxaflor-treated crops — all factors that could affect exposure levels. Moreover, exposure profiles would probably differ if sulfoxaflor were applied as a soil drench or seed treatment (an increasingly likely outcome following recent and probable future neonicotinoid regulation). Exposure could also be affected if sulfoxaflor, applied as a seed treatment or soil drench, moves outside crop fields and is absorbed by wild plants and contaminates their nectar and pollen, as reported for neonicotinoid seed treatments17,18. More data on sulfoxaflor concentrations in the nectar and pollen of bee-attractive crops are needed for an accurate assessment of the implications of sulfoxaflor use.

Nonetheless, Siviter et al. provide a valuable first step towards understanding the effects of sulfoxaflor exposure on bees. Future discussions must be broader than two-way comparisons of neonicotinoids and sulfoximines, because other classes of systemic insecticide (such as butenolides and anthranilic diamides) are also in agricultural use. It is vital to ascertain which of these insecticide classes represents the lowest potential risk to pollinators. A major part of the answer depends on how comparative risk assessments are undertaken, including which of the 20,000 living bee species are considered, because there is substantial variation in physiology, behaviour and ecology between these species. Such differences — particularly the extent to which species are social — might affect the bees’ sensitivity to insecticides10,12,19. For instance, low-level insecticide exposure might have more impact on solitary bees than on highly social colonies that have an abundance of workers.

Finally, commercially reared pollinators (particularly honeybees) feature prominently in global agriculture, but cannot provide all of the crop-pollination services needed20. Wild pollinators, including bumblebees and solitary bees, have a crucial, undervalued role that is likely to become increasingly important as our crop-pollination demands rise1,20. Our understanding of the risks to pollinators, and the choices we make about pest control, must evolve to reflect and balance these realities. There are no risk-free choices, but with more information such as that provided by Siviter and colleagues, we can make the most appropriate decisions about how to produce the food we need without inflicting irreparable damage on the global environment and the essential ecosystem services (such as pollination) on which we depend.



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