Warning! Unfortunately your browser has disabled scripting. Please enable it in order to display this page.
 

Neonicinoids, Are Honeybees The Only Pollinators Affected? | Greyhound Chromatography

ARE HONEYBEES THE ONLY POLLINATORS AFFECTED BY NEONICOTINOIDS?

 Bee on flowers

Throughout the world, both entomologists and farmers have been alarmed by honeybee colony collapse. For years, it was not clear whether the culprit was a parasite, cell phone frequencies, genetically modified crops, pesticides or a combination of all these. At least several studies have indicated that neonicotinoids are harmful to honeybees, a finding that the European Food Safety Authority has taken to heart.

However, it is important to remember that honeybees are not the only insect pollinators that can be used in agriculture. Therefore, it is possible that any environmental impact assessment pertaining to the family of neonicotinoids needs to expand to include their effects on other insects. For example, a team of scientists from the University of Guelph and Imperial College London discovered that these pesticides can also negatively affect bumblebees, as published in the journal Functional Ecology.

What are neonicotinoids?

According to Texas A&M University, neonicotinoids are a class of pesticides that act similarly to nicotine and damage the nerve synapses of insects. Vertebrates are not affected by neonicotinoids. When these pesticides first became popular, they were praised for their water solubility, which allowed for plant uptake after soil application, thereby reducing the amount of pesticide freely floating away from the target site.

There are at least seven neonicotinoid-containing products that are available on the market, according to Texas A&M:

 

At first, farmers believed that neonicotinoids were not harmful to honeybees, but subsequent studies dispute that idea. For two years, starting December 2013, the EFSA implemented a law restricting the use of clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiametoxam. Specifically, use of these pesticides was limited to seed treatment, soil granules and foliar treatment for plants that attract bees. Additional uses are only allowed for professionals, greenhouse plants or outdoor plants that already flowered.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency took these policies to heart, but did not adopt them because the EFSA did not account for risk management.

'Bumblebees may be much more sensitive'

To investigate the impact of neonicotinoids on bumblebees, the study authors from the University of Guelph and Imperial College London treated 40 colonies of honeybees with imidacloprid, pyrethroid, a combination of the two or neither. Meanwhile, the researchers fitted the bumblebees with radio frequency identification tags, which were used to track the insects' foraging habits. The experiment lasted four weeks.

By the end of the study period, the researchers observed that the bumblebees treated with pesticides were very slow in learning foraging skills, compared to the colonies that were not exposed to neonicotinoids. The scientists even observed that colonies with slow foragers had to send out more bumblebees to compensate.

"Bumblebees may be much more sensitive to pesticide impacts as their colonies contain a few hundred workers at most, compared to tens of thousands in a honeybee colony," study co-author Nigel Raine said in a statement.

These results may be cause for concern, considering that neonicotinoids account for 30 percent of the global pesticide market. Raine and his colleagues suggested that regulations on neonicotinoids be tightened and include both bumblebees and solitary bees, in addition to honeybees.

 

Article Courtesy of:

Susan Massie  Sales & Marketing Director

Greyhound Chromatography and Allied Chemicals

CONTACT US   

Tel:        +44 (0) 151 649 4000   

Web:     www.greyhoundchrom.com   

Email:   marketing@greyhoundchrom.com   

FOLLOW US   

Facebook Icon Twitter Icon Instagram Icon LinkedIn Icon    

YOU MAY ALSO BE INTERESTED IN OUR NEWSLETTER   

SIGN UP HERE   

Greyhound Monthly Newsletter   

CATALOGUE DOWNLOADS   

Greyhound Q-Fil catalogue  Greyhound reference standards guide   Trajan GC Supplies catalogue 

 Greyhound Chromatography Q-Range Vials Catalogue Image     Chem Service Catalogue Image  Chem Service Pesticides Catalogue Image

Wellington Laboratories Catalogue Image            PFAS EBook  PFAS Environmental EBook

                Wellington Perfluoroalkyl Compounds

Dandy Vice Brochure  Chem Service Catalogue