Neonicotinoid pesticides severely affect honey bee queens

Geoffrey R. Williams(University of Bern), Aline Troxler(University of Bern), Gina Retschnig(University of Bern), Kaspar Roth(University of Bern), Orlando Yañez(University of Bern), Dave Shutler(Acadia University), Peter Neumann(University of Bern), Laurent Gauthier(Agroscope)
Scientific Reports
October 13, 2015
Cited by 253Open Access
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Abstract

Queen health is crucial to colony survival of social bees. Recently, queen failure has been proposed to be a major driver of managed honey bee colony losses, yet few data exist concerning effects of environmental stressors on queens. Here we demonstrate for the first time that exposure to field-realistic concentrations of neonicotinoid pesticides during development can severely affect queens of western honey bees (Apis mellifera). In pesticide-exposed queens, reproductive anatomy (ovaries) and physiology (spermathecal-stored sperm quality and quantity), rather than flight behaviour, were compromised and likely corresponded to reduced queen success (alive and producing worker offspring). This study highlights the detriments of neonicotinoids to queens of environmentally and economically important social bees, and further strengthens the need for stringent risk assessments to safeguard biodiversity and ecosystem services that are vulnerable to these substances.


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