Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment

The causes of bee declines remain hotly debated, particularly the contribution of neonicotinoid insecticides. In 2013 the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency made public a study of the impacts of exposure of bumblebee colonies to neonicotinoids. The study concluded that there was no clear re...

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Main Author: Dave Goulson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2015-03-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/854.pdf
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spelling doaj-c6cec953c84b4c8f8e6772ddf0eaf4842020-11-25T00:18:29ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592015-03-013e85410.7717/peerj.854854Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experimentDave Goulson0School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Falmer, East Sussex, UKThe causes of bee declines remain hotly debated, particularly the contribution of neonicotinoid insecticides. In 2013 the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency made public a study of the impacts of exposure of bumblebee colonies to neonicotinoids. The study concluded that there was no clear relationship between colony performance and pesticide exposure, and the study was subsequently cited by the UK government in a policy paper in support of their vote against a proposed moratorium on some uses of neonicotinoids. Here I present a simple re-analysis of this data set. It demonstrates that these data in fact do show a negative relationship between both colony growth and queen production and the levels of neonicotinoids in the food stores collected by the bees. Indeed, this is the first study describing substantial negative impacts of neonicotinoids on colony performance of any bee species with free-flying bees in a field realistic situation where pesticide exposure is provided only as part of normal farming practices. It strongly suggests that wild bumblebee colonies in farmland can be expected to be adversely affected by exposure to neonicotinoids.https://peerj.com/articles/854.pdfEcotoxicologyInsecticideBombusColony growthQueen productionPesticide
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dave Goulson
spellingShingle Dave Goulson
Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment
PeerJ
Ecotoxicology
Insecticide
Bombus
Colony growth
Queen production
Pesticide
author_facet Dave Goulson
author_sort Dave Goulson
title Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment
title_short Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment
title_full Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment
title_fullStr Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment
title_full_unstemmed Neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency 2012 experiment
title_sort neonicotinoids impact bumblebee colony fitness in the field; a reanalysis of the uk’s food & environment research agency 2012 experiment
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2015-03-01
description The causes of bee declines remain hotly debated, particularly the contribution of neonicotinoid insecticides. In 2013 the UK’s Food & Environment Research Agency made public a study of the impacts of exposure of bumblebee colonies to neonicotinoids. The study concluded that there was no clear relationship between colony performance and pesticide exposure, and the study was subsequently cited by the UK government in a policy paper in support of their vote against a proposed moratorium on some uses of neonicotinoids. Here I present a simple re-analysis of this data set. It demonstrates that these data in fact do show a negative relationship between both colony growth and queen production and the levels of neonicotinoids in the food stores collected by the bees. Indeed, this is the first study describing substantial negative impacts of neonicotinoids on colony performance of any bee species with free-flying bees in a field realistic situation where pesticide exposure is provided only as part of normal farming practices. It strongly suggests that wild bumblebee colonies in farmland can be expected to be adversely affected by exposure to neonicotinoids.
topic Ecotoxicology
Insecticide
Bombus
Colony growth
Queen production
Pesticide
url https://peerj.com/articles/854.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT davegoulson neonicotinoidsimpactbumblebeecolonyfitnessinthefieldareanalysisoftheuksfoodenvironmentresearchagency2012experiment
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