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Differential sensitivity of honey bees and bumble bees to a dietary insecticide (imidacloprid)
Authors:James E Cresswell  Christopher J Page  Mehmet B Uygun  Marie Holmbergh  Yueru Li  Jonathan G Wheeler  Ian Laycock  Christopher J Pook  Natalie Hempel de Ibarra  Nick Smirnoff  Charles R Tyler
Institution:1. Environment and Plant Protection Institute, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101, China;2. Bee Industry Technology Research Center, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101,China;3. Environment and Plant Protection College, Hainan University, Haikou 570228, China;1. College of Bee Sciences, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou 350002, Fujian, China;2. Department of Biotechnology, Maejo University Phrae Campus, Rong Kwang, Phrae 54140, Thailand;3. Institute of Apiculture Research, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
Abstract:Currently, there is concern about declining bee populations and the sustainability of pollination services. One potential threat to bees is the unintended impact of systemic insecticides, which are ingested by bees in the nectar and pollen from flowers of treated crops. To establish whether imidacloprid, a systemic neonicotinoid and insect neurotoxin, harms individual bees when ingested at environmentally realistic levels, we exposed adult worker bumble bees, Bombus terrestris L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae), and honey bees, Apis mellifera L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae), to dietary imidacloprid in feeder syrup at dosages between 0.08 and 125 μg l?1. Honey bees showed no response to dietary imidacloprid on any variable that we measured (feeding, locomotion and longevity). In contrast, bumble bees progressively developed over time a dose-dependent reduction in feeding rate with declines of 10–30% in the environmentally relevant range of up to 10 μg l?1, but neither their locomotory activity nor longevity varied with diet. To explain their differential sensitivity, we speculate that honey bees are better pre-adapted than bumble bees to feed on nectars containing synthetic alkaloids, such as imidacloprid, by virtue of their ancestral adaptation to tropical nectars in which natural alkaloids are prevalent. We emphasise that our study does not suggest that honey bee colonies are invulnerable to dietary imidacloprid under field conditions, but our findings do raise new concern about the impact of agricultural neonicotinoids on wild bumble bee populations.
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