Abstract
Mass mortalities of honey bees occurred in France in the 1990s coincident with the introduction of two agricultural insecticides, imidacloprid and fipronil. Imidacloprid, a neonicotinoid, was widely blamed, but the differential potency of imidacloprid and fipronil has been unclear because of uncertainty over their capacity to bioaccumulate during sustained exposure to trace dietary residues and, thereby, cause time-reinforced toxicity (TRT). We experimentally quantified the toxicity of fipronil and imidacloprid to honey bees and incorporated the observed mortality rates into a demographic simulation of a honey bee colony in an environmentally realistic scenario. Additionally, we evaluated two bioassays from new international guidance for agrochemical regulation, which aim to detect TRT. Finally, we used analytical chemistry (GC-MS) to test for bioaccumulation of fipronil. We found in demographic simulations that only fipronil produced mass mortality in honey bees. In the bioassays, only fipronil caused TRT. GC-MS analysis revealed that virtually all of the fipronil ingested by a honey bee in a single meal was present 6 d later, which suggests that bioaccumulation is the basis of TRT in sustained dietary exposures. We therefore postulate that fipronil, not imidacloprid, caused the mass mortalities of honey bees in France during the 1990s because it is lethal to honey bees in even trace doses due to its capacity to bioaccumulate and generate TRT. Our results provide evidence that recently proposed laboratory bioassays can discriminate harmful bioaccumulative substances and, thereby, address evident shortcomings in a regulatory system that had formerly approved fipronil for agricultural use.
Funder
RCUK | Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Reference48 articles.
1. Expert explanations of honeybee losses in areas of extensive agriculture in France: Gaucho
®
compared with other supposed causal factors
2. Recherches sur les mortalités d’abeilles et prévention des risques liés aux insecticides [Research on bee mortalities and insecticide risk prevention];Aubert;Bull Epidemiol,2006
3. Neonicotinoids: insecticides acting on insect nicotinic acetylcholine receptors
4. Gaba Receptor Insecticide Non-Competitive Antagonists May Bind at Allosteric Modulator Sites
5. Nauen R Jeschke P (2011) Basic and applied aspects of neonicotinoid insecticides. Green Trends in Insect Control, eds Lopez O Fernandez-Bolanos JG (R Soc Chem, Cambridge, UK), pp 132–162.
Cited by
66 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献