posted on 2019-11-27, 13:07authored byMaj Rundlöf, Ola Lundin
Mass-flowering crops provide forage for bees but also
contain pesticides.
Such pesticide exposure can harm bees, but our understanding of how
this cost is balanced by forage benefits is limited. To provide insights
into benefits and costs, we placed bumblebee colonies in 18 landscapes
with conventional red clover fields treated with the neonicotinoid
thiacloprid (flowers + pesticide), untreated organic red clover fields
(flowers), or landscapes lacking clover fields (controls). Colonies
grew heavier near thiacloprid-treated clover compared to controls
lacking clover, while colonies near untreated clover did not differ
from colonies in neither of the other landscape types. Thiacloprid
treatment effectively controlled pests and increased bumblebee crop
visitation. However, colony production of queens and males did not
differ among landscape types. In conclusion, thiacloprid application
in clover appears to be of low risk for bumblebees. More generally,
neonicotinoids may not be equally harmful when used in flowering crops
and effective low-risk pest control in such crops could potentially
benefit bumblebees and crop pollination.