Agrochemicals interact synergistically to increase bee mortality
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Electronic versions
Links
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03787-7
Final published version
Licence: Unspecified
Other documents
- Agrochemicals interact synergistically to increase bee mortality
1.17 MB, PDF document
Global concern over widely documented declines in pollinators
has led to the identification of anthropogenic stressors that, individually, are detrimental to bee populations. Synergistic interactions between these stressors could substantially amplify the environmental effect of these stressors and could therefore have important implications for policy decisions that aim to improve the health of pollinators. Here, to quantitatively assess the scale of this threat, we conducted a
meta-analysis of 356 interaction effect sizes from 90 studies in which bees were
exposed to combinations of agrochemicals, nutritional stressors and/or parasites.
We found an overall synergistic effect between multiple stressors on bee mortality.
Subgroup analysis of bee mortality revealed strong evidence for synergy when bees were exposed to multiple agrochemicals at field-realistic levels, but interactions were not greater than additive expectations when bees were exposed to parasites and/or nutritional stressors. All interactive effects on proxies of fitness, behaviour, parasite load and immune responses were either additive or antagonistic; therefore, the potential mechanisms that drive the observed synergistic interactions for bee mortality remain unclear. Environmental risk assessment schemes that assume additive effects of the risk of agrochemical exposure may underestimate this interactive effect of anthropogenic stressors on bee mortality and will fail to protect the pollinators that provide a key ecosystem service that underpins sustainable agriculture.
has led to the identification of anthropogenic stressors that, individually, are detrimental to bee populations. Synergistic interactions between these stressors could substantially amplify the environmental effect of these stressors and could therefore have important implications for policy decisions that aim to improve the health of pollinators. Here, to quantitatively assess the scale of this threat, we conducted a
meta-analysis of 356 interaction effect sizes from 90 studies in which bees were
exposed to combinations of agrochemicals, nutritional stressors and/or parasites.
We found an overall synergistic effect between multiple stressors on bee mortality.
Subgroup analysis of bee mortality revealed strong evidence for synergy when bees were exposed to multiple agrochemicals at field-realistic levels, but interactions were not greater than additive expectations when bees were exposed to parasites and/or nutritional stressors. All interactive effects on proxies of fitness, behaviour, parasite load and immune responses were either additive or antagonistic; therefore, the potential mechanisms that drive the observed synergistic interactions for bee mortality remain unclear. Environmental risk assessment schemes that assume additive effects of the risk of agrochemical exposure may underestimate this interactive effect of anthropogenic stressors on bee mortality and will fail to protect the pollinators that provide a key ecosystem service that underpins sustainable agriculture.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Journal | Nature |
Early online date | 4 Aug 2021 |
Publication status | Published - 9 Aug 2021 |
Media coverage (18)
The Use of Toxic Pesticides in Farming is the Biggest Problem for Bees … and Us!
Press/Media: Research
Cocktail van pesticiden jaagt bijensterfte omhoog
Press/Media: Research