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Pesticide Linked To Bee Die Off

Courtesy of the American Chemical Society

New re­search has linked spring­time die-offs of much-needed hon­ey­bees — part of a mys­te­ri­ous mal­a­dy called col­o­ny col­lapse dis­or­der — with a tech­nol­o­gy for plant­ing in­sec­ti­cide-coat­ed corn.

The study ex­am­ined bee die-offs in Eu­rope, and did­n’t ad­dress wheth­er si­m­i­lar causes are be­hind bee die-offs that have also af­flict­ed the Un­ited States. The af­fect­ed bees are crit­i­cal for pol­li­nat­ing food crops.

The re­search ap­pears on the eve of spring plant­ing sea­sons in some parts of Eu­rope where farm­ers use the tech­nol­o­gy and wide­spread hon­ey­bees deaths have oc­curred. The study ap­pears in the jour­nal En­vi­ron­men­tal Sci­ence & Tech­nol­o­gy, pub­lished by the Amer­i­can Chem­i­cal So­ci­e­ty.

The re­search­ers, An­drea Tap­paro of the Uni­vers­ity of Pa­do­va in Ita­ly and col­leagues, said seeds coat­ed with so-called neon­i­coti­noid in­sec­ti­cides went in­to wide use in Eu­rope in the late 1990s. The pes­ti­cides are among the most widely used in the world, pop­u­lar be­cause they kill in­sects by par­a­lyz­ing nerves but have low­er tox­i­city for oth­er an­i­mals.

But al­most im­me­di­ate­ly, bee­keep­ers no­ticed large die-offs of bees that seemed to co­in­cide with mid-March to May corn plant­ing, the in­ves­ti­ga­tors said. Sci­en­tists thought this might be due to par­t­i­cles of in­sec­ti­cide thrown aloft by drill­ing ma­chines used for plant­ing. These ma­chines force­fully suck seeds in and ex­pel a burst of air con­tain­ing high con­centra­t­ions of par­t­i­cles of the in­sec­ti­cide coat­ing, ac­cord­ing to the re­searchers.

In an ef­fort to make the pneu­mat­ic drill­ing meth­od safer, the sci­en­tists tested dif­fer­ent types of in­sec­ti­cide coat­ings and seed­ing meth­ods. But they found that all varia­t­ions in seed coat­ings and plant­ing meth­ods killed hon­ey­bees that flew through the seed­ing ma­chine’s emis­sion cloud. One ma­chine mod­i­fied with a de­flec­tor to send the in­sec­ti­cide-laced air down­wards still caused the death of more than 200 bees for­ag­ing in the field.

The au­thors sug­gest that fu­ture work on the prob­lem should fo­cus on a way to pre­vent the seeds from frag­ment­ing in­side the pneu­mat­ic drill­ing ma­chines.

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