Comparing response of buff-tailed bumblebees and red mason bees to application of a thiacloprid-prochloraz mixture under semi-field conditions
Alkassab, Abdulrahim T.
Kunz, Nadine
Bischoff, Gabriela
Pistorius, Jens
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10646-020-02223-2
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/10625
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/10625
Alkassab, Abdulrahim T.; Kunz, Nadine; Bischoff, Gabriela; Pistorius, Jens, 2020: Comparing response of buff-tailed bumblebees and red mason bees to application of a thiacloprid-prochloraz mixture under semi-field conditions. In: Ecotoxicology, Band 29, 7: 846 - 855, DOI: 10.1007/s10646-020-02223-2.
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Recent studies have reported interspecific differences in how bee species respond to various stressors. Evaluating the
exposure and responses of different bee species to plant protection products is considered an essential part of their risk
assessment. This study was conducted to assess the impacts of thiacloprid-prochloraz mixture on buff-tailed bumblebees
(Bombus terrestris) and red mason bees (Osmia bicornis) in a worst-case scenario under semi-field conditions. Bumblebee
colonies or solitary bee trap nests were confined in tunnels with flowering oilseed rape. The recommended maximum
application rates of 72 g thiacloprid/ha and 675 g prochloraz/ha were applied as a tank mixture during bee flight in full
flowering oilseed rape. Several parameters such as flight and foraging activity, population parameters, and exposure level
were investigated. Our results show adverse effects of the combination of thiacloprid and prochloraz on the reproductive
performance of red mason bees. The number of cocoons produced by O. bicornis was significantly reduced in the treatment
compared to the control group. Regarding bumblebees, we found no effects of the thiacloprid-prochloraz mixture on any
observed parameters of colony development. The maximum detected concentrations of both active substances three days
after application were higher in O. bicornis pollen mass compared to B. terrestris stored pollen. We conclude that this worst-
case scenario of thiacloprid-prochloraz exposure poses a high risk to solitary bees and thus the use of such mixture should be
restricted.