Study Shows Insecticides Can Slow Bees, Leading To Smaller Strawberries

When bees visit their flowers, strawberries are known to become bigger. But to date it has remained unclear how strawberry growth is affected if those bees have been exposed to neonicotinoid insecticides.  

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In a study published in September in PLOS ONE, researchers from Lund University in Sweden make two discoveries: One, solitary bees that ingested the pesticide clothianidin when foraging from rapeseed flowers became slower. Two, the strawberries pollinated by these bees wound up smaller.  

“We studied bees that ingested clothianidin, a pesticide that was previously used in rapeseed to control flea beetles,” Lina Herbertsson, Biology Researcher at Lund University, writes. “Our study indicates that substance made the bees slower and impaired their ability to pollinate the strawberry flowers.”  

The researchers used 12 outdoor cages in which solitary bees could forage from rapeseed and strawberry flowers. In half of the cages, the rapeseed had been treated with clothianidin. The bees that were exposed to the treated rapeseed needed more time than other bees to visit the same number of rapeseed flowers.  

When the researchers later weighed the strawberries, they also discovered that the strawberries were smaller if they had been pollinated by bees that foraged from clothianidin-treated rapeseed. 

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“Previous studies have shown that clothianidin affects wild bees negatively in terms of foraging speed, development, and reproduction. Our results indicate that it can also impair the bees’ ability to pollinate strawberry flowers,” Herbertsson writes. 

She emphasizes the importance of interpreting the results with some caution. 

“In our study we did not identify the cause for the lower strawberry weight, and after only having performed a single study under rather special circumstances, we also don’t know if this is a general pattern,” Herbertsson writes. 

The EU in 2018 decided to completely ban the use of clothianidin and two other neonicotinoids for outdoor plant protection. One of the other neonicotinoids was thiamethoxam, which can distort apple pollination by bumblebees, as previously shown by another research team. Even though these agents are no longer used for outdoor plant protection in European agriculture, Herbertsson believes the new results are important because they show that pesticides can have more complex effects than usually expected. 

“Although clothianidin is now banned, other substances that affect the nervous system of insects in a similar way have partly replaced it. It is therefore of the utmost importance to continue this research and investigate how these substances affect bee behavior and pollination,” she concludes. 

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