Selectivity of Spinosad (Spintor®) Questioned
Pesticide levels previously thought to be safe for pollinators may prove harmful to wild bee
health, according to research published in May’s Pest Management Science. The Canadian study
shows that adult bumble bees exposed to the pesticide spinosad
during larval development - at environmentally relevant
concentrations - have impaired foraging ability. Bees are
important pollinators of crops. In developed countries,
approximately a third of human food is reliant on pollinating
activity. Wild bees are thought to contribute significantly to
this effort.
Although many pesticides are known to be toxic to bees,
toxicity testing is largely restricted to direct lethal effects on
adult honey bees, if tested on bees at all. Sub-lethal effects on honey bees could be going
unnoticed, and other bee species could be differentially affected. Lora Morandin and colleagues
at Canada’s Simon Fraser University tested the effects of different levels of spinosad on bumble
bee colony health and foraging ability. Bee colonies were fed the pesticide in a manner that
mimicked contact in an agricultural setting. Adult bees and developing larva were exposed to
spinosad in pollen. The bees’ foraging ability on an array of “complex” artificial flowers made
of centrifuge tubes was then evaluated. High levels of spinosad residues (about 10 times what
bees should experience in the environment) caused rapid colony death. Colonies exposed to
more realistic levels of spinosad in pollen did not show any acute effects and only minimal
immediate colony health effects. However, bees that were fed realistic levels of spinosad during
larval development were slower foragers. They took longer to access complex flowers, resulting
in longer handling times and lower foraging rates. The bees also displayed “trembling”, which
impaired their ability to land on the flowers and enter the flower tubes. This impaired foraging
ability in bumble bees could result in weaker colonies and lower pollination of crop plants,
according to Morandin. “Adult bees that have been exposed to a pesticide during larval
development may display symptoms of poisoning that are not detected with current tests required
by regulatory agencies.” (Society of Chemical Industry, 5/6/05).