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Acute oral toxicity and risks of exposure to the...
Journal article

Acute oral toxicity and risks of exposure to the neonicotinoid thiamethoxam, and other classes of systemic insecticide, for the Common Eastern Bumblebee (Bombus impatiens)

Abstract

Abstract The Common Eastern Bumblebee ( Bombus impatiens ) is native to North America with an expanding range across Eastern Canada and the USA. This species is commercially produced primarily for greenhouse crop pollination and is a common and abundant component of the wild bumblebee fauna in agricultural, suburban and urban landscapes. However, there is a dearth of pesticide toxicity information about North American bumblebees. The present study determines the acute oral toxicity (48-hour LD50) of cyantraniliprole (>0.54 μg/bee), flupyradifurone (>1.7 μg/bee), sulfoxaflor (0.0194 μg/bee), and thiamethoxam (0.0012 μg/bee). Compared with published honey bee ( Apis mellifera ) LD50 values, the present study shows that thiamethoxam and sulfoxaflor are 4.2x and 7.5x more acutely toxic to B. impatiens , whereas flupyradifurone is more acutely toxic to A. mellifera . The current rule of thumb for toxicity extrapolation beyond the honey bee as a model species, termed 10x safety factor, may be sufficient for bumblebee acute oral toxicity. A comparison of three risk assessment equations suggested that the Standard Risk Approach (SRA) and Fixed Dose Risk Approach (FDRA) provide more nuanced levels of risk evaluation compared to the European Plant Protection Organization (EPPO) Hazard Quotient (HQ), primarily because SRA and FDRA take into account real world variability in pollen and nectar pesticide residues and the chances that bees are exposed to them.

Authors

Mundy-Heisz KA; Prosser RS; Raine NE

Journal

, , ,

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Publication Date

January 28, 2020

DOI

10.1101/2020.01.27.921510

ISSN

2692-8205
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