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Pesticides harm honeybee nursing behavior, larval development, video shows
by Brooks Hays
Washington DC (UPI) May 26, 2020

Using a new video technique, scientists have documented the ill effects of pesticides on the nursing behavior and larval development of honeybees.

When exposed to neonicotinoids, one of the most common classes of insecticides, nurse bees fed larva less often and larval development took 10 hours longer. When larval development is delayed, hives are more susceptible to infestations of Varroa mites and other parasites.

Inside a honeybee hive, each new reproductive cycle begins with a deep clean. Cleaning bees rid empty combs of the remains of the previous brood. Once clean, the queen lays fresh eggs inside the brood cells. After the eggs hatch, nursing bees feed the larva for six days before capping the brood cell with wax.

Inside the capped combs, the larvae spin cocoons and undergo metamorphosis, emerging a few weeks latter with the features of a honeybee -- head, wings, legs. Just three weeks after the queen lays an egg, a fully grown bee emerges.

To observe this process in real time, researchers built a honeybee hive with a plane of glass. Special cameras allowed researchers to simultaneously watch the brood cells of four different colonies. Red light cameras ensured the bees weren't disrupted by the technology's presence.

In two colonies, researchers added insecticides to the sugar syrup used by the nurse bees to feed the larva. Scientists developed algorithms to analyze the video footage and detect changes in the behavior of nurse bees. The algorithms revealed even small amounts of neonicotinoids caused the nurse bees to feed the larva less often.

Scientists detailed the results of their experimental observations in a new paper published Tuesday in the journal Scientific Reports.

"Neonicotinoids affect the bees' nervous systems by blocking the receptors for the neurotransmitter acetylcholine," lead study author Paul Siefert, scientist with Goethe University Frankfurt at the Bee Research Institute of the Polytechnical Society, said in a news release. "For the first time, we were able to demonstrate that neonicotinoids also change the social behavior of bees. This could point to the disruptions in nursing behavior due to neonicotinoids described by other scientists."

Because Varroa mites lay eggs inside brood cells before they're capped, they benefit from prolonged development. The longer the bee larva take to emerge, the longer the mites can develop and multiply.

Researchers aren't yet certain whether the delayed development is caused by behavior changes in the nurse bees or from the presence of insecticides in the sugar syrup or jelly.

"From other studies in our work group, we know that the concentration of acetylcholine in the jelly is reduced by neonicotinoids," said Siefert. "On the other hand, we have observed that with higher dosages, the early embryonal development in the egg is also extended -- during a period in which feeding does not yet occur."

Follow-up studies are needed to determine precisely the ways insecticides impede the development of bee larva. Scientists hope other bee researchers will adopt the new observation and analysis methods.

"Our innovative technology makes it possible to gain fundamental scientific insights into social interactions in bee colonies, the biology of parasites, and the safety of pesticides," Siefert said.


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FARM NEWS
Lockdown gives Albanian beekeepers a 'golden year'
Korce, Albania (AFP) May 22, 2020
With factories and farms silenced by the coronavirus shutdown, Albania's bees have been busier than ever, stirring excitement among farmers expecting an unparalleled honey harvest thanks to a respite from pollution and pesticides. "It's a golden year for bees," says 68-year-old Gezim Skermo, dressed in a protective suit as he inspects his rows of wooden hives, lined up along the verdant base of Morava mountain in southeast Albania. The bucolic bee farm, home to some 300 colourfully-painted hive ... read more

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