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Putting pesticides on the map for pollinator research and conservation

Authors :
Eric V. Lonsdorf
Melanie Kammerer
Christina M. Grozinger
Paige Baisley
Sara Soba
Margaret R. Douglas
Source :
Scientific data. 9(1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Wild and managed pollinators are essential to food production and the function of natural ecosystems; however, their populations are threatened by multiple stressors including pesticide use. Because pollinator species can travel hundreds to thousands of meters to forage, recent research has stressed the importance of evaluating pollinator decline at the landscape scale. However, scientists’ and conservationists’ ability to do this has been limited by a lack of accessible data on pesticide use at relevant spatial scales and in toxicological units meaningful to pollinators. Here, we synthesize information from several large, publicly available datasets on pesticide use patterns, land use, and toxicity to generate novel datasets describing pesticide use by active ingredient (kg, 1997-2017) and aggregate insecticide load (kg and honey bee lethal doses, 1997-2014) for state-crop combinations in the contiguous U.S. Furthermore, by linking pesticide datasets with land-use data in the contiguous United States, we describe a method to map pesticide indicators at spatial scales relevant to pollinator research and conservation.

Details

ISSN :
20524463
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific data
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2bb3a584b6d65f76921e3aba0fba58bf