Back to Search Start Over

Citizen science monitoring reveals links between honeybee health, pesticide exposure and seasonal availability of floral resources

Authors :
Ben A. Woodcock
Anna E. Oliver
Lindsay K. Newbold
H. Soon Gweon
Daniel S. Read
Ujala Sayed
Joanna Savage
Jim Bacon
Emily Upcott
Katherine Howell
Katharine Turvey
David B. Roy
M. Gloria Pereira
Darren Sleep
Arran Greenop
Richard F. Pywell
Source :
Scientific Reports. 12
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

We use a national citizen science monitoring scheme to quantify how agricultural intensification affects honeybee diet breadth (number of plant species). To do this we used DNA metabarcoding to identify the plants present in 527 honey samples collected in 2019 across Great Britain. The species richness of forage plants was negatively correlated with arable cropping area, although this was only found early in the year when the abundance of flowering plants was more limited. Within intensively farmed areas, honeybee diets were dominated by Brassica crops (including oilseed rape). We demonstrate how the structure and complexity of honeybee foraging relationships with plants is negatively affected by the area of arable crops surrounding hives. Using information collected from the beekeepers on the incidence of an economically damaging bee disease (Deformed Wing Virus) we found that the occurrence of this disease increased where bees foraged in agricultural land where there was a high use of foliar insecticides. Understanding impacts of land use on resource availability is fundamental to assessing long-term viability of pollinator populations. These findings highlight the importance of supporting temporally timed resources as mitigation strategies to support wider pollinator population viability.

Details

ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7f3049bd302af99df4d74846cdb25bb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-18672-0