Impacts of a pesticide on pollinator species richness at different spatial scales

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

Pesticides are an important potential cause of biodiversity and pollinator decline. Little is known about the impacts of pesticides on wild pollinators in the field. Insect pollinators were sampled in an agricultural system in Italy with the aim of detecting the impacts of pesticide use. The insecticide fenitrothion was over 150 times greater in toxicity than other pesticides used in the area, so sampling was set up around its application. Species richness of wild bees, bumblebees and butterflies were sampled at three spatial scales to assess responses to pesticide application: (i) the ‘field’ scale along pesticide drift gradients; (ii) the ‘landscape’ scale sampling in different crops within the area and (iii) the ‘regional’ scale comparing two river basins with contrasting agricultural intensity. At the field scale, the interaction between the application regime of the insecticide and the point in the season was important for species richness. Wild bee species richness appeared to be unaffected by one insecticide application, but declined after two and three applications. At the landscape scale, the species richness of wild bees declined in vine fields where the insecticide was applied, but did not decline in maize or uncultivated fields. At the regional scale, lower bumblebee and butterfly species richness was found in the more intensively farmed basin with higher pesticide loads. Our results suggest that wild bees are an insect pollinator group at particular risk from pesticide use. Further investigation is needed on how the type, quantity and timing of pesticide application impacts pollinators.
Original languageEnglish
JournalBasic and Applied Ecology
Volume11
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)106-115
Number of pages10
ISSN1439-1791
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 03.2010

    Research areas

  • Ecosystems Research
  • Agriculture, Agro-chemicals, Bees, Butterflies, Fenitrothion, Insecticide

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Mapping the determinants of carbon-related CEO compensation
  2. External rotation of the auditor
  3. The constructs of sustainable supply chain management
  4. The Principles of Public International Law and their Influence on Space Contracts
  5. Real-world Laboratories and Transformation Research
  6. Ready for take off
  7. Networking and Interaction between Regions and Higher Education Institutions
  8. Crop variety and prey richness affect spatial patterns of human-wildlife conflicts in Iran's Hyrcanian forests
  9. Rats dying for mice: Modelling the competitor release effect
  10. Strangely Familiar
  11. Costs of Inaction and Costs of Action in Climate Protection
  12. Approaching the other
  13. Building a digital anchor
  14. Lightweight construction by means of profiles
  15. Schwebende Infrastrukturen
  16. Looking at the World With You
  17. On the micro-structure of the German export boom
  18. Are We Discovering or Making Concepts? Performativity in Concept Defining
  19. Did Descriptive and Prescriptive Norms About Gender Equality at Home Change During the COVID-19 Pandemic? A Cross-National Investigation
  20. Sustainable Redevelopment of Real Estate Properties and Its Social Impact
  21. From visual projections to visionary locations
  22. Platform workers centre stage!
  23. Modelling Interdependencies Within Production Planning and Control
  24. The role of self-evaluation in predicting attitudes toward supporters of COVID-19-related conspiracy theories
  25. Swissness Communication and its Impact on Consumer-Brand Relationships
  26. Mapping a sustainable future
  27. Enterprise Integration
  28. The interplay between individual and collective efforts in the age of global threats