Link found between fungicides & bee decline

Fungicides are found to be the strongest factor linked to steep bumblebee declines, surprising scientists, and adding to the threats to vital pollinators.

While this article discusses the effects on bumblebees, the same factors are also having an effect on our honey bees, and probably our native bees and pollinators as well.
Much has been written on the effect of pesticides on bees, but this effect of fungicides highlights the importance of looking at the big picture (landscape size) all factors and influences in that landscape.
Common fungicides are the strongest factor linked to steep declines in bumblebees across the US, according to the first landscape-scale analysis.
The surprising result has alarmed bee experts because fungicides are targeted at moulds and mildews—not insects—but now appear to be a cause of major harm.
How fungicides kill bees is now being studied, but is likely to be by making them more susceptible to the deadly Nosema disease or by exacerbating the toxicity of other pesticides.
The widespread decline in bees and other pollinators is worrying because they fertilise about 75% of all food crops, with half of pollination being done by wild species.
Pesticides, habitat destruction, disease and climate change have all been implicated in bee declines, but relatively little research has been done on the complex question of which factors cause the most damage.
This new study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, used machine learning statistical methods to analyse the role of 24 different factors in explaining the decline of four bumblebee species, tracked at 284 sites across 40 US states. These included latitude, elevation, habitat type and damage, human population and pesticide use.
“The ‘winners’ in predicting both Nosema prevalence and range contraction were fungicides,” said Scott McArt, at Cornell University in the US and who led the new study.
In particular, chlorothalonil, the most used fungicide in the US, was most strongly linked to Nosema, while the total fungicide usage was the best predictor of losses of bumblebees.
Fungicides were generally overlooked
(continued next month)

See this article in Tree Fruit Jan 2018

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