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Assessing the effects of a commercial fungicide and an herbicide, alone and in combination, on Apis mellifera: Insights from biomarkers and cognitive analysis

Chemosphere 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
David Baracchi, Federico Ferrante, Federico Ferrante, Agata Di Noi, David Baracchi, Federico Ferrante, Tommaso Campani, Ilaria Caliani, Federico Ferrante, Silvia Casini Antonella D’Agostino, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Silvia Casini Silvia Casini Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Silvia Casini Ilaria Caliani, Tommaso Campani, Giampiero Cai, Marco Romi, Tommaso Campani, Silvia Casini Silvia Casini Silvia Casini Federico Ferrante, Federico Ferrante, David Baracchi, David Baracchi, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, David Baracchi, David Baracchi, David Baracchi, Tommaso Campani, Tommaso Campani, Tommaso Campani, Ilaria Caliani, Tommaso Campani, David Baracchi, David Baracchi, Ilaria Caliani, Ilaria Caliani, Silvia Casini Tommaso Campani, Ilaria Caliani, Tommaso Campani, Ilaria Caliani, Federico Ferrante, David Baracchi, Tommaso Campani, Silvia Casini Silvia Casini Silvia Casini Ilaria Caliani, Silvia Casini

Summary

Researchers tested the combined effects of a commercial fungicide and herbicide on honey bees and found that the mixture was more harmful than either chemical alone. The pesticide combination impaired the bees' cognitive abilities, disrupted detoxification enzymes, and increased oxidative stress markers. The study suggests that current risk assessments, which typically evaluate pesticides individually, may underestimate the real-world dangers bees face from chemical mixtures.

Body Systems

Agrochemicals play a vital role in protecting crops and enhancing agricultural production by reducing threats from pests, pathogens and weeds. The toxicological status of honey bees can be influenced by a number of factors, including pesticides. While extensive research has focused on the lethal and sublethal effects of insecticides on individual bees and colonies, it is important to recognise that fungicides and herbicides can also affect bees' health. Unfortunately, in the field, honey bees are exposed to mixtures of compounds rather than single substances. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of a commercial fungicide and a commercial herbicide, both individually and in combination, on honey bees. Mortality assays, biomarkers and learning and memory tests were performed, and the results were integrated to assess the toxicological status of honey bees. Neurotoxicity (acetylcholinesterase and carboxylesterase activities), detoxification and metabolic processes (glutathione S-transferase and alkaline phosphatase activities), immune system function (lysozyme activity and haemocytes count) and genotoxicity biomarkers (Nuclear Abnormalities assay) were assessed. The fungicide Sakura® was found to activate detoxification enzymes and affect alkaline phosphatase activity. The herbicide Elegant 2FD and the combination of both pesticides showed neurotoxic effects and induced detoxification processes. Exposure to the herbicide/fungicide mixture impaired learning and memory in honey bees. This study represents a significant advance in understanding the toxicological effects of commonly used commercial pesticides in agriculture and contributes to the development of effective strategies to mitigate their adverse effects on non-target insects.

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