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Thiamethoxam soil contaminations reduce fertility of soil-dwelling beetles, Aethina tumida

Chemosphere 2023 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Audrey Sheridan, Audrey Sheridan, Lars Straub, Elijah J. Johnson, Elijah J. Johnson, Armelle Vallat‐Michel, Armelle Vallat‐Michel, Gaétan Glauser, Jeffrey W. Harris, Jeffrey W. Harris, Peter Neumann Lars Straub, Peter Neumann

Summary

Researchers found that field-realistic neonicotinoid (thiamethoxam) soil contamination reduced the fertility of soil-dwelling beetles by approximately half on average, providing evidence that environmental pollutants contribute to insect population declines.

Body Systems

There in increasing evidence for recent global insect declines. This is of major concern as insects play a critical role in ecosystem functionality and human food security. Even though environmental pollutants are known to reduce insect fertility, their potential effects on insect fitness remain poorly understood - especially for soil-dwelling species. Here, we show that fertility of soil-dwelling beetles, Aethina tumida, is reduced, on average, by half due to field-realistic neonicotinoid soil contaminations. In the laboratory, pupating beetles were exposed via soil to concentrations of the neonicotinoid thiamethoxam that reflect global pollution of agricultural and natural habitats. Emerged adult phenotypes and reproduction were measured, and even the lowest concentration reported from natural habitats reduced subsequent reproduction by 50%. The data are most likely a conservative estimate as the beetles were only exposed during pupation. Since the tested concentrations reflect ubiquitous soil pollution, the data reveal a plausible mechanism for ongoing insect declines. An immediate reduction in environmental pollutants is urgently required if our aim is to mitigate the prevailing loss of species biodiversity.

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