Selected Biochemical Markers Change after Oral Administration of Pesticide Mixtures in Honey Bees

Toxics. 2022 Oct 5;10(10):590. doi: 10.3390/toxics10100590.

Abstract

The honey bee is an important pollinator. In the environment, it can be exposed to many harmful factors, such as pesticides. Nowadays, attention is paid to evaluating the potentially harmful effects of these substances. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of worst-case environmental concentrations of pesticide mixtures on honey bee survival and selected physiological markers (the activity of ALT, AST, ALP, and GGTP, and the concentration of albumin, creatinine, urea, and uric acid). Pesticides of three different groups (insecticide-acetamiprid, herbicide-glyphosate, and fungicide-tebuconazole) and their mixtures were resolved in 50% (w/v) sucrose solution and given to bees ad libitum. After 24 h, hemolymph was collected. All mixtures caused higher mortality than single pesticides. Pesticides in mixtures caused disturbances in biochemical markers, and in some cases the interaction between pesticides was synergistic. The mixtures had individual effects on physiology, and the results were sensitive to changes in proportions.

Keywords: Apis mellifera; biochemical markers; honey bee; insect physiology; pesticide compositions.

Grants and funding

This work was co-financed by the Department of Environment, Hygiene and Animal Welfare, project number B010/0005/22, and the Department of Human Nutrition, project number B010/0013/22. This work was supported by the Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences (Poland) as the Ph.D. research program “Bon doktoranta SD UPWr” number N020/1754/2021 and innovative scientist number N070/0014/21.