|
By D.F. Mayer, Ph.D., Washington
State University Cooperative Extension entomologist, Prosser;
C.A. Johansen, Ph.D., Washington State University Cooperative
Extension entomologist, retired and C.R. Baird, Extension entomologist,
University of Idaho
CAUSES OF BEE POISONING
Most bee poisoning occurs when
insecticides are applied to crops during the blooming period.
Other hazards are
- Drift of toxic pesticides
onto adjoining crops or weeds that are in bloom.
- Contamination of flowering
cover crops when orchards are sprayed.
- Insecticidal dusts adhere
to foraging bees and ultimately become packed with the pollen
onto the hind legs. Penncap-M and Sevin are especially dangerous
because they may be stored with pollen and kill newly emerged
workers the following season.
- Bees drinking or touching
contaminated water on foliage or flowers.
- Bees collecting contaminated
pollen or nectar.
|
BEE POISONING SYMPTOMS
The most common symptom
of bee poisoning is the appearance of excessive numbers of dead
bees in front ot the hives. Another common symptom is lack of
foraging bees. Aggressiveness in bees may be caused by most pesticides.
Stupefaction, paralysis, and abnormal activities of bees are
commonly caused by chlorinated hydrocarbons and organophosphorus
insecticides. Regurgitation of the honey stomach contents is
often caused by poisoning with organophosphorus insecticides.
Bees may perform abnormal communication dances on the horizontal
landing board at the hive entrance while under the influence
of insecticide poisoning. Disorganized behavior patterns may
lead to lack of recognition of affected field bees by guard bees.
Many bees poisoned with Sexin or dieldrin slow down and appear
as though they had been chilled; such bees may take two to three
days to die. Beekeepers familiar with Sevin poisoning quickly
learn to recognize the "crawlers" that move about in
front of the hive but are unable to fly. Dead brood in or in
front of the hive is typical of Sevin, micro-encapsulated methyl
parathion (Penncap-M), or arsenical poisoning. When not enough
hive bees are left to cover the brood frames or care for the
brood, desiccation or starvation kills the larvae. In severe
cases, few bees in the hives survive, or the entire colony may
be dead.
One forager returning to the
hive with a load of contaminated pollen or nectar can cause extreme
agitation and death of a number of bees. Several such foragers
can seriously disrupt and damage the colony. Often, the queen
is superseded because of the agitation of the workers, possibly
aggravated by a reduction in the secretion of queen substance.
Queens may be affected, especially
by slow-acting materials such as arsenicals, Sevin, and micro-encapsulated
methyl parathion (Penncap-M), which may be taken into the hive
with pollen. Queens may behave abnormally: for instance, lay
eggs in a poor pattern. Severely weakened or queenless colonies
will not live through the following winter. Queenlessness the
following fall have been associated with the use of a wide variety
of insecticides including arsenicals, Penncap-M, Sevin, and parathion.
Typically, severe Sevin or Penncap-M poisoning makes at least
half of the colonies queenless within 30 days.
BEEKEEPER-GROWER COOPERATION
A major consideration for the
reduction of bee poisoning is beekeeper-grower cooperation. Many
cases could be cited where a grower, simply through ignorance
of the hazard to bees, has caused tremendous damage to a large
number of colonies. The timing or materials of the pest control
program could have been modified so that little or no poisoning
occurred. In many cases this can be done without unduly increasing
the control cost or inconveniencing the grower.
Beekeepers should get acquainted
with the farmer on whose land they place hives. They should know
about pest-control practices and other special problems that
might occur.
When the grower rents colonies
for crop pollination, definite verbal or written agreements can
be made. One type of written contract emphasizes crop production
and has the desirable effect of encouraging closer cooperation
between the grower and the beekeeper. Such contracts should include
details of the responsibility of the beekeeper in providing strong
and effective colonies and of the farmer in safeguarding the
bees from poisoning. In modern agriculture, the beekeeper often
depends on the grower for bee forage and the grower depends on
the beekeeper for pollination. Cooperation and understanding
of each other's problems are essential.
REGULATIONS
Many states have regulations
that attempt to reduce the hazard of insecticide applications
to bees. These are based on the safest timing and bloom conditions
for given chemicals on given crops. Note: Some of the listed
pesticides have been discontinued and are no longer available
or legal to use.
REDUCTION OF BEE POISONING
Following are some of the ways
to help reduce bee poisoning:
What the Pesticide Applicator
Can Do
- Do not apply insecticides
that are toxic to bees on crops in bloom, including cover crops
in orchards and adjacent crops or interplants. With aerial application,
do not turn the aircraft or transport materials back and forth
across blossoming fields. Ground application is generally less
hazardous than aerial application because less drift of the pesticides
occurs, and smaller acreages are treated at one time.
|
- Apply certain chemicals only
in late evening, night, or early morning while bees are not actively
foraging (generally between 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. in the north and
8:30 p.m. to 4 a.m. in the south). Evening applications are generally
less hazardous to bees than early morning applications. When
high temperatures cause bees to start foraging earlier or continue
later than usual (5:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.) shift time accordingly.
|
- Do not apply insecticides
when temperatures are expected to be unusually low following
treatment or on nights when dews occur. Residues will remain
toxic to bees for a much longer time under such conditions.
|
- Do not dump unused dusts or
sprays where they might become a bee poisoning hazard. Sometimes
bees collect any type of fine dust material when pollen is not
readily available. Under such conditions, they may actually carry
pesticide dusts back to the colony.
|
- Use insecticides that are
relatively nonhazardous to bees whenever such choices are consistent
with other pest control considerations.
|
- Choose the less hazardous
insecticide formulations. Our tests have consistently indicated
dusts are more hazardous than sprays of the same insecticide.
Emulsifiable (liquid) formulations usually have a shorter residual
toxicity to bees than do wettable powders. Granular formulations
are low in hazard to bees.
|
- Contact and ask the beekeeper
to remove colonies from the area (or keep the bees confined during
the application period) before applying hazardous pesticides
when such measures are feasible and of value.
|
- When roadside and other weed
control operations involve 2,4-D and similar compounds on blooming
plants, select the formulations or derivatives known to be least
harmful to bees. Our tests have shown that at maximum dosage,
alkanolamine salts and isopropyl esters are more toxic than other
forms. Oily formulations seem to be more hazardous to bees. Spraying
in late afternoon or evening will also lessen the hazard, since
bees will not visit the blooms after they become curled. The
only highly toxic herbicides are arsenicals and DNOSBP.
|
- Observe State Department of
Agriculture regulations aimed at reducing bee poisoning.
|
What the Grower Can Do
- Mow or beat down orchard cover
crops before applying sprays hazardous to bees. Treatment with
2,4-D is the best way to remove dandelion blooms. This is especially
important in relation to the first cover spray on apples, applied
during a critical foraging period when bees will fly several
miles to obtain pollen and nectar from even a few blooms of dandelion,
or mustard.
|
- Blossom-thinning sprays have
not been hazardous to bees in Washington orchards. However, Sevin
used as a fruit thinner can be hazardous if cover crop blooms
become contaminated.
|
- Learn the pollination requirements
of the crops you raise. Such information is not generally known
for some insect-pollinated crops, such as lima beans. Application
of insecticides hazardous to bees on these crops, or driving
beekeepers out of your area by the use of insecticides on other
blossoming crops will likely cause poor yields.
|
- When insect pests have been
damaging a crop every season, use a preventive program of early
season application before pest population increases, foliage
growth, and weather conditions reduce the effectiveness of insecticides.
Such a program is usually less dangerous to pollinating bees
and other beneficial insects as well.
|
- Learn about the beekeeper's
problems with chemical poisoning and enter into mutually advantageous
agreements to best produce bee-pollinated crops.
|
What the Beekeeper Can Do
- Do not leave unmarked colonies
of bees next to orchards or fields. Post your name, address,
and phone number in printing large enough to be read at some
distance in all apiaries so you can be contacted readily to move
the colonies when hazardous sprays are to be applied. Several
regulations concerning such marking of apiaries are in effect
in the Pacific Northwest.
|
- Do not move hives back into
fields treated with hazardous insecticides until at least 48
to 72 hours after the application. Our tests have shown that
50 to 90 percent of the killing of bees by insecticides occurs
during the first 24 hours after application.
|
- Choose apiary sites that are
relatively isolated from intensive insecticide applications and
not normally subjected to drift of chemicals. Establish holding
yards of honey bee colonies at least 4 miles from orchards being
treated with toxic materials.
|
- Learn about pest control problems
and programs so you can develop mutually beneficial agreements
with growers concerning pollination service and prudent use of
pesticides.
|
- Be careful how you control
insect pests around beekeeping storage facilities or apiaries.
Vapona "No Pest Strips" will also contaminate beeswax
and kill bees when the combs are put in colonies later. Use relatively
low-hazard materials, such as Sevin bait granules for ant control
and pyrethrum aerosols for fly control.
|
- Cover honey bee colonies with
wet burlap for two or three days to protect them from the initial
hazards of an insecticide. Such covers should be put over the
hives during the night before the crop is treated and should
be kept wet during use. This method works; however, most beekeepers
find it impractical.
|
POISONING OF WILD BEES
Much of the research data on
the effects of insecticides on species of wild bees has been
done at WSU. Our work on the effects of chemicals on the alkali
bee, Nomia melanderi, and the alfalfa leafcutting bee,
Megachile rotundata, has been the most extensive to date.
The alfalfa leafcutting bee can be safeguarded by storing the
nest units in a cool room or root cellar for a few days while
the field is being treated. Nests with females in the ends of
the tunnels can be moved at night. This bee is nearly inactive
at 70ºF and completely inactive at 60ºF. Leafcutter
nest shelters can be built to be covered or closed during insecticide
applications to reduce the drift of dusts or sprays into the
nest structures. When placing leafcutters on fields in a rotation
plan, do not move nest shelters in until at least 1 week after
Lorsban, Cygon, Supracide, Furadan, or malathion ULV treatments.
Do not allow insecticide dusts
or sprays to drift onto alkali bee nest sites or blooming crops
on which these bees are foraging.
Do not spray chemicals on or
burn adjacent wild land or fence rows around red clover, cranberry,
or other berry crops. Such areas provide nest sites for bumble
bees that aid materially in pollinating these crops.
A classification of the relative
hazard of insecticides to wild bees is presented in Table 4.
SPECIAL PRECAUTIONS
| 1. |
There is a special
tendency for Penncap-M to adhere to bees foraging on contaminated
flowers. Ultimately, this material is combed from the bee hairs
and deposited with the pollen on the pollen baskets. It can be
a long-term hazard when stored in pollen in beehives from one
season to the next. |
| 2. |
Do not use Thimet
G, Di-Syston G, Phosdrin, TEPP, and methyl parathion where there
is a possible fumigation hazard to alfalfa leafcutting bee shelters,
alkali bee nest sites, or honey bee apiaries. |
| 3. |
Undiluted or ultralow
volume technical malathion spray treatments can retain a high
residual toxic hazard to honey bees for at least 5 days, and
to alfalfa leafcutting bees for at least 7 days. |
| 4. |
Bees are temporarily
inactivated by direct contact with oil sprays and some loss may
occur. |
| 5. |
Acidified spray
mixtures with Dylox are more hazardous to bees than nonacidified
sprays of this material. Do not use more than recommended rates
of acidifiers. |
| 6. |
Alfalfa leafcutting
bees are much more sensitive to all chemicals after they have
been in the field for 3 weeks or more. Time late applications
to occur 6 to 7 weeks after the start of activity in the field
to coincide with the natural lull between peaks of bee emergence. |
| 7. |
Specific miticides
such as Kelthane and Comite should not be applied in mixtures
with insecticides because this increases the hazard to bees. |
| 8. |
Do not treat during
warm evenings when honey bees are clustered on the outside of
the hives. |
Note: Some of the listed
pesticides have been discontinued and are no longer available
or legal to use.
| TABLE 1. |
TOXICITY
OF INSECTICIDES AND ACARICIDES TO HONEY BEES (length of residual
toxic effect in hours or days) |
| TABLE 2. |
TOXICITY
OF HERBICIDES, BLOSSOM AND FRUIT THINNERS, DESICCANTS, AND PLANT
GROWTH REGULATORS TO HONEY BEES |
| TABLE 3. |
TOXICITY
OF FUNGICIDES TO HONEY BEES |
| TABLE 4. |
TOXICITY
OF INSECTICIDES AND ACARICIDES TO WILD BEES |
| TABLE 5. |
TOXICITY OF PESTICIDES
TO HONEY BEES, ALFALFA LEAFCUTTING BEES, AND ALKALI BEES |
CAUTION: Timing of insecticide applications
in respect to bee poisoning hazard can be drastically modified
by abnormal weather conditions. If temperatures are unusually
low following treatment, residues on the crop typically remain
toxic to bees about twice as long as during reasonably warm weather.
Conversely, if abnormally high temperatures occur during late
evening or early morning, bees may actively forage on the treated
crop during these times.
!Warning. Use pesticides with care. Apply them only to
plants, animals, or sites listed on the label. When mixing and
applying pesticides, follow all label precautions to protect
yourself and others around you. It is a violation of the law
to disregard label directions. If pesticides are spilled on skin
or clothing, remove clothing and wash skin thoroughly. Store
pesticides in their original containers and keep them out of
the reach of children, pets, and livestock.
Pacific Northwest Extension Publications contain material written
and produced for public distribution. You may reprint written
material, provided you do not use it to endorse a commercial
product. Please reference by title and credit Pacific Northwest
Extension Publications.
Copyright 1999 Washington State University
|