[Pollinator] From Daily Camera - Study: Bumblebees decreasing by 57%
peter jenkins
jenkinsbiopolicy at gmail.com
Sat Feb 18 04:30:17 PST 2023
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WESTERN WILDLIFE
Study: Bumblebees decreasing by 57%
Some point to climate change, neonicotinoids
By Kiara Demare
The Denver Post
Western bumblebees are becoming less common in Colorado, dropping nearly
60% since 1998 due to impacts from climate change and the use of a certain
pesticide, according to a study by the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was petitioned to list western
bumblebees as a threatened or endangered species in 2015, and the academy
has been studying specifically western bumblebees since.
“Across the Western U.S., we saw a 57% decrease in the species occurrence,”
PNAS biologist William M. Janousek said.
The main focus of the study was to examine the changes in how common the
western bumblebee is in the region.
“In 1998, if you were to go to 10 random locations in the (Colorado), you
would expect to see them in about seven to eight of those places,” Janousek
said. “In 2020, we found that if you were to go to 10 random locations, you
might only find the species in about one to three of those 10 locations.”
PNAS biologists point to many reasons behind the decline in the study, but
climate change is the main one. In their testing, they measured the heavy
effects of drought and temperature change. The study indicates that the
most optimistic scenario for 2050 is that the occupancy of different
ecoregions will go down to about half of what they host now.
“…more severe scenarios predict declines in all ecoregions ranging from 51
to 97%,” the authors of the study wrote.
They also found that neonicotinoids are the type of pesticides most heavily
affecting the western bumblebee. Neonicotinoids are a form of pesticide
that closely resembles nicotine. It gets soaked into the soil of plants and
disrupts the nervous system of insects. A major increase in the use of
neonicotinoids began in 2004, and since then, there have been multiple
studies done on the effect they have on insects.
“Our findings join a substantial body of research implicating
neonicotinoids (particularly the nitroguanidine group) in ongoing wild bee
declines,” the study states.
The Colorado Office of Policy, Research, and Regulatory Reform is
performing a sunset review of the Pesticides Applicator Act, which
regulates who can use neonicotinoid pesticides. Coloradans are allowed to
comment on the review, which could result in the repeal of the law.
However, Environment Colorado, a policy action group focused on
conservation, sustainability and recycling, wants more action than is
currently allowed under the Pesticides Applicator Act going forward.
“The work that we’re doing to save the bees and the actions that we’re
calling for in the legislature matter and … they really do have this broad
impact and that the bees need help more than ever,” said Natalie Woodland,
the Saves the Bees associate at Environment Colorado.
“We are open to different policy mechanisms to get this done, but what’s
important is that we take action ASAP to save the bees from bee-killing
neonic pesticides,” Woodland said.
Maine addressed this issue in 2018, prohibiting the unlicensed use of
neonicotinoids. New Jersey and New York have also passed laws to restrict
the use of neonicotinoids.
“We need to take action for pollinators this year. We can’t just keep
putting it off. Now is the time to do something about it.” Woodland said.
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Study: Bumblebees decreasing by 57%
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