Bee Pollen Is Full of Pesticides Like Mosquito Repellents
http://www.newsweek.com/bee-pollen-full-pesticides-mosquito-repellants-465166
Bees that live next to cornfields and soybean fields spend only a minority of their time feeding on these crop plants; instead, they mostly seek out pollen from flowering weeds, trees and gardens nearby. In the course of their foraging, they are exposed to a surprisingly wide and concerning range of pesticides, new research shows.
In a study published May 30 in the journal Nature Communications, researchers Elizabeth Long and Christian Krupke show that bees next to cornfields collected pollen containing up to 32 different pesticides, most of which didnt originate from crops or agricultural applications. Pollen samples were taken over a four-month period from three hives in West Lafayette, Indiana, where Purdue University is located.
Some of these pesticides were expected. Neonicotinoids, for example, which some research has implicated in the decline of bees, are used to coat seeds and are known to be found in corn and soybean pollen. But others came as quite a surprise. The pesticides found in the greatest quantities were pyrethroids, synthetic products generally used in households to repel insects, says Krupke, an entomology professor at Purdue. Among these were phenothrin, which is used to repel ticks and fleas, and prallethrin, for killing wasps and hornets.
The researchers also found the mosquito repellent DEET (also known as N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide) in every single pollen sample.
Sounds like suburban dwellers have a substantial role in the decline of bees. If you spray chemicals on your lawn, you may want to reconsider it.