Abstract

This paper shows the results of a dose-response study in Scaptotrigona bipunctata bees, Lepeletier, 1836 (Hymenoptera: Apidae) exposed to the insecticide Fastac Duo. The aim was to evaluate the lethal concentration that causes the death of 50% of bees (LC50) and investigate the odd of mortality after exposure to different concentrations, using the logistic regression model under the Bayesian approach. In this approach, it is possible to incorporate a prior information and gives more accurate inferential results. Three independent dose-response experiments were analyzed, dissimilar in their lead time according to guidelines from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), in which each assay contained four replicates at the concentration levels investigated, including control. Observing exposure to the agrochemical, it was identified that the higher the concentration, the greater the odd of mortality. Regarding the estimated lethal concentrations for each experiment, the following values were found, 0.03 g a.i. L-1, for 24 hours, 0.04 g a.i. L-1, for 48 hours and 0.06 g a.i. L-1 for 72 hours, showing that in experiments with longer exposure times there was an increase in LC50. Concluding, the study showed an alternative approach to classical methods for dose-response studies in Scaptotrigona bipunctata bees exposed to the insecticide Fastac Duo.

Highlights

  • Bees, belonging to the class of pollinating insects, play a crucial role in the stability and conservation of biosystems

  • This study aims to show the statistical results obtained by Bayesian methods, using logistic regression, inherent to the dose-response assay (LC50), in Scaptotrigona bipunctata bees exposed to the insecticide Fastac Duo

  • Adult Scaptotrigona bipunctata forages were collected at the entrance of the colony when they returned from foraging, at the Fazenda Experimental de Iguatemi (FEI) (23°25'S and 51°57'W) of Universidade Estadual de Maringá (UEM) and taken to the Laboratory of Animal Genetics of the Department of Biotechnology, Genetics and Cell Biology at UEM

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Summary

Introduction

Bees, belonging to the class of pollinating insects, play a crucial role in the stability and conservation of biosystems. There are several species of bees classified as native Brazilian bees (Chuttonh, Chanbang, Sringarm, & Burget, 2016) Among these species is the Scaptotrigona bipunctata, Lepeletier, 1836 (Hymenoptera: Apidae), a stingless bee, found in South America (Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Peru) and the Brazilian states of Acre, Ceará, Maranhão, Minas Gerais, Paraná, Pará, Rio Grande do Sul, Rio de Janeiro and Santa Catarina (Camargo & Pedro, 2013). The authors SanchezBayo and Goka (2014), indicate that plants contaminated by specific agrochemicals, in full bloom, play a fundamental role in the mortality of pollinating insects, and may impair the behavior of bees affecting the colony

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