Abstract

Introduced wasps (Vespula germanica and V. vulgaris) are costly invertebrate pests in New Zealand, with large impacts on the local ecology and economy. Wasps eat honeybees (Apis mellifera), which has potentially devastating effects on hive health, as well as agricultural and horticultural industries. Vespex bait, which contains fipronil in a proteinaceous carrier, has recently been introduced for wasp control. In over a decade of reported trials, honeybees have never been observed foraging on Vespex, likely because the bait contains no sugars to serve as a bee food source. However, the potential for the control agent fipronil to enter beehives has not been tested. Therefore, here, we investigated this using a liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry assay of fipronil and two of its environmental breakdown and metabolic derivatives, fipronil desulfinyl and fipronil sulfone. We did not detect fipronil in any of the worker bee, bee larva, honey or pollen samples (n = 120 per product) collected from 30 hives over a 2-year period. Furthermore, although we detected fipronil desulfinyl in one honeybee sample, this is thought to have originated from a single individual, representing a rare occurrence of intoxication, and there was no evidence that Vespex was the toxicant source. There was also no evidence of trophallactic transfer of fipronil or its derivatives in any of the hives sampled. Previous studies have reported the impairment of individual bee performance at fipronil doses similar to the detection limit of our study. However, our results provide confidence that if undetectable intoxication was occurring, it would involve an acute exposure for those few individuals affected, with minimal impairment to colonies. Therefore, we conclude that the use of Vespex in the vicinity of honeybees does not result in significant hive uptake while effectively reducing wasp pressure on honeybee colonies.

Highlights

  • The limit of detection (LOD) for fipronil and its two derivatives ranged between 1.1 and 1.8 ng/mL, corresponding to 0.16–0.26 ng/bee or 1.1–1.8 ng/g of bee product, while the limit of quantitation (LOQ) fell between 1.8–2.0 ng/mL (0.25–0.29 ng/bee), which are within the sub-lethal levels needed to observe toxicological effects on bees and below the most conservative reported ingested LD50 of fipronil for honeybees (1 ng/bee; see S2 Table and [36])

  • We found no trace of fipronil above its detection limit in any of the worker bee, bee larva, honey or pollen samples collected from either study area across both seasons following Vespex bait treatment for wasp control (Table 2)

  • We detected 6 ng/mL of fipronil desulfinyl in one sample assay containing approximately seven worker bees that was collected following wasp treatment in Big Bush Conservation Area (BB), two further assays from the same bee sample did not detect any of this compound

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Summary

Introduction

Unintentional, non-target exposure during the broad-scale use of insecticides has been recognised as a contributing factor to the loss of honeybees (Apis mellifera L. 1758) worldwide [1–. A new method for suppressing wasps over a wide area recently became available in New Zealand [21] This involves placing bait stations on trees in areas where wasps are active and filling them once per year with a protein wasp bait containing 1 g/kg fipronil active ingredient (traded as Vespex). We chose to seek direct evidence of any colony-wide exposure by developing a test for fipronil and its derivatives that was sufficiently sensitive to detect sub-lethal quantities of up to one-tenth of a conservatively reported median lethal dose (LD50) and testing numerous samples from multiple hives situated at sites where wasps were baited using Vespex with fipronil as the active ingredient.

22–26 Feb 2016 26 Feb 2016
Materials and methods
Method validation
Results
Discussion
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