Abstract

Agrochemical risk assessment that takes into account only pesticide active ingredients without the spray adjuvants commonly used in their application will miss important toxicity outcomes detrimental to non-target species, including humans. Lack of disclosure of adjuvant and formulation ingredients coupled with a lack of adequate analytical methods constrains the assessment of total chemical load on beneficial organisms and the environment. Adjuvants generally enhance the pesticidal efficacy and inadvertently the non-target effects of the active ingredient. Spray adjuvants are largely assumed to be biologically inert and are not registered by the USA EPA, leaving their regulation and monitoring to individual states. Organosilicone surfactants are the most potent adjuvants and super-penetrants available to growers. Based on the data for agrochemical applications to almonds from California Department of Pesticide Regulation, there has been increasing use of adjuvants, particularly organosilicone surfactants, during bloom when two-thirds of USA honey bee colonies are present. Increased tank mixing of these with ergosterol biosynthesis inhibitors and other fungicides and with insect growth regulator insecticides may be associated with recent USA honey bee declines. This database archives every application of a spray tank adjuvant with detail that is unprecedented globally. Organosilicone surfactants are good stand alone pesticides, toxic to bees, and are also present in drug and personal care products, particularly shampoos, and thus represent an important component of the chemical landscape to which pollinators and humans are exposed. This mini review is the first to possibly link spray adjuvant use with declining health of honey bee populations.

Highlights

  • Applications of modern pesticide formulations, in combinations, are often accomplished using proprietary spray adjuvants to achieve high efficacy for targeted pests and diseases [1]

  • Numerous studies have found that pesticide active ingredients elicit very different physiological effects on non-target organisms when combined with their co-formulants and tank adjuvants [7,8,9]

  • Among the 300 pesticide formulations tested for oral toxicity to adult honey bee in China, a 25% emulsifiable concentrate (EC) formulation of the fungicide tebuconazole was toxic to the most bee-toxic insecticide known, emamectin benzoate (LD50 = 0.0035 μg/bee), whereas a 5% suspension concentrate of tebuconazole was > 25,000 times less toxic [34]

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Summary

Frontiers in Public Health

Increased tank mixing of these with ergosterol biosynthesis inhibitors and other fungicides and with insect growth regulator insecticides may be associated with recent USA honey bee declines This database archives every application of a spray tank adjuvant with detail that is unprecedented globally. Organosilicone surfactants are good stand alone pesticides, toxic to bees, and are present in drug and personal care products, shampoos, and represent an important component of the chemical landscape to which pollinators and humans are exposed. This mini review is the first to possibly link spray adjuvant use with declining health of honey bee populations

INTRODUCTION
SPRAY ADJUVANTS CONTRIBUTE TO THE TOXIC LOAD
SPRAY ADJUVANT USE DURING POLLINATION OF CALIFORNIA ALMONDS
ARE ORGANOSILICONE SURFACTANTS CAUSING HARM AND UNDERREGULATED?
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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