Simple SummaryThe effects of pesticides on honey bees are of great concern to beekeepers and the general public. In particular, a class of pesticides called neonicotinoids has been found in some studies to affect bee learning and colony function. A pesticide classified as a neonicotinoid, flonicamid, has been detected in the residue analyses of honey and pollen samples for a published study, and that compound was tested at three concentrations (0, 50, and 250 parts per billion (ppb)) in sugar syrup in a field study with bee colonies and in two cage studies. Colony population levels, hive weight changes, thermoregulation, and CO2 concentrations were measured in the field study, and syrup consumption, thermoregulation, and survivorship by worker bees were measured in the cage studies. No significant treatment effects of the pesticide exposure were observed in either the field or the cage studies. These results support the idea that flonicamid is safe for honey bees at these concentrations. Publishing such results when they occur is important, so people use safe pesticides when they need them.The extent to which insecticides harm non-target beneficial insects is controversial. The effects of long-term exposure on honey bees to sublethal concentrations of flonicamid, a pyridinecarboxamide compound used as a systemic insecticide against sucking insects, were examined in a field study and two cage studies. The field study involved the continuous weight, temperature, and CO2 monitoring of 18 honey bee colonies, 6 of which were exposed over six weeks to 50 ppb flonicamid in sugar syrup, 6 exposed to 250 ppb flonicamid in syrup, and 6 exposed to unadulterated syrup (control). Treatments were derived from concentrations observed in honey samples in a published study. No effects were observed on foraging activity, hive weight gain, thermoregulation, or average CO2 concentrations. However, Varroa mite infestations may have also contributed to experimental variability. The two cage studies, in which cages (200 newly-emerged bees in each) were exposed to the same flonicamid concentrations as the field study and kept in a variable-temperature incubator, likewise did not show any experiment-wide effects on survivorship, thermoregulation, or syrup consumption. These results suggest that field applications of flonicamid that result in concentrations as high as 250 ppb in honey may be largely safe for honey bees.