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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Bumblebee Queens Prefer to Live in a Toxic Home

An undated photo provided by Sabrina Rondeau shows Bumblebee queens starting new colonies in the spring after burrowing into soil and spending the winter hibernating alone.
An undated photo provided by Sabrina Rondeau shows Bumblebee queens starting new colonies in the spring after burrowing into soil and spending the winter hibernating alone.
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North-facing, sloping ground with loose, sandy soil — if you’re a bumblebee queen on the market for a winter home, these features will have you racing to make an offer. But scientists were recently stunned to find there’s something else these monarchs like in a place to hibernate: pesticides.


In a paper published last month in the journal Science of The Total Environment, researchers described an experiment that gave common eastern bumblebee queens a choice: hibernate in clean soil, or in soil laced with pesticides. The insects behaved in a way that was the opposite of what was expected.


“Queens did not avoid any of the pesticides,” said Sabrina Rondeau, an ecologist at the University of Ottawa. “Even at high concentrations they didn’t, and still seem to prefer the soil contaminated with pesticides.”


An undated photo provided by Sabrina Rondeau shows Scientists using small cement mixers to blend soils, replicating their experiment in 10 different hoop houses.
An undated photo provided by Sabrina Rondeau shows Scientists using small cement mixers to blend soils, replicating their experiment in 10 different hoop houses.


S. Hollis Woodard, a bee biologist at the University of California, Riverside, said, “It wasn’t just one pesticide at one concentration, it was across the board.” That’s scary, she said, because our soils are full of pesticides. Gravitating toward these pesticides may put queens at risk for direct exposure, with potentially damaging consequences.


Most of the roughly 250 species of bumblebee have annual life cycles, where queens start new colonies in the spring that grow throughout the summer before dying out in the fall. As winter nears, queens that have mated then burrow into the soil to sleep through the cold before restarting the cycle. — DARREN INCORVAIA /NYT


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