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Common Pesticides Stop Bees and Flies from Getting a Good Night’s Sleep

BRISTOL, UK / AGILITYPR.NEWS / January 19, 2021 / Researchers urge UK to keep EU ban on pesticide which has detrimental effect on pollinators


Just like us, many insects need a decent night’s sleep to function properly, but this might not be possible if they have been exposed to neonicotinoid insecticides, the most common form of insecticide used worldwide, suggests research by academics at the University of Bristol.


Two studies by scientists at Bristol’s Schools of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience and Biological Sciences have shown these insecticides affect the amount of sleep taken by both bumblebees and fruit flies, which may help us understand why insect pollinators are vanishing from the wild.


Dr Kiah Tasman, Teaching Associate in the School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience and lead author of the studies, said: “The neonicotinoids we tested had a big effect on the amount of sleep taken by both flies and bees. If an insect was exposed to a similar amount as it might experience on a farm where the pesticide had been applied, it slept less, and its daily behavioural rhythms were knocked out of synch with the normal 24-hour cycle of day and night.”


The fruit fly study published today [21 January] in Scientific Reports, allowed the researchers to study the impact of the pesticides on the insect brain.


As well as finding that typical agricultural concentrations of neonicotinoids ruined the flies’ ability to remember, the researchers also saw changes in the clock in the fly brain which controls its 24-hour cycle of day and night.


Dr James Hodge, Associate Professor in Neuroscience and senior author for the study, added: “Being able to tell time is important for knowing when to be awake and forage, and it looked like these drugged insects were unable to sleep. We know quality sleep is important for insects, just as it is for humans, for their health and forming lasting memories.”


Dr Sean Rands, Senior Lecturer in the School of Biological Sciences and co-author, explained: “Bees and flies have similar structures in their brains, and this suggests one reason why these drugs are so bad for bees is they stop the bees from sleeping properly and then being able to learn where food is in their environment.


“Neonicotinoids are currently banned in the EU, and we hope that this continues in the UK as we leave EU legislation.”


Papers


‘Neonicotinoids disrupt memory, circadian behaviour and sleep’ by Tasman K, Hidalgo S, Zhu B, Rands SA & Hodge JJL in Scientific Reports


‘The neonicotinoid insecticide imidacloprid disrupts bumblebee circadian rhythms and sleep’ by Tasman K, Rands SA & Hodge JJL in iScience [open access]



Notes to editors:


For further information or to arrange an interview with Drs Kiah Tasman, James Hodge or Sean Rands, please contact Joanne Fryer [Monday to Thursday], email joanne.fryer@bristol.ac.uk, mobile: +44 (0)7747 768805 or Shona East [Wednesday to Friday], email shona.east@bristol.ac.uk, mobile: +44 (0) 7971 067 978 at the University of Bristol.


Once the embargo lifts, the Scientific Reports paper will be available at: www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-81548-2



About Neonicotinoids


Neonicotinoids are the most commonly used insecticides in the world and make up nearly 25 per cent of the global insecticide market, which is valued at US $1 billion/year. The intensive use of insecticides has been linked with the global decline in pollinating insects, and all four major types of neonicotinoid have largely been banned in the EU and currently in the UK.


Contacts

Joanne Fryer

joanne.fryer@bristol.ac.uk

University of Bristol

Phone: +44 7747 768805

Shona East

shona.east@bristol.ac.uk

University of Bristol

Phone: +44 7971 067 978