Neonicotinoids are
harming more than bees.
Migrating
songbirds exposed to small amounts of a neonicotinoid pesticide suffered weight
loss and migration delays, both of which could reduce their chances of
survival, according to a new study.
The study is the first to examine the impacts of neonicotinoids—in this case, one called imidacloprid—on wild birds and suggests the pesticides are putting migrating birds at risk during their migration, which hampers their ability to survive and, ultimately, reproduce.
"The
sublethal effects of imidacloprid on food consumption, body condition, and
stopover duration have clear links with survival and reproduction and are
predicted to negatively affect populations of migratory birds that commonly use
agricultural habitats for refueling," the authors wrote in a study
published today in Science.
Neonicotinoids—widely
used on corn, cotton, sorghum, soybeans and on some other fruits and
vegetables—are thought to be at least partially behind bee declines in recent
years and also have been linked to widespread impacts on aquatic insects and
invertebrates.
Spring
migration for birds happens the same time that many farmers are seeding
pesticide-treated crops in northern midlatitudes, which is the heart of the
Midwest and major U.S. farming regions.
Researchers gave small doses—amounts they'd likely be exposed to in the wild—of imidacloprid to white-crowned sparrows during the birds' spring migration through southern Ontario, Canada. "The [doses] here were extremely low … minute," Christy Morrissey, an ecotoxicologist in the University of Saskatchewan's College of Arts and Science and the School of Environment and Sustainability and senior author on the study, told EHN.
They
measured the birds' body before and after exposure and they used radio
transmitters to track them. Migratory birds' main fuel source for flying
hundreds of miles during migration is fat – to make the strenuous trips they
need to put on about 50 to 100 percent of their body mass in a short period of
time with fat, Morrissey said.
"They
change their whole physiology and become extremely fat in a short period of
time and that is burned when they fly," she said.
Birds
given the highest dose lost 6 percent of their body mass within six hours.
Also, the exposure caused birds to stay an average of 3.5 days longer at the
stopover site on their migration route compared to birds that weren't dosed.
"When
exposed to these chemicals it caused this anorexic response, they reduced food
consumption and essentially rapidly lost weight," Morrissey said.
Morrissey
went on: "When we released them with radio tag on, we did not see
disorientation, as we expected them to, but quite surprising for us, they
didn't fly. They wouldn't leave the stopover site."
She
said migration is a critical period for birds and any delays in these
travels—which include hundreds of miles of nonstop flight —can
"seriously" harm nesting and reproduction.
"The
decision for birds to depart a stopover has to do with their internal fuel
stores, as well as good weather conditions, or if there's a headwind, but we
controlled for those in our study," Morrissey said. "We think they
don't have sufficient fuel in the tank."
Such
exposures may partially explain why migrant and farmland bird species are
declining so dramatically worldwide, Morrissey added. About 74 percent of bird
species in North America that rely on farm habitat have suffered population
declines since 1966.
Morrissey
and colleagues say these impacts are likely due to the pesticide suppressing
the birds' appetites—which would mean they would eat less food and not have the
fuel and energy to re-start their migrating flights.
Neonicotinoids
are neurotoxic, and overstimulate the nervous system.
"[Neonicotonoids]
are structurally similar to nicotine — nicotine is an appetite
suppressant," Morrissey said. "These low doses could have caused
birds to lose their appetite and there could be an additional effect of
metabolizing the chemical and its general toxicity causes them to lose
weight."
"This
is bigger than the bees"
Adult white-crowned sparrow (Credit: Pete Myers) |
Morrissey
said, while there are differences between species' response to any contaminant,
there's "no real reason this would be unique" and only impacting
white-crowned sparrows.
Most
previous studies have reported the pesticides' health impacts to insects, such
as bees, however, more and more studies show problems for birds, including:
A 2015 study that found
imidacloprid-treated seeds can kill red-legged partridges and reduce their
offspring's immunity;
A 2013 study that reported three
different types of neonicotinoids can reduce egg size and fertilization rate in
re-legged partridge;
A 2017 study—from the same researchers
involved in the new study—that found imidacloprid impacted white-crowned
sparrows' orientation during migration.(In the new study, disorientation was
not one of the impacts).
"Our
study shows that this is bigger than the bees — birds can also be harmed by
modern neonicotinoid pesticides which should worry us all," said co-author
and biologist Bridget Stutchbury of York University in a statement.
Morrissey
said, in seeking solutions to this exposure, banning individual chemicals will
not work.
There
are "already replacement for neonics—and they're just as toxics as
neonics, they're just a different name," she said.
Rather
we "need to change the whole system to make it more resilient."
"Monoculture,
single crop agriculture is heavily reliant on chemicals for production,
unfortunately, that's just not conducive to life and biodiversity," she
said.
"We
should incentivize farmers to diversify systems rather than substituting one
chemical for another."