Are cover crops a potential threat for pollinators due to clothianidin residues in floral resources?
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
Data
2025Autor
Tarano, Inès Gancedo
Boumal, Thomas
De Toffoli, Marc
Buron, Maxime
Kiljanek, Tomasz
Martel, Anne-Claire
Jacquemart, Anne-Laure
Agnan, Yannick
Metadane
Pokaż pełny rekordStreszczenie
Cover crops are now mandatory in areas
at risk of nitrogen leaching into groundwater. Many
late-flowering entomophilous species used in these
cover crops provide critical floral resources (pollen
and nectar) for pollinators in early autumn. However,
pesticide residues such as neonicotinoids can trans-
fer to cover plants and their floral resources, posing
a potential threat to pollinators. We investigated the
transfer of clothianidin, a neonicotinoid insecticide,
from soil to plants and floral resources in three com-
mon cover species (phacelia, white mustard, and
faba bean). The study was conducted both in fields
conditions (three years after clothianidin treatment
on sugar beet) and under controlled growth chamber
conditions (74 days post-treatment). We analysed
clothianidin concentrations in soils, vegetative parts
(stems and leaves), flowers, pollen, and fruits. Our
results demonstrated that clothianidin persisted across
the soil–plant–floral resource continuum in both field
(soil concentration of 2.79 ng g−1 ) and growth cham-
ber (soil concentrations of 34.4–106 ng g−1 ) experi-
ments. Clothianidin residues accumulated in floral
resources (ranging from 0.55 to 66.0 ng g−1 in pollen)
posed a potential risk to pollinators through pollen
consumption exposure (hazard quotient close to 1),
and an even greater risk through soil contact exposure
(hazard quotient > 1, reaching up to several hundred).
These findings highlight that neonicotinoid residues
in soil, and to a lesser extent in cover crop pollen,
may threaten pollinator health.
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