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A deeper understanding of system interactions can explain contradictory field results on pesticide impact on honey bees

Biology

A deeper understanding of system interactions can explain contradictory field results on pesticide impact on honey bees

D. Breda, D. Frizzera, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Dimitri Breda and colleagues explains the contradictory effects of pesticides on honeybees using a novel systems biology approach. The interplay between various stressors and viruses like the deformed wing virus reveals how honeybees may experience drastically different outcomes—ranging from survival to premature death—when exposed to the same pesticide. These findings not only clarify previous field test discrepancies but also emphasize the complexity of ecological interactions.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
Contradictory field results on pesticide effects on honeybees are explained using a systems biology approach. The study focuses on system architecture rather than individual interaction strengths. In vivo experiments on caged honeybees demonstrate that pesticide impact is shaped by concurrent stressors. The immune-suppressive effect of deformed wing virus (DWV) creates a positive feedback loop, leading to bistability (two stable equilibria). This explains how bees under similar conditions experience different outcomes (prolonged survival or premature death) when exposed to the same stressor, impacting hive vulnerability. These conclusions reconcile conflicting field test results and have implications for field studies on complex systems.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Sep 29, 2022
Authors
Dimitri Breda, Davide Frizzera, Giulia Giordano, Elisa Seffin, Virginia Zanni, Desiderato Annoscia, Christopher J. Topping, Franco Blanchini, Francesco Nazzi
Tags
pesticides
honeybees
systems biology
stressors
deformed wing virus
ecological interactions
bistability
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