Publication | Open Access
Organochlorine Pesticides in Honey and Pollen Samples from Managed Colonies of the Honey Bee Apis mellifera Linnaeus and the Stingless Bee Scaptotrigona mexicana Guérin from Southern, Mexico
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Citations
90
References
2018
Year
In this paper, we show the results of investigating the presence of organochlorine pesticides in honey and pollen samples from managed colonies of the honey bee, <i>Apis mellifera</i> L. and of the stingless bee <i>Scaptotrigona mexicana</i> Guérin. Three colonies of each species were moved into each of two sites. Three samples of pollen and three samples of honey were collected from each colony: the first collection occurred at the beginning of the study and the following ones at every six months during a year. Thus the total number of samples collected was 36 for honey (18 for <i>A. mellifera</i> and 18 for <i>S. mexicana</i>) and 36 for pollen (18 for <i>A. mellifera</i> and 18 for <i>S. mexicana</i>). We found that 88.44% and 93.33% of honey samples, and 22.22% and 100% of pollen samples of <i>S. mexicana</i> and <i>A. mellifera</i>, respectively, resulted positive to at least one organochlorine. The most abundant pesticides were Heptaclor (44% of the samples), γ-HCH (36%), DDT (19%), Endrin (18%) and DDE (11%). Despite the short foraging range of <i>S. mexicana</i>, the number of pesticides quantified in the honey samples was similar to that of <i>A. mellifera</i>. Paradoxically we found a small number of organochlorines in pollen samples of <i>S. mexicana</i> in comparison to <i>A. mellifera</i>, perhaps indicating a low abundance of pollen sources within the foraging range of this species.
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