Current Pesticide Risk Assessment Protocols Do Not Adequately Address Differences between Honey Bees (Apis mellifera) and Bumble Bees (Bombus spp.)

Recent research has demonstrated colony-level sublethal effects of imidacloprid on bumble bees affecting foraging and food consumption, and thus colony growth and reproduction, at lower pesticide concentrations than for honey bee colonies. However, these studies may not reflect the full effects of neonicotinoids on bumble bees because bumble bee life cycles are different from those of honey bees. Unlike honey bees, bumble bees live in colonies for only a few months each year. Assessing the sublethal effects of systemic insecticides only on the colony level is appropriate for honey bees, but for bumble bees, this approach addresses just part of their annual life cycle. Queens are solitary from the time they leave their home colonies in fall until they produce their first workers the following year. Queens forage for pollen and nectar, and are thus exposed to more risk of direct pesticide exposure than honey bee queens. Almost no research has been done on pesticide exposure to and effects on bumble bee queens. Additional research should focus on critical periods in a bumble bee queen’s life which have the greatest nutritional demands, foraging requirements, and potential for exposure to pesticides, particularly the period during and after nest establishment in the spring when the queen must forage for the nutritional needs of her brood and for her own needs while she maintains an elevated body temperature in order to incubate the brood.


INTRODUCTION
Bumble bees are major crop pollinators, particularly in temperate ecosystems.Kleijn et al. (2015) ranked 11 North American bumble bee species and seven European species among the 100 top wild bees for crop pollination value worldwide, with Bombus impatiens, Bombus terrestris/lucorum (indistinguishable in the field), and Bombus lapidarius at the top.Bumble bees pollinate springblooming crops and wildflowers under cooler and wetter weather than honey bees (Corbet et al., 1993), and pollinate flowers that require high frequency sonication (King and Buchmann, 2003).Bumble bees are keystone species in natural pollination networks because of the diversity of flowering plants they visit (Memmott et al., 2004), their ability to use flowers requiring complex behavior for pollination (Heinrich, 1979), and the long tongues of some species, allowing them to reach nectar deep in flowers not effectively pollinated by other insects (Corbet, 2000).
Multiple factors are implicated for these losses (Goulson et al., 2015) including: loss of long-term flowering habitat (Goulson et al., 2005;Xie et al., 2008;Grixti et al., 2009), increased infection with pathogens and parasites (Cameron et al., 2011(Cameron et al., , 2016;;Szabo et al., 2012;Graystock et al., 2015), displacement of native species by imported commercial species (Inoue et al., 2008;Morales et al., 2013), and climate change (Kerr et al., 2015).The decline in bumble bee abundance and shift from early emerging to later emerging bumble bee species following spring aerial application of fenitrothion to New Brunswick forests shows that pesticide application during this sensitive period can also be a factor (Plowright et al., 1978;Plowright and Rodd, 1980).
Pesticide risk assessments require identifying pesticide concentrations causing adverse effects on species survival and reproduction, understanding the routes and magnitude of pesticide exposure and evaluating these in relation to each other at all stages of the life cycle (Sanchez-Bayo and Tennekes, 2015).Historically, pesticide risk assessments for pollinators focused on acute toxicity, using standardized methods to determine the median lethal dose (LD 50 ) for honey bee workers, and models to quantify honey bee contact exposure from foliar applications (Fischer and Moriarty, 2011).Reviews comparing LD 50 values among bee species have shown that bumble bee workers are similar to or less sensitive than honey bee workers for most pesticides (Thompson and Hunt, 1999;Thompson, 2001;Mommaerts and Smagghe, 2011;Arena and Sgolastra, 2014;Sanchez-Bayo and Goka, 2014).
With increasing concern about losses of honey bees in North America and Europe (Vanengelsdorp and Meixner, 2010), decline of wild pollinators in Europe (Biesmeijer et al., 2006), and evidence of sublethal effects of pesticides on pollinators (Desneux et al., 2007), assessment of pesticide risks to pollinators has come under increased scrutiny.This scrutiny has particularly focused on neonicotinoid insecticides (Maxim and van der Sluijs, 2010).Although neonicotinoids have been implicated in direct mortality of honey bees (Pistorius et al., 2009;Cutler et al., 2014) and bumble bees (Xerces Society, 2014), the continuing controversy about the risk of neonicotinoid insecticides to bees rests on whether the levels to which bees are exposed cause sublethal effects on the long-term health and survival of bee populations (Blacquière et al., 2012;Godfray et al., 2014Godfray et al., , 2015)).

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN HONEY BEE AND BUMBLE BEE LIFE CYCLES
Honey bees live in eusocial colonies as superorganisms, with the queen always attended by workers (Straub et al., 2015).A honey bee queen does not forage.She leaves the protective environment of the colony only once, for her mating flight (Sammataro and Avitabile, 1998).Her exposure to pesticides is mediated by workers who collect pollen and nectar and process them into bee bread and honey.Large honey bee colonies can compensate for loss of workers from pesticide exposure, maintaining colony size and honey production, although small colonies may be more susceptible (Henry et al., 2015;Wu-Smart and Spivak, 2016).
In contrast, bumble bees live in colonies for only part of the year, and the potential for the queen to be directly exposed to pesticides, orally and by contact, is much greater than for honey bees.Unlike honey bees, which overwinter as a colony, only the mated bumble bee queen overwinters.In the typical bumble bee life cycle, after overwintering each queen must successfully establish a colony in order to reproduce, although there are also bumble bee species that are inquilines (nest parasites) on other bumble bee species, and individual queens may usurp the nests of other queens (Goulson, 2010).Many bumble bee colonies fail, and many produce only males, with generally only the largest colonies producing both males and new queens (Duchateau and Velthuis, 1988;Müller and Schmid-Hempel, 1992).This may be due to the greater resources required to produce queens.Queen larvae in Bombus terrestris require approximately 3X as much food as workers and 2X as much as males (Duchateau and Velthuis, 1988).As a result, males are generally present in excess, although in most species queens mate only once (Goulson, 2010).
The most energy-intensive period of the queen's life is after establishment of a new colony, because she not only has to forage for sufficient pollen and nectar to support herself and her larvae, but also produce enough heat to incubate the developing eggs and larvae (Heinrich, 2004).She heats this brood clump with her own body, maintaining a body temperature of 35-38 • C day and night during the first few weeks after nest initiation to keep the brood around 30 • C (Heinrich, 1974).Incubating Bombus vosnesenskii queens in a laboratory environment (20-23 • C), with a 50% sucrose solution supplied so that they did not have to forage, consumed ca. 1 ml. of sucrose solution (0.5 g. of sucrose) per day, 3X as much as non-incubating queens (Heinrich, 1972).
Although for honey bees the gold standard for pesticide risk assessment is to evaluate effects on the long-term survival of the colony as a whole, for bumble bees, the appropriate standard is 2-fold: (1) effects on colony production of new queens and males, and (2) effects on queen success in mating, overwintering, establishing, and supporting a new colony capable of reproducing at the end of the season.A number of studies of sublethal effects of neonicotinoids have addressed foraging, growth, and reproduction of bumble bee colonies (Supplementary Table 1); very few have addressed pesticide exposure to bumble bee queens or possible effects on their fitness.

NEONICOTINOID CONCENTRATIONS WITH SUBLETHAL EFFECTS ON BUMBLE BEE COLONIES
The specifics of 24 studies of the sublethal effects of oral exposure to neonicotinoids in bumble bee colonies are presented in Supplementary Table 1, including whether they were in the laboratory or field, the extent to which foraging was a component, the concentration and duration of exposure, and the species used.One important factor is whether workers traveled for food.This appears most dramatically in Mommaerts et al. (2010).When workers had to travel 20 cm to a separate box for food, exposure to imidacloprid at 10 ppb for 14 days resulted in a significant (60%) loss of reproduction, whereas in an otherwise identical test with the food in the nest box, there was no significant loss of reproduction at 10 or 20 ppb.
Another important distinction is between the studies with queenright colonies (queen plus workers, generally standardized by starting size) and those using micro-colonies (small artificial colonies with 3-5 workers, one of whom becomes dominant and lays eggs).Due to the haplo-diploid system of reproduction in Hymenoptera, unmated workers can produce offspring, but they are always haploid, and thus male (Goulson, 2010).Microcolonies are used only in laboratory or confined greenhouse experiments (Tasei et al., 2000;Gradish et al., 2010;Mommaerts et al., 2010); queenright colonies are used for field studies, whether the pesticide exposure happens in the field (Larson et al., 2013;Rundlöf et al., 2015), or in the laboratory followed by field foraging (Whitehorn et al., 2012;Feltham et al., 2014), or by simultaneous provision of pesticide-treated sugar water and field foraging (Gill et al., 2012;Gill and Raine, 2014;Moffat et al., 2015Moffat et al., , 2016)).
Many of the studies in Supplementary  2010) reported significant loss of reproduction at 10 ppb imidacloprid in micro-colonies required to travel 20 cm for food, and a complete loss of reproduction in queenright colonies at 10 ppb imidacloprid when required to travel 3 m for food.Even without requiring the workers to travel, Laycock et al. (2012) still had a dose-dependent decrease in both sugar water and pollen consumption and a decline in brood production of microcolonies down to 1.27 ppb imidacloprid with 14 days exposure.In a subsequent laboratory experiment, Laycock and Cresswell (2013) found a dose-dependent reduction in brood production at 0.3-10 ppb of imidacloprid with 14 days of exposure, but the colonies substantially recovered after 14 days off dose.Bryden et al. (2013) measured birth and death rates over time in a laboratory colony at 10 ppb, and found eclosion of new workers was near zero after 21 days.
In studies requiring field foraging with B. terrestris and imidacloprid, Whitehorn et al. (2012) found that queenright colonies fed imidacloprid for 14 days at 6 ppb in pollen, and 0.7 ppb in sugar water followed by field foraging had a modest but significant reduction in total colony weight, but a major reduction (85%) in queen production.Feltham et al. (2014) also fed queenright colonies 6 ppb imidacloprid in pollen and 0.7 ppb in sugar water for 14 days and found a subsequent 31% reduction in the rate of field pollen foraging.Gill et al. (2012) and Gill and Raine (2014) used a longer period (28 days) and higher level (10 ppb in sugar water) of exposure, and similarly found effects on the efficiency of field pollen foraging and effects on worker numbers and brood.Moffat et al. (2015), providing colonies foraging freely in the field with a one-time supplement of 1500 ml of sugar water with 2.1 ppb imidacloprid, found significant reductions in colony growth, viable brood and surviving bees at the end of 43 or 48 days.Repeating the experiment the next year at 2.5 ppb, there was again a significant decrease in brood cells, although changes in live bees, nest mass, and number of queens were not significant (Moffat et al., 2016).
In summary, imidacloprid consistently affects foraging and subsequently colony growth and brood production of B. terrestris at a level of 10 ppb in sugar water or 6 ppb in pollen and 0.7 ppb in sugar water for an exposure period of 14 days.Even a sugar water supplement to natural foraging at 2.1-2.5 ppb imidacloprid reduced brood production of colonies foraging in the field.
There are fewer studies using B. impatiens, and those found colony effects at higher imidacloprid concentrations than for B. terrestris.Scholer and Krischik (2014), testing a range of concentrations, found reduced production of males and colony weight at 14 ppb and higher queen mortality at 16 ppb using queenright colonies traveling 30.5 cm for food.Morandin and Winston (2003) found less efficient foraging behavior at 30 ppb in mixed pollen and sugar water patties, but not at 7 ppb, and found no effect of either concentration on colony growth.
Different neonicotinoid compounds have different effects on bumble bees at the levels of neurons, feeding behavior in individual worker bees, and colonies (Kessler et al., 2015;Moffat et al., 2016).Fewer studies have been conducted with thiamethoxam and clothianidin than with imidacloprid.Moffat et al. (2016) directly compared thiamethoxam, clothianidin, and imidacloprid, each provided at 2.5 ppb in a sugar water supplement to naturally foraging colonies in the field, and found that imidacloprid reduced the number of brood cells; thiamethoxam reduced brood cells, live bees, nest mass, and the proportion of females in B. terretstris; the only significant effect of clothianidin at that concentration was to increase the number of queens produced.By contrast Rundlöf et al. (2015), in a field study with exposure to higher concentrations of clothianidin from the nectar and pollen of seed-treated oilseed rape (mean concentration 13.9 ± 1.8 ppb in honey bee collected pollen, 5.4 ± 1.4 ppb in bumble bee nectar), found a 63% reduction in new queens produced, and also significant reductions in colony growth and production of workers and males.Field studies by Cutler and Scott-Dupree (2014) and Sterk et al. (2016) found no effect of clothianidin seed treatment on bumble bee colonies, probably because the concentrations were lowbelow 0.8 ppb for corn pollen (Cutler and Scott-Dupree, 2014) and from 1.3 ppb to below the level of quantification for oil seed rape pollen (Sterk et al., 2016).In a laboratory study with B. impatiens that also involved a foraging assay, Franklin et al. (2004) found no significant effects on colony health or foraging behavior at 6 ppb and at 36 ppb.In a laboratory microcolony study, Piiroinen et al. (2016) also found no effect of clothianidin at 1 ppb, except to bees stressed in a behavioral test.
For thiamethoxam, laboratory studies differ on the levels showing negative effects, with Elston et al. (2013) finding significant delays in nest initiation, fewer eggs laid, and zero larvae produced at 10 ppb, while Laycock et al. (2014), testing a range of concentrations, found significant effects on food consumption and oviposition starting only at 39 ppb.Fauser-Misslin et al. (2014), in a long-term laboratory study, found that a mixture of thiamethoxam (4 ppb) and clothianidin (1.5 ppb) resulted in reduced worker survival, reduced production of workers and males, and a 77% reduction in production of new queens.Stanley et al. (2016) found no effect of a 2.4 ppb thiamethoxam sugar water supplement on colony growth, but found effects on field foraging for pollen, with longer foraging bouts producing less pollen for treated bees.

LEVELS OF ORAL EXPOSURE OF BUMBLE BEE COLONIES TO NEONICOTINOIDS IN POLLEN AND NECTAR
There are few direct measurements of pesticides in pollen or nectar collected by bumble bee colonies.David et al. (2016) provides the most comprehensive data for neonicotinoids and fungicides in pollen in rural and urban areas near Sussex (UK).They found thiamethoxam in 100% of their samples of stored bumble bee pollen from rural areas, and at surprisingly high concentrations (mean 18 ppb, median 21 ppb) -higher than in oilseed rape pollen, pollen from wildflowers on the borders of oilseed rape fields, and honey bee pollen from hives adjacent to the oilseed rape fields.No thiamethoxam was found in stored pollen from urban bumble bee nests, but imidacloprid was found in 1/3 of the urban nests at a mean concentration of 6.5 ppb.Rundlöf et al. (2015) measured clothianidin at 5.4 ± 1.4 ppb in bumble bee nectar from colonies adjacent to treated oilseed rape fields with effects described above.These neonicotinoid concentrations are higher than those generally considered "field realistic" in previous reviews (Blacquière et al., 2012;Godfray et al., 2014Godfray et al., , 2015)), and are also higher than mean or median concentrations in area-wide surveys of trapped honey bee pollen (Chauzat et al., 2006;Stoner and Eitzer, 2013) or stored honey bee bread (Lawrence et al., 2016).

Knowledge Gaps
Pesticide risk assessment requires evaluating toxicity (acute, chronic, and sublethal) and exposure (contact and oral) and then evaluating the relationship between toxicity and exposure (Sanchez-Bayo and Tennekes, 2015).Throughout this complex process, it is crucial to keep the protection goals in mind.A workshop of government, academic, and industry representatives identified the protection goal "to maintain pollinator services and the biodiversity and abundance of bumble bees in a specific area" (Cabrera et al., 2015).These are knowledge gaps I see in achieving this protection goal throughout the bumble bee life cycle:

Effects of Pesticide Exposure of Colonies on Queen Production
The appropriate metric for colony fitness is the production of queens and, to a lesser extent, males, because only mated queens overwinter and establish new colonies.Few of the studies in Supplementary Table 1 reported on queen production (Whitehorn et al., 2012;Larson et al., 2013;Fauser-Misslin et al., 2014;Scholer and Krischik, 2014;Moffat et al., 2016).Bumble bee queens have several critical periods of foraging between their emergence as adults in the fall and when the first cohort of workers takes over foraging the following spring (Table 1).As noted above, spring nest establishment and incubation make the greatest foraging demands on queens.
In addition to the energy expenditure for nest incubation (Heinrich, 1972), queens must also expend significant energy in nectar foraging, requiring major investments in warm-up for flight (depending on ambient temperature) and for flight itself.
Foraging is required daily, since the queen's energy storage in her honey pot is only sufficient for a few hours of incubation (Heinrich, 2004).Spring foraging is also highly localized to minimize the energy expense of extended flight and minimize time away from the nest (Heinrich, 2004).The estimates of food consumption for each critical stage in Table 1 were gleaned from literature on several different species, but at least laboratory estimates for each critical period for B. terrestris and B. impatiens, which are commercially available and crucial crop pollinators, should be measured.Food consumption at each stage is important to assess acute toxicity by relating pesticide concentration in pollen and nectar to an oral dose per queen bee, which can then be related to the LD 50 (Stoner and Eitzer, 2013), although both the oral dose and the LD 50 would need to be standardized for differences in weight between queens and workers and for variation among queens (Thompson and Hunt, 1999).

Major Sources of Nectar and Pollen for Bumble Bee Queens during Critical Life Stages
Detailed studies of pollen and nectar sources of spring bumble bee queens have been made in west Scotland (Brian, 1957), Wisconsin (Macior, 1968), and sub-Alpine environments near Mount Hood in Oregon (Macior, 1994), and could be extracted from season-long surveys of bumble bee visits to flowers (e.g., Fussell and Corbet, 1992) and from analysis of pollen on queens from museum collections (Scheper et al., 2014).Bumble bee queens have been frequently noted as pollinators of springblooming fruit trees and bushes (e.g., lowbush blueberry: Stubbs et al., 1992;Javorek et al., 2002;apple: Macior, 1968;Adamson et al., 2012;Russo et al., 2015), and thus use of pesticides on these crops and on spring-blooming ornamental shrubs and trees attractive to bumble bee queens, such as rhododendron, lilac and honeysuckle (Evans et al., 2007), may pose a particular hazard in this critical stage of the bumble bee life cycle.

Potential Effects of Pesticide Exposure on Bumble Bee Queens
There is no data on whether pesticide exposure has sublethal effects on the solitary stages of bumble bee queens.Bumble bee queens have major physiological differences from workers because they build up fat reserves for overwintering, consume those resources during hibernation, and then switch over to ovary development, nest establishment, wax production, and incubation (Votavová et al., 2015).A recent paper (Chaimanee et al., 2016) reported loss of viability of sperm stored in the spermatheca of honey bee queens exposed to 20 ppb of imidacloprid for 7 days.Bumble bee queens mate before overwintering and store sperm for months before beginning oviposition, so they could be similarly affected.

CONCLUSION
Although, eusocial bee colonies are buffered from the effects of pesticides in relation to their size (Henry et al., 2015;Straub et al., 2015;Wu-Smart and Spivak, 2016), and the solitary queen phase of the bumble bee life cycle and early nest establishment are likely the periods of greatest sensitivity to pesticides (Thompson, 2001;Cabrera et al., 2015), current recommendations for additional risk assessment protocols for bumble bees focus exclusively on colonies (Cabrera et al., 2015).These recommendations may become policy not only for neonicotinoids, but also for other pesticides as pollinator health rises in importance to regulatory agencies.There is danger in limiting pesticide risk assessment to what is likely the least sensitive stage of the bumble bee life cycle.
Future pesticide risk assessments should be directed by a model based on expert knowledge of bumble bee ecology throughout the life cycle identifying the most critical points for targeted research (Henry et al., 2016).In the meantime, evaluation of pesticide concentrations that interfere with nest establishment, nectar foraging, and brood incubation, and comparison of those concentrations to probable exposures on pesticide-treated spring blooming crops would be apparent priorities for research.
Table 1 have demonstrated adverse effects of imidacloprid on B. terrestris colonies at concentrations well below the proposed US EPA trigger levels for honey bees (No Observed Adverse Effect Concentration of 25 ppb in nectar and the Lowest Observed Adverse Effect Concentration of 100 ppb in pollen; United States Environmental Protection Agency, 2016).Mommaerts et al. (

TABLE 1 |
Critical periods for nutrition of bumble bee queens.