Title: | Sub-lethal effects of the consumption of Eupatorium buniifolium essential oil in honeybees |
Author(s): | Rossini C; Rodrigo F; Davyt B; Umpierrez ML; Gonzalez A; Garrido PM; Cuniolo A; Porrini LP; Eguaras MJ; Porrini MP; |
Address: | "Laboratorio de Ecologia Quimica, Facultad de Quimica, Universidad de la Republica de Uruguay, Montevideo, Uruguay. Centro de Investigacion en Abejas Sociales (CIAS), Instituto de Investigaciones en Produccion Sanidad y Ambiente (IIPROSAM), Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina" |
DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pone.0241666 |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1932-6203 (Electronic) 1932-6203 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "When developing new products to be used in honeybee colonies, further than acute toxicity, it is imperative to perform an assessment of risks, including various sublethal effects. The long-term sublethal effects of xenobiotics on honeybees, more specifically of acaricides used in honeybee hives, have been scarcely studied, particularly so in the case of essential oils and their components. In this work, chronic effects of the ingestion of Eupatorium buniifolium (Asteraceae) essential oil were studied on nurse honeybees using laboratory assays. Survival, food consumption, and the effect on the composition of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHC) were assessed. CHC were chosen due to their key role as pheromones involved in honeybee social recognition. While food consumption and survival were not affected by the consumption of the essential oil, CHC amounts and profiles showed dose-dependent changes. All groups of CHC (linear and branched alkanes, alkenes and alkadienes) were altered when honeybees were fed with the highest essential oil dose tested (6000 ppm). The compounds that significantly varied include n-docosane, n-tricosane, n-tetracosane, n-triacontane, n-tritriacontane, 9-tricosene, 7-pentacosene, 9-pentacosene, 9-heptacosene, tritriacontene, pentacosadiene, hentriacontadiene, tritriacontadiene and all methyl alkanes. All of them but pentacosadiene were up-regulated. On the other hand, CHC profiles were similar in healthy and Nosema-infected honeybees when diets included the essential oil at 300 and 3000 ppm. Our results show that the ingestion of an essential oil can impact CHC and that the effect is dose-dependent. Changes in CHC could affect the signaling process mediated by these pheromonal compounds. To our knowledge this is the first report of changes in honeybee cuticular hydrocarbons as a result of essential oil ingestion" |
Keywords: | "Alkanes/metabolism Alkenes/metabolism Animals Bees/*drug effects/*metabolism/microbiology Eupatorium/*chemistry Hydrocarbons/metabolism Nosema/pathogenicity Oils, Volatile/*metabolism/*toxicity;" |
Notes: | "MedlineRossini, Carmen Rodrigo, Federico Davyt, Belen Umpierrez, Maria Laura Gonzalez, Andres Garrido, Paula Melisa Cuniolo, Antonella Porrini, Leonardo P Eguaras, Martin Javier Porrini, Martin P eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2020/11/05 PLoS One. 2020 Nov 4; 15(11):e0241666. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241666. eCollection 2020" |