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January 29, 2026 | Source: Beyond Pesticides
(Beyond Pesticides, January 29, 2026) A study of ecotoxicity risk from neonicotinoid insecticides, published in Environmental Chemistry and Ecotoxicology, finds that chemicals in this class of pesticides, particularly dinotefuron, increase the body temperature of Apis mellifera (European honey bee) and subsequently accelerate the translocation (movement) of contaminants into hives by the honey bees. The research indicates that neonicotinoids affect acetylcholine receptors in the nervous system, leading to an “elevation in octopamine titer [neurotransmitter/hormone] and subsequent increase in the body temperature of honeybees,” the authors report. They continue: “Furthermore, we observed a considerable upregulation [of] the expression of a flight gene flightin in honeybees. This gene accelerates the homing behavior of honeybees and facilitates the rapid and frequent transport of neonicotinoid pesticide-contaminated nectar to the hive.”
In describing their results, the researchers state: “For the first time, we propose that neonicotinoid pesticides accelerate the homing ability of honeybees by affecting their body temperature, which leads to more neonicotinoid pesticides entering the hive and explains the prevalence of neonicotinoids and at higher concentrations in terms of their effects on the honeybee body temperature that enhances homing.” This accelerated movement of neonicotinoid pesticides into honey bee hives heightens the toxicity risks to honey bee populations.
The study also analyzes the difference between S-dinotefuran and R-dinotefuran, which are enantiomers (mirror images) of the same compound that can vary in their chemical properties due to different configurations. The results reveal that “S-dinotefuran exhibited a markedly higher influence on the body temperature of honeybees and the expression of flight genes than R-dinotefuran,” the authors state.
The post Neonicotinoid Insecticides Cause Deadly Overheating Behavior in Honey Bees, Study Finds appeared first on Organic Consumers.
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