Manganese Speeds Up Honey Bees

Redistributed industrial metal is present at levels harmful to bees

Written byWashington University in St. Louis
| 4 min read
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Asked to name one way people have changed the environment, many people would probably say “global warming.” But that’s really just the start of it.

People burn fossil fuels, but they also mine and manufacture. It’s who we are: Homo fabricus: man the maker. And as a side effect of our ingenuity and craft we have taken many metals originally buried safely in Earth’s depths and strewn them about the surface.

Does it matter? Yehuda Ben-Shahar and Eirik Søvik, biologists at Washington University in St. Louis, together with colleagues from Andrew Barron’s lab at Macquarie University in Australia, have publishd a study of honey bees in the March 24 online issue of Biology Letters  that suggests we answer this question too glibly.

The scientists looked at the effect of low levels of manganese, a common industrial pollutant, on the behavior of honey bees. At levels considered safe for human food, the metal seemed to addle bees: they advanced through age-related work assignments faster than normal, yet completed fewer foraging trips than their sisters who were not exposed to manganese.

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