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Dust abraded from thiamethoxam-treated seed during sowing: Refining the risk assessment for native bees in Brazil.

Helen M ThompsonAna CioneMario PanagioMariana ArtalJosé Soto VeigaAdhemar OliveiraVinícius Mareca
Published in: Integrated environmental assessment and management (2023)
During sowing using pneumatic machinery, dust may be abraded from pesticide-treated seed and contaminate adjacent bee-attractive off-crop areas. This study quantified the potential risk to native bees of dust released during sowing of Brazilian crop seeds treated with a thiamethoxam formulation (Cruiser 350FS). To address toxicity to native bees, adult acute contact LD 50 data for thiamethoxam were collated from the literature, an SSD generated and the HD 5 calculated. The LD 50 HD 5 was used to refine the default safety factor applied to the honeybee acute contact LD 50 from 10 to 5.45 for thiamethoxam. Crop-specific abraded dust data (Heubach dust and Heubach AI) were generated for seeds treated with Cruiser 350FS sourced from on-farm and industrial facilities. The mean Heubach dust levels was ranked as cotton=maize>sunflower=soybean >drybean. There was no correlation between the measured residues of thiamethoxam (Heubach AI) and those estimated in dust based on the thiamethoxam content of Cruiser 350FS. A hazard quotient (HQ) for each crop (based on application rate, the default dust deposition factor and the honeybee contact LD 50 /10) identified potential risks during sowing for all crops. Refinement of the application rate with the measured 90 th percentile Heubach dust (assuming 100% thiamethoxam) resulted in sowing of industrially treated soybean and on-farm treated cotton being identified as potential risks. Further refinement using either the measured 90 th percentile Heubach AI or the acute contact LD 50 (HD 5 ) resulted sowing of all crops treated with Cruiser 350FS being identified as low risk. Similar high quality seed treatment should be demonstrated for other formulations containing insecticides with high toxicity to bees. Data on dust drift from machinery and crops more representative of those in Brazil may allow further refinement of the default dust deposition value of 17% used in this study. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2023;00:0-0. © 2023 SETAC.
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