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Crop chemicals are preventing the brains of baby bees from developing

(Natural News) They say we need them to grow enough food for everyone on the planet. But the irony is that continuing to use them is actually killing off the bees and other pollinators we absolutely need to even grow food at all.

Pesticides are what we’re talking about, here, and new research out of Imperial College London has determined that they’re impairing the healthy development of bee brains during their larval phase.

Using micro-CT scanning technology, British scientists identified specific areas of bumblebee brains that grew abnormally when exposed to pesticides during their early years.

A likely explanation for the disturbing phenomenon of colony collapse disorder (CCD), pesticide exposure during a bee’s developmental period affects not just the individual bee but the entire colony.

“Bee colonies act as superorganisms, so when any toxins enter the colony, these have the potential to cause problems with the development of the baby bees within it,” says Dr. Richard Lee, lead author of the new research from Imperial’s Department of Life Sciences.

“Worryingly in this case, when young bees are fed on pesticide-contaminated food, this caused parts of the brain to grow less, leading to older adult bees possessing smaller and functionally impaired brains.”

Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of Dr. Lee’s findings is that the damaging effects of pesticide exposure in developing bees appears to be permanent and irreversible, carrying well into adulthood up until the point of death.

“These findings reveal how colonies can be impacted by pesticides weeks after exposure, as their young grow into adults that may not be able to forage for food properly,” Dr. Lee further warns.

“Our work highlights the need for guidelines on pesticide usage to consider this route of exposure.”

For more related news about the plight of bees, butterflies, and other pollinators in the age of pesticides and herbicides, be sure to check out Bees.news.

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Published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a groundbreaking paper covering these findings explains how the micro-CT scan technology used to arrive at them offers amazing, never-before-observed insights into the utterly detrimental effects of crop chemicals on bees.

Particularly in what’s known as the “mushroom body” of the insects’ brains, pesticide exposure was found to impair their ability to learn and remember important tasks, including food gathering. And, again, the damage lasted into adulthood, suggesting that such effects are permanent.

“There has been growing evidence that pesticides can build up inside bee colonies,” adds Dr. Dylan Smith, another study co-author from the Department of Life Sciences at Imperial.

“Our study reveals the risks to individuals being reared in such an environment, and that a colony’s future workforce can be affected weeks after they are first exposed.”

Dr. Smith further warns that it’s not just the pesticide residue left on plants that’s a worry. It’s also the residue present inside the colonies that few are paying attention to, or flat-out rejecting as a considerable factor, amid the ongoing pollinator extinction crisis.

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