Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil.
Faculdade de Ciências Farmacêuticas de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil.
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf. 2021 Jun 1;215:112147. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2021.112147. Epub 2021 Mar 20.
The intensive shift on land cover by anthropogenic activities have led to changes in natural habitats and environmental contamination, which can ultimately impact and threat biodiversity and ecosystem services, such as pollination. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of native forest and human-modified land covers on the concentrations of chemical elements accumulated in the neotropical pollinator bee T. angustula. Eight landscapes, within an Ecological Corridor in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, with gradients of forest cover, spatial heterogeneity and varying land covers were used as sampling unities. Bees collected in traps or through actives searches had the concentration of 21 chemical elements determined by ICP-MS. Results show a beneficial effect of forested areas on the concentrations of some well-known toxic elements accumulated in bees, such as Hg, Cd, and Cr. Multivariate Redundancy Analysis (RDA) suggests road as the most important driver for the levels of Cr, Hg, Sb, Al, U, As, Pb and Pt and bare soil, pasture and urban areas as the landscape covers responsible for the concentrations of Zn, Cd, Mn, Mg, Ba and Sr in bees. The results reinforce the potential use of T. angustula bees as bioindicators of environmental quality and also show that these organisms are being directly affected by human land use, offering potential risks for the Neotropical ecosystem. Our study sheds light on how land covers (native forest and human-modified) can influence the levels of contaminants in insects within human-dominated landscapes. The generation of predictions of the levels of toxic metals and metalloids based on land use can both contribute to friendly farming planning as well as to support public policy development on the surrounding of protected areas and biodiversity conservation hotspots.
人类活动对土地覆盖的强烈改变导致了自然栖息地的变化和环境污染,这最终可能会影响和威胁生物多样性和生态系统服务,如传粉。本研究旨在评估原生森林和人为土地覆盖对新热带传粉蜂 T. angustula 体内积累的化学元素浓度的影响。在巴西圣保罗州的一个生态走廊内,选择了 8 个景观作为采样单元,这些景观具有森林覆盖梯度、空间异质性和不同的土地覆盖类型。通过陷阱或主动搜索收集的蜜蜂,通过 ICP-MS 确定了 21 种化学元素的浓度。结果表明,森林覆盖对蜜蜂体内一些已知有毒元素(如 Hg、Cd 和 Cr)的浓度有有益影响。多元冗余分析(RDA)表明,道路是 Cr、Hg、Sb、Al、U、As、Pb 和 Pt 水平的最重要驱动因素,而裸地、草地和城市地区则是导致蜜蜂体内 Zn、Cd、Mn、Mg、Ba 和 Sr 浓度的景观覆盖物。研究结果强化了利用 T. angustula 蜜蜂作为环境质量生物指示剂的潜力,同时也表明这些生物正直接受到人类土地利用的影响,对新热带生态系统构成潜在风险。本研究阐明了土地覆盖(原生森林和人为土地)如何影响人类主导景观中昆虫体内的污染物水平。基于土地利用的有毒金属和类金属水平的预测生成,既可以为友好农业规划做出贡献,也可以支持保护区周边和生物多样性热点地区的公共政策制定。