1. Abstract
This study investigated the negative effects of neonicotinoid pesticides on honey bees in environment surrounding areas of pesticide use. The aim of the experiment is to identify possible contributors to the sudden decrease in honey bee population over the past 60 years, a phenomenon known as Colony Collapse Disorder.
Analysis was performed on three sets of bees: the control group which was not in contact with pesticides, the infected dead group which was a set of bees suspected to have died due to neonicotinoids, and the infected alive group which was suspected to be under the influence of neonicotinoids. After dissecting the bee samples and extracting their fat bodies, the chemical composition and protein structures of the samples were analyzed using Mid-Infrared Beamline at the Canadian Light Source. Results from the spectra of bee samples exposed to neonicotinoids demonstrated possible residual pesticide chemicals within fat bodies. Several spectral peaks were also correlated with possible changes in protein secondary structures within fat bodies of neonicotinoid-affected bees. It is likely that the pesticides caused the change in protein assembly structures, which is known to be correlated with disease, paralysis, and death, coinciding with symptoms of Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD).