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Article

Chernobyl-level radiation exposure damages bumblebee reproduction: a laboratory experiment

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Citation

Raines KE, Whitehorn PR, Copplestone D & Tinsley MC (2020) Chernobyl-level radiation exposure damages bumblebee reproduction: a laboratory experiment. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 287 (1937), Art. No.: 20201638. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.1638

Abstract
The consequences for wildlife of living in radiologically contaminated environments are uncertain. Previous laboratory studies suggest insects are relatively radiation-resistant; however, some field studies from the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone report severe adverse effects at substantially lower radiation dose rates than expected. Here we present the first laboratory investigation to study how environmentally-relevant radiation exposure affects bumblebee life-history, assessing the shape of the relationship between radiation exposure and fitness-loss. Dose rates comparable to the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (50-400 ?Gy h-1) impaired bumblebee reproduction and delayed colony growth but did not affect colony weight or longevity. Our best-fitting model for the effect of radiation dose rate on colony queen production had a strongly non-linear concave relationship: exposure to only 100 ?Gy h-1 impaired reproduction by 30-45%, while further dose rate increases caused more modest additional reproductive impairment. Our data indicate that the practice of estimating effects of environmentally-relevant low dose rate exposure by extrapolating from high dose rates may have considerably underestimated the effects of radiation. If our data can be generalised, they suggest insects suffer significant negative consequences at dose rates previously thought safe; we therefore advocate relevant revisions to the international framework for radiological protection of the environment.

Keywords
ionising radiation; environmental protection; life history, insect, environmental

Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences: Volume 287, Issue 1937

StatusPublished
Funders and
Publication date28/10/2020
Publication date online21/10/2020
Date accepted by journal30/09/2020
URL
ISSN0962-8452
eISSN1471-2954

People (2)

Professor David Copplestone

Professor David Copplestone

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Professor Matthew Tinsley

Professor Matthew Tinsley

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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Research centres/groups