Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept

The aim of this research was to evaluate as a proof of concept, a quantitative relationship between atmospheric particulate matter (PM10), atmospheric heavy metals (Pb, Ni and Cd) and Pb, Ni and Cd concentrations accumulated on bees reared in a beehive in the urban territory in Milan. For this purpo...

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Main Authors: Annamaria Costa, Mauro Veca, Maurizio Barberis, Alessandra Tosti, Giacomo Notaro, Stefano Nava, Massimo Lazzari, Alessandro Agazzi, Francesco Maria Tangorra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Italian Journal of Animal Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2018.1520052
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spelling doaj-0f1de623d91145e3ad64a4834e56350f2020-11-24T21:24:07ZengTaylor & Francis GroupItalian Journal of Animal Science1828-051X2019-01-0118130931510.1080/1828051X.2018.15200521520052Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of conceptAnnamaria Costa0Mauro Veca1Maurizio Barberis2Alessandra Tosti3Giacomo Notaro4Stefano Nava5Massimo Lazzari6Alessandro Agazzi7Francesco Maria Tangorra8Università degli Studi di MilanoAgronomist, beekeeperATS Milano SS Sanita Animale Milano NordATS SC Qualita'MilanoATS SC Qualita'MilanoUniversità degli Studi di MilanoUniversità degli Studi di MilanoUniversità degli Studi di MilanoUniversità degli Studi di MilanoThe aim of this research was to evaluate as a proof of concept, a quantitative relationship between atmospheric particulate matter (PM10), atmospheric heavy metals (Pb, Ni and Cd) and Pb, Ni and Cd concentrations accumulated on bees reared in a beehive in the urban territory in Milan. For this purpose, a beehive called the Honey Factory, located in the Triennale museum area in Milano, was considered in the trial from May to October 2015. Every two days, bees found dead in the beehive were collected and the concentration of lead, cadmium and nickel on the bees bodies were evaluated through atomic absorption analysis. In the same period, data about atmospheric dust, Lead, Cadmium and Nickel, were daily downloaded by the ARPA website. The comparison between atmospheric and animal data has revealed a tight relation. Linear regressions for animals and atmosphere were calculated: when the concentration of atmospheric lead exceeded the value of 4 ng/m3, bees ‘carried’ about 0.7 mg/kg of lead. When the lead atmospheric concentration was higher than 15 ng/m3, lead on the bee’s body was more than 0.9 mg/kg (y = 0.1006x + 0.573, R2 = 0.98). A similar relationship was detected for Nickel. This study showed that heavy metals accumulated on honeybees depend on the atmospheric concentrations measured during the month before animal sampling and that PM10 pollution level seems to contribute to Pb and Ni levels detected on the animals.Highlights Bees are environmental quality indicators. Pb, Ni, Cd (HM) were detected on bees and in the air. HM on bees depend on the atmospheric concentration.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2018.1520052beesatomic absorptionheavy metalsair pollutantsenvironmental indicators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annamaria Costa
Mauro Veca
Maurizio Barberis
Alessandra Tosti
Giacomo Notaro
Stefano Nava
Massimo Lazzari
Alessandro Agazzi
Francesco Maria Tangorra
spellingShingle Annamaria Costa
Mauro Veca
Maurizio Barberis
Alessandra Tosti
Giacomo Notaro
Stefano Nava
Massimo Lazzari
Alessandro Agazzi
Francesco Maria Tangorra
Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
Italian Journal of Animal Science
bees
atomic absorption
heavy metals
air pollutants
environmental indicators
author_facet Annamaria Costa
Mauro Veca
Maurizio Barberis
Alessandra Tosti
Giacomo Notaro
Stefano Nava
Massimo Lazzari
Alessandro Agazzi
Francesco Maria Tangorra
author_sort Annamaria Costa
title Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
title_short Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
title_full Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
title_fullStr Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
title_full_unstemmed Heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
title_sort heavy metals on honeybees indicate their concentration in the atmosphere. a proof of concept
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Italian Journal of Animal Science
issn 1828-051X
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The aim of this research was to evaluate as a proof of concept, a quantitative relationship between atmospheric particulate matter (PM10), atmospheric heavy metals (Pb, Ni and Cd) and Pb, Ni and Cd concentrations accumulated on bees reared in a beehive in the urban territory in Milan. For this purpose, a beehive called the Honey Factory, located in the Triennale museum area in Milano, was considered in the trial from May to October 2015. Every two days, bees found dead in the beehive were collected and the concentration of lead, cadmium and nickel on the bees bodies were evaluated through atomic absorption analysis. In the same period, data about atmospheric dust, Lead, Cadmium and Nickel, were daily downloaded by the ARPA website. The comparison between atmospheric and animal data has revealed a tight relation. Linear regressions for animals and atmosphere were calculated: when the concentration of atmospheric lead exceeded the value of 4 ng/m3, bees ‘carried’ about 0.7 mg/kg of lead. When the lead atmospheric concentration was higher than 15 ng/m3, lead on the bee’s body was more than 0.9 mg/kg (y = 0.1006x + 0.573, R2 = 0.98). A similar relationship was detected for Nickel. This study showed that heavy metals accumulated on honeybees depend on the atmospheric concentrations measured during the month before animal sampling and that PM10 pollution level seems to contribute to Pb and Ni levels detected on the animals.Highlights Bees are environmental quality indicators. Pb, Ni, Cd (HM) were detected on bees and in the air. HM on bees depend on the atmospheric concentration.
topic bees
atomic absorption
heavy metals
air pollutants
environmental indicators
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2018.1520052
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