Risk to pollinators from anthropogenic electro-magnetic radiation (EMR): Evidence and knowledge gaps

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TitreRisk to pollinators from anthropogenic electro-magnetic radiation (EMR): Evidence and knowledge gaps
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursVanbergen AJ, Potts SG, Vian A, E. Malkemper P, Young J, Tscheulin T
JournalSCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume695
Pagination133833
Date PublishedDEC 10
Type of ArticleEditorial Material
ISSN0048-9697
Mots-clésALAN, Anthropogenic EMR, EKLIPSE, Electromagnetic, invertebrates, pollinators
Résumé

Worldwide urbanisation and use of mobile and wireless technologies (5G, Internet of Things) is leading to the proliferation of anthropogenic electromagnetic radiation (EMR) and campaigning voices continue to call for the risk to human health and wildlife to be recognised. Pollinators provide many benefits to nature and humankind, but face multiple anthropogenic threats. Here, we assess whether artificial light at night (ALAN) and anthropogenic radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation (AREMR), such as used in wireless technologies (4G, 5G) or emitted from power lines, represent an additional and growing threat to pollinators. A lack of high quality scientific studies means that knowledge of the risk to pollinators from anthropogenic EMR is either inconclusive, unresolved, or only partly established. A handful of studies provide evidence that ALAN can alter pollinator communities, pollination and fruit set. Laboratoiy experiments provide sonic, albeit variable, evidence that the honey bee Apis meth:fern and other invertebrates can detect EMR, potentially using it for orientation or navigation, but they do not provide evidence that AREMR affects insect behaviour in ecosystems. Scientifically robust evidence of AREMR impacts on abundance or diversity of pollinators (or other invertebrates) are limited to a single study reporting positive and negative effects depending on the pollinator group and geographical location. Therefore, whether anthropogenic EMR (ALAN or AREMR) poses a significant threat to insect pollinators and the benefits they provide to ecosystems and humanity remains to be established. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

DOI10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133833