Research Ideas and Outcomes (May 2024)

PollinERA: Understanding pesticide-Pollinator interactions to support EU Environmental Risk Assessment and policy

  • Christopher John Topping,
  • Agnieszka Bednarska,
  • Emilio Benfenati,
  • Jordan Chetcuti,
  • Noa Delso,
  • Xiaodong Duan,
  • Andreas Focks,
  • Ryszard Laskowski,
  • Anna Lombardo,
  • Luna Marcussen,
  • Teodor Metodiev,
  • Michael Rubinigg,
  • Maj Rundlöf,
  • Fabio Sgolastra,
  • Carla Stoyanova,
  • Gregor Sušanj,
  • James Williams,
  • Elżbieta Ziółkowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/rio.10.e127485
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 1 – 51

Abstract

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PollinERA aims to reverse pollinator population declines and reduce the harmful impacts of pesticides. It addresses the call through four objectives: SO1 filling ecotoxicological data gaps to enable realistic prediction of the source and routes of exposure and impact of pesticides on pollinators and their sensitivity to individual pesticides and mixtures. SO2 developing and testing a co-monitoring scheme for pesticides and pollinators across European cropping systems and landscapes, developing risk indicators and mixture exposure information. SO3 developing models for predicting pesticide toxicological effects on pollinators for chemicals and organisms, environmental fate, toxicokinetic/ toxicodynamic, and population models. SO4 developing a population-level systems-based approach to risk and policy assessment considering multiple stressors and long-term spatiotemporal dynamics at the landscape scale and generating an open database for pollinator/pesticide data and tools.This will be achieved through developing knowledge and protocols for a broad range of toxicological testing, feeding to in silico models (QSARS, toxicokinetic/toxicodynamic, and population). Using a strong stakeholder co-development approach, these models will be combined in a One System framework taking a systems view on risk assessment and policy evaluation, including an international monitoring program.The One System framework is based on EFSA’s system ERA view, expanding on the tools used for bees to include butterflies, moths and hoverflies. The consortium partners are experts in the field needed for this development and are well-placed to facilitate the uptake of tools by European bodies to guarantee the project's future impact.Expected impacts target Destination impacts of better understanding and addressing drivers of biodiversity decline, interconnected biodiversity research using digital technologies, and understanding the biodiversity and health nexus at the ecosystem level.