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Updated Sep 29, 2022

Understanding pesticide labels to protect pollinators

The photo shows a butterfly on a flower. Along with bees, butterflies and moths are often pollinators.

What are pollinators?

  • Pollinators include honey bees, native bees, butterflies, and even hummingbirds. They all are attracted to plants’ flowers. Flowers provide food resources for pollinators, including nectar for energy and pollen for nutrients.
  • As pollinators visit each flower, they collect pollen on their body. Then they transfer the pollen to the next flower. This pollen transfer assists sexual reproduction in plants to form fruits or seeds.

What are pesticides?

Pesticides are products designed to kill rodents, weeds, mosses, insects, plant diseases, slugs, and snails.

JUMP TO

  1. How to Find Information about Pollinators on Insecticide Labels
  2. What the Label Says and What That Means for Pollinators

FOR QUESTIONS ABOUT PESTICIDES

The National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC)  can answer questions about pest control chemicals.
 1-800-858-7378 or npic@ace.orst.edu" 


Tilia / linden / basswood tree Information

OREGON PESTICIDE ADVISORY ABOUT NEONICOTINOIDS AND TILIA SPECIES

It is illegal in Oregon to apply certain neonicotinoid insecticides on linden trees, basswood trees, or other Tilia species.

See Oregon Department of Agriculture’s 2015 PESTICIDE ADVISORY Bees and Linden Trees   (PDF).

Neonicotinoids include active ingredients such as dinotefuran, clothianidin, imidacloprid, and thiamethoxam.  

  • These products are absorbed by one plant part (e.g., stems or roots) and move to leaves or other plant parts.
  • Following application, the poison may be found in flowers for months or years.
  • Beneficial insects feed on the nectar and pollen.

Tilia species’ flowers are very attractive to bees.

Apply this same reasoning to other bee-attractive shade trees and woody ornamental shrubs.

If you suspect a pesticide incident with bees, call the Oregon Department of Agriculture at
 503-986-4635.

Overview

  • Insecticides are pesticides designed to kill insects. Most insecticides can be harmful to pollinating insects, including bees and butterflies. However, some are more harmful than others. Read the ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS section of the product label. See below for more details.
  • Herbicides (chemical weed killers) sprayed on flowering weeds can harm pollinators. Manage weeds before they flower. If possible, make chemical applications in the morning or evening when bees are less active. Avoid spraying flowers and pollinators directly.
  • Even fungicides can be harmful to pollinators. Research has shown that honey bees exposed to certain fungicides are more susceptible to parasites and disease.
  • Pesticides are listed as a contributing factor to colony losses. Other suspected causes include: parasites, disease, poor nutrition, lack of genetic diversity in bees, and habitat loss.

Keys for Success

  • Read pesticides labels. Follow the instructions.
  • Use information provided on pesticide labels to understand the risks of a product.
  • Labels also tell you how to apply pesticide products correctly.
  • Look for information about hazards to pollinators in the ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS section of the pesticide label.
  • Follow the instructions to minimize risks.
  • Follow the instructions to maximize benefits.
How to Find Information about Pollinators on Insecticide Labels

Why are pesticide labels essential to read?

  • Labels are legal documents. Failure to follow the instructions is against the law.
  • The label will indicate if a pesticide is toxic to bees. The information is, however, not easy to find and understand.
  • The following stems guide you where to find and how to understand crucial information to protect bees.

Look in the ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS section of the pesticide label

  • If the symbol below (bee inside red diamond) appears on a pesticide product label, it means the product contains an insecticide in the neonicotinoid family. These insecticides are referred to as “neonics.”
  • The products are highly toxic to bees at low levels. Even the residue can be harmful for a long time. Don’t use these products around plants that are attractive to bees.

Neonicotinoid insecticides can harm pollinators and natural enemies

Symbol with red diamond with bee inside

US Environmental Protection Agency

Look for the bee hazard symbol or other warnings. It may be on the label or inside an attached booklet/pamphlet. This symbol means the product contains an insecticide in the neonicotinoid family.

Example product label with active ingredient Imidacloprid and other ingredient

Weston Miller, Oregon State University

The white box on the example product label highlights active ingredient imidacloprid (a neonicotinoid) and other ingredients. The label states “12 MONTH Insect Protection.” Bees and natural enemies that feed on the nectar and pollen of treated plants could be poisoned.

How to read pesticide labels to learn about pollinators

Open the label on the back and read the instructions carefully.

  • Look for information about hazards to pollinators in the ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS section of the pesticide label.

  • See the graphic below for details about what to look for on the label.

Infographic with information about reading insecticide labels with full text below
Adapted from Iris Kromann, © Oregon State University

 

  1. PROTECT BEES BY READING THE LABEL ⁠— Failure to follow label instructions is against the law.
  2. ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS SECTION — Look for “toxic” or “highly toxic” to bees. RESIDUAL TOXICITY. “Foraging” or “visiting” means pesticide is toxic for more than 8 hours. Apply only at night.  Labels might also say “This product is highly toxic to bees exposed to direct treatment or residues on blooming crops or weeds. Do not apply this product or allow it to drift to blooming crops if bees are actively foraging the treatment area.”
  3. OTHER PRECAUTIONS — Some labels have a bee advisory section with an icon of a bee inside a red triangle (as shown above).
  4. DIRECTIONS FOR USE SECTION — Follow the directions specific to crop and pest carefully. Effects can be different if not applied according to the label instructions.
What the Label Says and What That Means for Pollinators
  • Do you want to interpret language that you see on a pesticide label?
  • Look for information about hazards to pollinators in the ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS section of the pesticide label.
  • Learn what the information about pollinators on pesticide labels means.

What the Label Says: “This product is highly toxic to bees and other pollinating insects exposed to direct treatment or residues.... Do not apply this product or allow it to drift to blooming crops or weeds if bees or other pollinating insects are visiting the treatment area.”

What That Means: This means the product contains an active ingredient that kills 50% of bees exposed to 2 micrograms or less. That’s highly toxic! It also means this product has “extended residual toxicity.” The residue is likely to be harmful to visiting pollinators, even several hours or days after the application. Even night-time applications would be a high-risk action for pollinators.


What the Label Says: “This product is moderately toxic to bees and other pollinating insects exposed to direct treatment or residues on blooming crops or weeds. Do not apply this product if bees or other pollinating insects are visiting the treatment area.”

What That Means: This means the product contains an active ingredient that kills 50% of bees exposed to 11 micrograms or less. It also means this product has “extended residual toxicity.” The residue is likely to be harmful to visiting pollinators, even several hours or days after the application. Even night-time applications would be a high-risk action for pollinators.


What the Label Says: “This product is toxic to bees and other pollinating insects exposed to direct treatment. Do not apply this product if bees or other pollinating insects are actively visiting the treatment area.”

What That Means: This means the product contains an active ingredient that kills 50% of bees exposed to 11 micrograms or less. It also means this product does NOT have “extended residual toxicity.” The residue is not as likely to be harmful after several hours. A night-time application, if absolutely necessary, could be low-risk for pollinators.


What if there is no mention of pollinators? That doesn’t mean zero risk to pollinators.

If there is no mention of pollinators in the ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS section of the label, it means that low doses (11 micrograms or less) were not sufficient to kill many bees during tests. Lower exposure leads to lower risk. If possible, avoid using insecticides and fungicides during peak pollinator activity.

Content provided by Kaci Buhl and Weston Miller. Content reviewed by Andony Melathopoulos.

 Peer reviewed by OSU Department of Horticulture.

Photo of Kaci Buhl

Kaci Buhl

At the state level, I lead the Pesticide Safety Education Program (PSEP). The program hosts live recertification events around the state, serving over 1,000 licensed pesticide applicators each year. We also produce web-based training modules and license-preparation study manuals. Special training for unlicensed pesticide applicators is also available through a grant from the USDA Specialty Crop Block Grant Program. The PSEP at OSU works closely with the Oregon Department of Agriculture's Pesticides Division.

Photo of Weston Miller

Weston Miller

Project Founder and Content Writer

Weston Miller served as Community and Urban Horticulture faculty for Oregon State University Extension Service for Clackamas, Multnomah, and Washington Counties. Weston is an author for content for this website. He developed funding partnerships with Portland area agencies to initiate and build out the Solve Pest Problems website focused on this goals:

Andony Melathopoulos

Andony Melathopoulos

 I have wide interests in the area of keeping native and managed bees healthy in working and natural landscapes. A major area of my work focuses on how pesticide applicators understand the risks associated with pest management decisions. This has taken the form of large scale assessment of language of the Pollinating Insect Hazard Statement on pesticide labels. I have also been increasingly interested in estimating how pesticide use practices contribute to pesticide exposure.