Abstract
The global pollinator decline is linked to intensive farming and the high use of plant protection products (PPPs), necessitating risk assessment and mitigation. This study investigates the potential negative impacts of agricultural practices on pollinator health, specifically focusing on the effects of PPPs used in viticulture on the honey bee, Apis mellifera, despite grapevines' lack of reliance on bee pollination. The beehives sampled were from two farms with vineyards under different management regimes: one transitioning from conventional to organic practices and an organic-biodynamic site with pollinator mitigation measures. Sampling was conducted during three phases, pre-, during, and post-PPP application, to evaluate biomarkers of neurotoxicity (AChE), detoxification enzymes (CaE, GST), metabolic stress (ALP), and immune markers (Lys, PO, proPO). Comparison between the organic-biodynamic farm and the transitioning one revealed a pattern suggesting significant neurotoxic effects in the transitioning farm characterised by a trend of decreased AChE activity during treatments and the subsequent induction of GST post exposure. Crucially, both PO and proPO were induced post treatment, but with a lower PO/proPO ratio compared to previous seasons, suggesting inefficient proPO activation and potentially weakened immune competence that could favour pathogen proliferation. Bee health appeared to deteriorate most at the transitioning farm post treatment, while the biodynamic site remained relatively stable; these differences are likely associated with legacy residues and drift, exacerbated by overwintering stress and summer heat. Given the specific environmental and management characteristics of these two farms, the results provide an indicative comparison of how different agronomic approaches may influence bee health. Moreover, these results support the multi-biomarker approach for detecting potential PPP impacts, suggesting that organic transitions and mitigation strategies could play a role in pollinator conservation.