Abstract: Nearly 80% of all pesticides applied to row crops are herbicides, and these applications pose potentially significant ecotoxicological risks to non-target plants and associated pollinators. In response to the widespread occurrence of weed species resistant to glyphosate, biotechnology companies have developed crops resistant to the synthetic-auxin herbicides dicamba or 2,4-D, and once commercialized, adoption of these crops is likely to change herbicide-use patterns. Despite current limited use, dicamba and 2,4-D are often responsible for injury to non-target plants, but effects of these herbicides on insect communities are poorly understood. To understand the influence of dicamba on pollinators, we applied several sub-lethal, drift-level rates of dicamba to alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.