Mark Waghorn, Zenger News -
Air pollution is preventing insects from sniffing out the crops and wildflowers that depend on them, according to research. The review in Trends in Ecology and Evolution also found that ozone pollutes plants almost instantly—leaving injury signs of diverse hues and shapes and discoloring leaves.
A bee collects nectar from a sunflower on the Dorset Sunflower Trail, on August 13, 2022 in Dorchester, England. Air pollution is preventing insects from sniffing out the crops and wildflowers that depend on them, according to research.
© Finnbarr Webster/Getty Images
Bees and butterflies pollinate plants, going from flower to flower—boosting reproduction. This process has been interrupted by rising levels of ozone, impacting the survival of both fauna and flora.
The review's lead author, Professor Evgenios Agathokleous of Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology in China, said: "There is much noise about the direct effects of agrochemicals on pollinators, a subject of profound societal attention. But it now emerges that ozone is a silent threat to pollinators and thus pollination. These impacts of ozone have long been missed."
Bees and butterflies pollinate plants, going from flower to flower—boosting reproduction. This process has been interrupted by rising levels of ozone, impacting the survival of both fauna and flora.
The review's lead author, Professor Evgenios Agathokleous of Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology in China, said: "There is much noise about the direct effects of agrochemicals on pollinators, a subject of profound societal attention. But it now emerges that ozone is a silent threat to pollinators and thus pollination. These impacts of ozone have long been missed."
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Ozone forms naturally in the stratosphere 7.5 miles above sea level and helps protect against harmful sun rays. But in the troposphere, the lowest region of the atmosphere, it damages Earth. A photochemical reaction between volatile chemicals creates the greenhouse gas.
Levels have been increasing because a warming climate is creating optimal conditions for it to thrive.
Agathokleous said: "Ozone pollution can affect the timing and duration of flowering in such a way the occurrence of flowering is asynchronous to the activities of pollinators.
"It can also change the color of flowers, disrupting the visual signals to pollinators. Ozone pollution can also directly react with pollen, decreasing its quality, but also indirectly changing the amount of pollen."
When damaged, plants have a hard time photosynthesizing and struggle to provide the energy needed for growth.
Plants emit their own organic volatile compounds to facilitate communication between them and to alert pollinators to the presence of a waiting flower.
Ozone pollution appears to be disrupting these chemical signatures.
Agathokleous added: "Changes in the composition of the volatile blends could also have severe implications to pollinators because they might not recognize host plants and their qualities in the same way they did in the past.
"Within plant tissues, ozone pollution could decrease the number of nutrients that are essential to insects, increase the abundance of chemicals that are harmful to insects ingesting them, and degrade the overall quality of plant tissues."
A recent scientific review of insect numbers around the world suggested that 40 percent of species were undergoing "dramatic rates of decline."
Bees, ants, and beetles are disappearing eight times faster than mammals, birds, or reptiles.
According to the World Health Organisation, air pollution accounts for an estimated 4.2 million deaths a year from stroke, heart disease, lung cancer, and chronic respiratory diseases.
Produced in association with SWNS Talker.
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