Air pollution harms pollinators more than pests, study finds | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
MENU
Home

Periodically curated articles and updates on national and international developments relevant for UPSC Civil Services Examination.

Quick Links

High-quality MCQs and Mains Answer Writing to sharpen skills and reinforce learning every day.

Watch explainer and thematic concept-building videos under initiatives like Deep Dive, Master Classes, etc., on important UPSC topics.

ESC

A recent study published in Nature Communications reveals that air pollution disproportionately harms pollinators like bees and butterflies while crop-destroying pests remain largely unaffected.

Key Findings

  • Scent-based communication disruption: Air pollutants alter scent trail (airborne chemical signals), disrupting bees' and wasps' ability to locate flowers, mates, or prey.
  • Biological impact: Among the biological behaviours including feeding, growth, survival, and reproduction, the ability to locate food was most severely impaired. 
  • Ozone is most harmful pollutant: Ozone reduced beneficial insects' ability to thrive by around 34%. Nitrogen oxides also had substantial negative effects.
  • Damage at low pollution levels: Changes in insect performance occur even at low levels of air pollution. 

About Pollination and pollinators 

  • Pollination, an essential part of plant reproduction, refers to transferring pollen grains from the male anther of a flower to the female stigma. It is of two types: 
    • Self-pollination: Transfer of pollen grains within same flower or another flower of the same plant.
    • Cross-pollination: Transfer of pollen grains to flower of a different plant of the same kind. 
  • Pollinators refer to agents (or facilitators) of pollination. It could be: 
    • Abiotic: Wind and water
    • Biotic: Insects (bees, wasps, beetles, etc.), birds, and bats among others.
Diagram depicting self-pollination and cross-pollination in flowers. Self-pollination shows pollen from the anther moving to the stigma of the same flower. Cross-pollination illustrates pollen transfer to the stigma of a different flower. Labeled parts include stigma, anther, and pollen.
Watch Video News Today

Explore Related Content

Discover more articles, videos, and terms related to this topic

RELATED VIDEOS

3
What is Artificial Rain? | Deep Dive With VisionIAS

What is Artificial Rain? | Deep Dive With VisionIAS

YouTube HD
News Today (Jul 14-15, 2024)

News Today (Jul 14-15, 2024)

YouTube HD
News Today (Oct 23, 2024)

News Today (Oct 23, 2024)

YouTube HD
Title is required. Maximum 500 characters.

Search Notes

Filter Notes

Loading your notes...
Searching your notes...
Loading more notes...
You've reached the end of your notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria or clear the search.

Saving...
Saved

Please select a subject.

Referenced Articles

linked

No references added yet

Subscribe for Premium Features