News Release

Ozone can reduce a flower's scent that's critical for attracting pollinators

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Wiley

New research shows that high levels of ozone, which are predicted to increase in the atmosphere in the future, can dampen the scents of flowers that attract bees and other pollinators.

High ozone concentrations in ambient air caused fast degradation of the scent emitted from Brassica nigra flowers, reducing the range over which flowers could be identified by pollinators. Behavioral tests conducted with the buff-tailed bumblebee confirmed that ozone concentrations commonly occurring near large urban areas can strongly inhibit pollinators' attraction to flowers.

?"The volatile chemicals that constitute flower scents are critical signals for the successful pollination of most insect pollinated plants," said Dr. Gerard Farré-Armengol, lead author of the New Phytologist study. "Due to high ozone concentrations like those caused by urban pollution, flower scents can be quickly degraded and lose their biological function as a long- or middle-distance signal for pollinator attraction."

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