January 18, 2006
The decline of
birds, bees and other pollinators in the world's most diverse
ecosystems may be putting plants in those areas at risk,
according to new research. The finding raises concern that more
may have to be done to protect Earth's most biologically rich
areas, scientists say in an article appearing in the Jan. 17
issue of the
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The
analysis shows that ecosystems with the largest number of
different species, including the jungles of South America and
Southeast Asia and the rich shrubland of South Africa, have
bigger deficits in pollination compared to the less-diverse
ecosystems of North America, Europe and Australia.
"The global
pattern we observed suggests that plants in species-rich regions
exhibit a greater reduction in fruit production due to
insufficient pollination than plant species in regions of lower
biodiversity," said Susan Mazer, a co-author of the article and
a biologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She
and her colleagues believe such biodiversity "hotspots" are
characterized by stronger competition among plant species for
pollinators, such that many plant species simply don't receive
enough pollen to achieve maximum fruit and seed production.
"Many
plants rely on insects and other pollen vectors to reproduce,"
said Jana Vamosi, an evolutionary biologist at the University of
Calgary and co-author of the paper. "We've found that in areas
where there is a lot of competition between individuals and
between species, many plants aren't getting enough pollen to
successfully reproduce. If plants can't survive, neither can
animals. These biodiversity hotspots are important because they
are where we most often find new sources of drugs and other
important substances. They are also the areas where habitat is
being destroyed the fastest."
The study
analyzes 482 field experiments on 241 flowering plant species
conducted since 1981. The research took several years to
complete; all continents except Antarctica are represented.
The
analysis, which was sponsored by the researchers affiliated with
the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
(NCEAS) at the UC-Santa Barbara, and was funded by the National
Science Foundation (NSF), "can tell us things about ecological
processes hat individual studies can't," Mazer said, noting that
the synthesis could not have been done 25 years ago because few
careful field studies of this type had been conducted. "Our
detection of global patterns required the simultaneous analysis
of many studies conducted independently by plant ecologists all
over the world," she said.
Mazer
cautioned that it is not yet possible to determine whether low
pollenation observed in species-rich areas is a new phenomenon
or a long-standing one. It may be a recent problem due to
habitat fragmentation or destruction, she said, or it may be
long term. Plant species in ecologically complex areas may be
continually faced with new competitors, and therefore cannot
evolve as rapidly as their environment changes. If that is true,
she said, pollen limitation may be a chronic problem for species
in biodiversity hotspots--a challenge they have coped with for
millions of years.
"The
pattern raises the alarm, however, that these species face two
challenges that increase the risk of extinction: habitat
destruction, which is occurring at alarming rates in the
tropics, and reduced pollinator activity," said Mazer.
In addition
to Vamosi and Mazer, authors include Tiffany Knight at
Washington University; Tia-Lynn Ashman and Janette Steets at the
University of Pittsburgh; and Martin Burd at Monash University
in Melbourne, Australia. |