News / Science News

    In fire-prone West, plants need their pollinators, and vice versa

    Scientists are still grappling with some of the most basic questions about how fire influences interactions between plants and animals in the natural world.



    New research shows the importance of plant-pollinator interactions in restoring wildfire regimes. Photo: Jonathan Myers


    A new study in the northern Rockies explores the role of fire in the finely tuned dance between plants and their pollinators.

    The findings by researchers at Washington University and other institutions are particularly significant in light of recent reports about the rapid and widespread decline of insects globally.

    "A large number of studies have looked at how fire affects plants, or how fire affects animals, but what is understudied is the question of how fire affects both, and about how links within their ecological networks might respond to fire disturbance," said Jonathan Myers, an ecologist at Washington University and co-author of the study.

    The researchers discovered that wildfire disturbance and plant-pollinator interactions are both important in determining where plants take root and where pollinators are found.

    But in burned landscapes, plant-pollinator interactions are as important or more important than any other factor in determining the composition of species present.

    The importance of flowering plants in the composition of pollinator species doubled to quadrupled following wildfires. And the importance of pollinators in determining plant composition nearly doubled.

    The research advances the understanding of how and why wildfire affects conservation, land management and restoration of forest ecosystems, according to Myers. "It also shows that ecological models that predict how species will respond under various climate change scenarios should consider biological interactions within food webs."

    Added Doug Levey, a program director in NSF's Division of Environmental Biology, "This study reminds us that fire is an important part of how ecosystems function, and that no species exists in isolation." (National Science Foundation)

    DECEMBER 9, 2020



    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

    On Dec. 6 local time, Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa2 dropped a capsule to the ground of the Australian Outback from about 120 miles above Earth’s surface.
    Scientists have tracked the very early stages of human foetal gut development in incredible detail, and found specific cell functions that appear to be reactivated in the gut of children with Crohn’s Disease.
    Researchers find mercury in fish and crustaceans collected at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.
    Eruption triggered by rapid change after a decade-long buildup of pressure.
    New research describes a fossil family that illuminates the origin of perissodactyls -- the group of mammals that includes horses, rhinos and tapirs.
    A unique stage of planetary system evolution has been imaged by astronomers, showing fast-moving carbon monoxide gas flowing away from a star system over 400 light years away, a discovery that provides an opportunity to study how our own solar system developed.

    © 1991-2023 The Titi Tudorancea Bulletin | Titi Tudorancea® is a Registered Trademark | Terms of use and privacy policy
    Contact