Prima Contact Harta
 Română  English
 
 
Prima / CADRUL INTERNAŢIONAL / Materiale informaţionale / Noutăţi / Climate Change affecting Bees
Climate Change affecting Bees
06.09.2010  
Accesări: 234   

Votează: 0.0/5 (0 Voturi )

imprimare
http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-world/climate-change-affecting-bees-20100906-14wz6.html

Climate change may be preventing bees from carrying out the vital job of pollination by upsetting their life cycles, a study has shown.

Flowering times of mountain lilies in the US appear to be out of synch with their bumble bee pollinators, evidence suggests.
As a result, fewer of the plants are being pollinated and bearing fruit.
The findings point to a phenomenon that may only be local, or could be globally widespread.
Reports of declining populations of bees and other flower-visiting creatures have raised concerns about pollination levels.
There are major implications for farming and food supplies: a third of the world's fruits and vegetables would not exist without the help of bees and other pollinators.
The new research provides early evidence that climate change may be playing a role in driving down pollination.
"Bee numbers may have declined at our research site, but we suspect that a climate-driven mismatch between the times when flowers open and when bees emerge from hibernation is a more important factor," said biologist James Thomson, from the University of Toronto in Canada.
Professor Thomson conducted a 17-year pollination study of the glacier lily, Erythronium grandiflorum, in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado - one of the longest investigations of its kind ever conducted.
He found a progressive decline in pollination over the years which was most pronounced early in the flowering season.
Three times a year Prof Thomson compared the fruiting rate of flowers that were left to be pollinated naturally, or given extra doses of pollen by hand.
"Early in the year, when bumble bee queens are still hibernating, the fruiting rates are especially low," he said.
"This is sobering because it suggests that pollination is vulnerable even in a relatively pristine environment that is free of pesticides and human disturbance but still subject to climate change."
Prof Thomson began his research in the late 1980s after buying a remote plot of land and building a log cabin in a meadow full of glacier lilies.
His findings were published today in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
The glacier lily's blooming period lasts about four weeks, typically from May to June.
Its principal pollinators are queens of the early-emerging bumble bee species Bombus bifarius and Bombus occidentalis.
Surveys have shown no clear evidence of a decline in bumble bee numbers in the region.
Prof Thomson said the pollination deficits he had observed were probably due to a "growing phenological mismatch between the blooming of E. grandiflorum and the emergence of its best pollinators".
He added that the activity levels of queen bumble bees and the lifespan of flowers may be highly sensitive to air temperatures, sunshine, precipitation and wind.
"If these factors are changing, subtle dislocations of bees and flowers seem plausible," said Prof Thomson.
"Further research is needed to see whether the trend continues, and what might be driving it."


Plasează articolul în:
google Delicious Digg Yahoo Facebook Twitter Netvibes linkedin
 
Comentarii Adaugă comentariu
Nume, Prenume *:
E-mail:
Comentariu * caractere rămase:
 
Prima   Contact   Harta
vizitatori: 965617
sus
B2B and B2C solutions , Branding & Graphic Design Services,Website Design and Development , E-Commerce Systems,Software Application Architecture and Development,Multimedia solutions , 2D/3D modeling & animation solutions,Video & Post Production Creat de Trimaran
 
Profilul energetic al tarii   /   Cadrul legislativ   /   Studii de caz   /   Profiliurile INP/CN   /   Planuri de afaceri   /   Constientizare   /   Publicaţii   /   Noutati
Tel. +373 22 232247   /  Fax. +373 22 232247

Adresa: Str. Mitropolit Dosoftei 156a, bir. 37, mun. Chisinau, Republica Moldova