French wild pansies are producing smaller flowers and less nectar than 20 to 30 years ago in ‘startling’ act of evolution, study shows

Flowers are “giving up on” pollinators and evolving to be less attractive to them as insect numbers decline, researchers have said.

A study has found the flowers of field pansies growing near Paris are 10% smaller and produce 20% less nectar than flowers growing in the same fields 20 to 30 years ago. They are also less frequently visited by insects.

“Our study shows that pansies are evolving to give up on their pollinators,” said Pierre-Olivier Cheptou, one of the study’s authors and a researcher at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. “They are evolving towards self-pollination, where each plant reproduces with itself, which works in the short term but may well limit their capacity to adapt to future environmental changes.”

Plants produce nectar for insects, and in return insects transport pollen between plants. This mutually beneficial relationship has formed over millions of years of coevolution. But pansies and pollinators may now be stuck in a vicious cycle: plants are producing less nectar and this means there will be less food available to insects, which will in turn accelerate declines.

  • @BloodSlut
    link
    1611 months ago

    “Fine, ill do it myself”

    jokes aside, if we could stop pumping toxins into the environment that would be great

  • @paddirn
    link
    English
    1011 months ago

    Sometimes, when no one else will help you do it, you have to take matters into your own hands and spread your seed all over the place on your own.

    • @hakunawazo
      link
      411 months ago

      Don’t give up. Surely there are hot insects in your neighbourhood.

  • @WhiteOakBayou
    link
    511 months ago

    I’m a strong, independent flower and I don’t need no bugs.