While the results of this analysis provide further evidence that reducing emissions of all air pollutants should be a priority, they indicate that an increased focus on reducing, or at least restricting, increases in ozone could be particularly advantageous for beneficial invertebrate species.
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Air pollution jeopardizes bees and other pollinators essential for food
production, according to a new study that sheds light on a significant but
underrecognized threat to beneficial insects.
In a study published Thursday in the journal Nature Communications,
researchers found that bees, as well as some moths and butterflies, became
about a third less efficient at foraging for food, on average, after
exposure to elevated air pollution levels. The findings were based on an
analysis of data from 120 scientific papers on how 40 types of insects
respond to ozone, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide and particulate matter.
“Air pollution is not generally considered as a driver of pollinator
declines, but these results indicate that air pollution should be considered
as a further factor that is driving pollinator declines,” said James Ryalls,
an ecologist at the University of Reading and an author of the study.
Declines in pollinator health can translate to declines in crop yields,
Ryalls said.
The researchers noted that insects generally seen as harmful to agriculture,
such as sap-sucking aphids, did not experience significant declines in their
ability to forage from exposure to air pollution.
Air pollution may be more disruptive for bees and other insects because it
muddles the chemical signals they use to communicate and sense their
surroundings, the researchers suggest, while pests tend to rely more heavily
on visual cues or others.
Surprisingly, even low concentrations of air pollutants below the threshold
considered safe for humans harmed the pollinators, Ryalls said.
“While the results of this analysis provide further evidence that reducing
emissions of all air pollutants should be a priority, they indicate that an
increased focus on reducing, or at least restricting, increases in ozone
could be particularly advantageous for beneficial invertebrate species,” the
study warns.
A related 2023 study found that ozone can change the odors given off by
flowers, dramatically reducing how well honeybees recognize them, while a
separate 2024 study found that both ozone and nitrate air pollution made it
harder for pollinators to find flowers.
Recent research has also further added to concerns about how air pollution
impacts human health. Chronic exposure to air pollution, including nitrogen
oxides and particulate matter, increases risk for developing the autoimmune
disease lupus, especially for people with high genetic risk for developing
the disease, according to a study published July 10.
Air pollution exposure also increases risk for developing Alzheimer’s
disease, according to a study of more than 1,100 participants from Atlanta
published in April, and may greatly diminish the chances of a live birth
after in vitro fertilization, according to research presented Monday at the
European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology annual meeting in
Amsterdam.
The new study’s findings come on the heels of a June 27 Supreme Court
decision to block the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)’s so-called
“good neighbor rule” designed to reduce the spread of air pollution between
states, including harmful ozone.
The EPA estimates that the rule would prevent about 1,300 deaths each year
and contribute $13 billion to the economy annually for the next two decades.
A brief issued June 24 by the American Thoracic Society and the American
Lung Association stated that even ozone concentrations below the national
standard of 70 parts per billion are harmful to human health and compared
the lasting effects of zone exposure on the respiratory system to sun damage
on skin.
Last year, the EPA announced it would launch a two-year review of the
national standard for ground-level ozone pollution, delaying updating the
standard until after the 2024 presidential election.