AI Article Synopsis

  • Human activities are negatively affecting plant-pollinator interactions, particularly outcross pollination, as shown in a meta-analysis of 22 studies on 27 plant species.
  • Evidence suggests a significant decline in seeds produced through outcrossing due to habitat modifications caused by humans.
  • Understanding how these disturbances impact plant mating systems may reveal insights into evolutionary processes and inform strategies to mitigate the ecological consequences of human influence.

Article Abstract

There is increasing evidence that human disturbance can negatively impact plant-pollinator interactions such as outcross pollination. We present a meta-analysis of 22 studies involving 27 plant species showing a significant reduction in the proportion of seeds outcrossed in response to anthropogenic habitat modifications. We discuss the evolutionary consequences of disturbance on plant mating systems, and in particular whether reproductive assurance through selfing effectively compensates for reduced outcrossing. The extent to which disturbance reduces pollinator versus mate availability could generate diverse selective forces on reproductive traits. Investigating how anthropogenic change influences plant mating will lead to new opportunities for better understanding of how mating systems evolve, as well as of the ecological and evolutionary consequences of human activities and how to mitigate them.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2009.06.013DOI Listing

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