The Effect of Climate Change on Pollinators and the Implications for Global Agriculture: A Case Study in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Oregon.

Year: 
2016
Publications Type: 
Thesis
Publication Number: 
4945
Citation: 

Young, Anna. 2016. The Effect of Climate Change on Pollinators and the Implications for Global Agriculture: A Case Study in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Oregon. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale College. Senior thesis.

Abstract: 

More than one-third of global food crops depends on commercial bees for pollination, but
over 30% of domesticated honey bee colonies collapse each year due to poor nutrition, spread of
pathogens, exposure to pesticides, and transportation stress. To avoid a pollination crisis that
would cripple global agriculture, farmers can introduce diverse populations of wild bees by
simply planting pollen-rich wildflowers near the cropland. Diverse bee populations not only
supply higher crop yields and larger fruit set (compared to single-species management), but the
differential responses among species to climate change and other perturbations provide a buffer
against disastrous declines in any one species. In this essay, I analyze the effect of climate
change on wild pollinators in montane meadows at the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in
Oregon. Globally, warming temperatures have confused plants into flowering earlier each spring,
which can cause temporal mismatches with pollinator species. Asynchronies can hinder plant
reproduction and limit the food resources necessary for pollinator survival. At the study site,
springtime temperatures rose significantly from 2011 to 2015, and the snowpack melted from the
ground consistently earlier over the five years. In response to this climate variability, the median
date of peak flower abundance and the median date of peak plant-pollinator interactions both
shifted earlier by about five weeks from 2011 to 2015. Despite sustained synchrony between the
plants and pollinators, the median flower abundances declined by 68% and the median number
of interactions declined by 73%. Although the data suggest that the wild pollinators are trying to
adapt to shifts in timing of flowering, the dwindling interaction counts indicate that the
populations are still suffering. These findings reinforce the importance of cultivating a diverse
set of wild bee species for agriculture. Even if a few individual species decline as a result of
climate change and harmful agricultural practices, pollinator biodiversity can mitigate systemic
crop pollination failures.