Invasive rats are compensating for the loss of native pollinators in New Zealand, scientists report.
The rats, which are responsible for devastating the native
pollinator populations, are attracted to the flowers for their nectar.
The results could mean that the decline of pollinating animals worldwide does not spell the end for all native plants.
Almost 90% of the world's flowering plants are pollinated by animals.
Insect pollination alone is estimated to be worth £141bn
($224bn) each year, and according to a report from the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) bees pollinate over two-thirds of the
world's crops.
So the decline of the world's pollinating animals has
unsurprisingly sparked concerns about lower yields and serious long-term
food shortages among farmers and governments.
Conservationists also predict the loss of many animal-pollinated plants.
"New Zealand offers a really interesting and rare opportunity
to look at what the consequences of species extinction [are] for...
pollination," explained conservation biologist David Wilcove from
Princeton University, US.
"We have this situation where almost all of the native
vertebrates in New Zealand - birds, bats and reptiles - have disappeared
from the North island... largely due to predation by rats," he added.
But a small patch of pristine New Zealand woodland still
exists, affording the researchers the opportunity to investigate the
impact of losing key pollinating species on endemic plant species.
Dr Wilcove, and his then Princeton colleague David Pattemore, set out to study three plants: the red-flowered Metrosideros and Knightia, and the purple-flowered Veronica.
What the duo didn't expect to see was that on the mainland,
where the plants were no longer visited by traditional pollinating
species, rats, and a recently colonising bird, were doing the job
instead.
And for two of the three plant species, the invasive species were doing a comparable job to the native pollinators
News source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15738837