Cordeiro Guaraci Duran, Dötterl Stefan
Department of Environment & Biodiversity, Paris-Lodron University of Salzburg, Hellbrunnerstr. 34, 5020 Salzburg, Austria.
Insects. 2023 Feb 28;14(3):242. doi: 10.3390/insects14030242.
Many wild plants and crops are pollinated by insects, which often use floral scents to locate their host plants. The production and emission of floral scents are temperature-dependent; however, little is known about how global warming affects scent emissions and the attraction of pollinators. We used a combination of chemical analytical and electrophysiological approaches to quantify the influence of a global warming scenario (+5 °C in this century) on the floral scent emissions of two important crop species, i.e., buckwheat () and oilseed rape (), and to test whether compounds that are potentially different between the treatments can be detected by their bee pollinators ( and ). We found that only buckwheat was affected by increased temperatures. Independent of temperature, the scent of oilseed rape was dominated by -anisaldehyde and linalool, with no differences in relative scent composition and the total amount of scent. Buckwheat emitted 2.4 ng of scent per flower and hour at optimal temperatures, dominated by 2- and 3-methylbutanoic acid (46%) and linalool (10%), and at warmer temperatures threefold less scent (0.7 ng/flower/hour), with increased contributions of 2- and 3-methylbutanoic acid (73%) to the total scent and linalool and other compounds being absent. The antennae of the pollinators responded to various buckwheat floral scent compounds, among them compounds that disappeared at increased temperatures or were affected in their (relative) amounts. Our results highlight that increased temperatures differentially affect floral scent emissions of crop plants and that, in buckwheat, the temperature-induced changes in floral scent emissions affect the olfactory perception of the flowers by bees. Future studies should test whether these differences in olfactory perception translate into different attractiveness of buckwheat flowers to bees.
许多野生植物和农作物都由昆虫授粉,昆虫常常利用花香来定位它们的寄主植物。花香的产生和释放取决于温度;然而,关于全球变暖如何影响气味释放以及传粉者的吸引力,我们却知之甚少。我们结合化学分析和电生理方法,来量化全球变暖情景(本世纪升高5摄氏度)对两种重要农作物,即荞麦()和油菜()花香释放的影响,并测试传粉蜜蜂(和)能否检测出不同处理之间可能存在差异的化合物。我们发现只有荞麦受到温度升高的影响。与温度无关,油菜的气味主要由对甲氧基苯甲醛和芳樟醇组成,相对气味组成和气味总量没有差异。荞麦在最适温度下每朵花每小时释放2.4纳克气味,主要成分是2-和3-甲基丁酸(46%)和芳樟醇(10%),而在温度较高时,气味释放量减少三倍(0.7纳克/花/小时),2-和3-甲基丁酸在总气味中的占比增加(73%),且没有芳樟醇和其他化合物。传粉者的触角对各种荞麦花香化合物有反应,其中一些化合物在温度升高时消失或(相对)含量受到影响。我们的结果表明,温度升高对农作物花香释放的影响存在差异,而且在荞麦中,温度引起的花香释放变化会影响蜜蜂对花朵的嗅觉感知。未来的研究应该测试这些嗅觉感知上的差异是否会转化为荞麦花对蜜蜂不同的吸引力。