Home / Science / Pollinator Decline Fuels Plant Extinction Vortex
Pollinator Decline Fuels Plant Extinction Vortex
18 Apr
Summary
- Pollinator loss directly decreases plant biodiversity, creating a negative feedback loop.
- Research used bridal veil fabric to exclude pollinators from 54 prairie plots.
- Bagged flowers showed a 50% reduction in viable seeds and 23% fewer plant species.

Researchers at Iowa State University have established a direct causal relationship between the health of pollinators and the biodiversity of plant life. Their findings indicate that a decline in pollinators can lead to a decrease in plant diversity, which subsequently causes further declines in pollinator populations, forming a dangerous "plant-pollinator extinction vortex."
This four-year study involved experiments on university prairie land near Ames. Researchers bagged approximately 68,000 flowers using fabric similar to that in bridal veils to exclude pollinators. Control groups were left undisturbed or hand-pollinated.
The results, published in the journal Ecology, showed that plants in plots where pollinators were excluded experienced a 50% reduction in viable seeds. Furthermore, there was a significant 23% decline in overall plant species richness within these plots.
These findings suggest that pollinators play a vital role in maintaining high plant diversity, a factor that may have been overlooked in previous ecosystem restoration efforts. The research team hopes this will encourage public action to better support pollinator populations through planting choices.