Degradation of Odour signals by air pollution: chemical Mechanisms, plume dynamics and INsect-Orientation behaviour (DOMINO)

Lead Research Organisation: NERC CEH (Up to 30.11.2019)
Department Name: Atmospheric Chemistry and Effects

Abstract

This project will investigate the mechanisms by which air pollution can disrupt vital airborne chemical signals that insects use for critical processes, such as mating or finding a flower, and will evaluate the ecological consequences of this phenomenon.

Air pollution is a global issue that regularly hits the front pages of newspapers. Despite tough legislation, pollution levels in many areas remain above the legal limits. For example, multiple locations in London breached annual limits for the traffic-produced gas nitrogen dioxide within the first week of January 2016. Exceeding these limits not only poses major risks for human health, but also leads to substantial EU imposed fines for the UK. In developing nations the problem can be even greater. For example, in December 2015 China issued its second ever "red alert" for air pollution in Beijing, resulting in restrictions on vehicle use and the closure of schools. Air pollution, however, is not limited to large industrialised cities. Rural areas are also regularly exposed to pollution transported from cities and major roadways and are increasingly impacted by ozone pollution due to both a rise in the global background and regular weather-induced episodic ozone peaks often referred to as ozone bubbles. One such episode was triggered during the August 2003 heat wave and is thought to have resulted in 2139 deaths in England and Wales.

Concerns over public health have driven current efforts to reduce air pollution, but there is strong evidence to suggest that the health of plants and insects are also at risk. The honey bee for example, finds food by following the unique blend of volatile organic compounds (VOC) emitted by flowers. However, we and others have recently demonstrated in laboratory experiments that common air pollutants, such as diesel exhaust and ozone, can disrupt these floral odours, but we do not yet understand what consequences this might have in the real-world. Nonetheless, it is clear that any disruption to these signals may have wide ranging and as yet unquantified impacts on the important ecosystem services they provide, such as pollination (estimated to be $361bn globally and £691m in the UK) and pest-regulation ($417bn globally).

This project will result in a step-change in our knowledge of this subject by radically advancing our conceptual understanding of how air pollution interacts with the VOCs that many insects rely on to communicate and interact with their environment.

Initially we will conduct studies to provide comprehensive evidence of how a range of key air pollutants (nitrogen dioxide, nitrate radicals and ozone) in isolation and in combination, react and interact with a series of selected VOCs, which function as either floral attractants or pheromones. We will then establish which products of these reactions a pair of model insects, the silver y moth and the buff-tailed bumblebee, are capable of detecting. Next, we will for the first time measure how degradation occurs spatially within odour plumes at time scales relevant to atmospheric mixing processes and insect navigation. Finally, we will use these data to: (i) quantify the effects of diesel exhaust (a major contributor to nitrogen dioxide pollution) and ozone pollution on the ability of male moths to locate females and pollinators to locate and pollinate flowers in field studies; and (ii) establish the effects of odour degradation in the plume on in-flight orientation behaviour of moths flying to the selected VOCs in a wind tunnel. This will provide us with a significantly advanced erudition of the mechanisms by which pollutants can degrade volatile odours used by insects and the effects that this has on insect behavioural ecology and the vital ecosystem service of pollination.

Planned Impact

This multidisciplinary research project will be of interest to a wide range of researchers, practitioners, organisations and the general public. This is a very novel area of research, therefore precise quantification of possible impacts poses a challenge. However, we have identified four key stakeholder groups with the potential to directly benefit from the planned research:

1. NGOs: A number of non-governmental organisations may benefit from the outcomes of the project, particularly wildlife and conservation organisations. Insects are a critical part of all terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems and are required for healthy ecosystem functioning and the maintenance of biodiversity. This project will provide information on how air pollution may interfere with insect ecology. This will be used to provide actionable insights for wildlife and conservation organisations in planning and developing conservation strategies, which will impact upon the management of wildlife reserves.

2. Practitioners: The two main sub-divisions of practitioners who will benefit from the research are: (i) beekeeper groups, and (ii) producers and advisors. The value of insect pollination to UK agriculture is estimated at £691M p.a. (2011). Under current agricultural practices, honey bees play a vital role in global production of pollinated crops, e.g. in the United States pollination by honey bees is estimated to be worth $11.68bn, 3 times the value of wild pollination. Using, field studies, this project will provide the first ever estimate of the effects of odour signal degradation on the ability of insects to provide pollination services and therefore the potential scale of this problem for practitioners. The outcomes of the research will be used to design and provide advisories for beekeepers on how best to manage pollinators to reduce impacts of air pollution, with respect to siting of hives. It will benefit producers/advisors, by providing information on how to enhance pollination services by taking into account the potential impacts of air pollution.

3. Policy makers: The project will play a significant contribution in shaping policy, both nationally and internationally. There is currently great political interest and debate relating both to the wider environmental and health impacts of air pollution, and to declines in pollinator populations and wider biodiversity. The outcomes of this project will be used to inform both debates and influence future policy. At national level Defra's recent National Pollinator Strategy and associated Implementation Plan are critical policy implements, but currently the effects of air pollution interrupting odour communication are not featured because there is insufficient evidence and very limited understanding of field scale effects. This project will provide that lacking evidence and thus have a major influence on future policy, for example by contributing actionable outcomes from the project to influence package design for the Countryside Stewardship Scheme to greater benefit pollinator communities.

4. General public: The recent VW emissions scandal garnered much attention in the mainstream media and has brought air quality issues to the forefront of public awareness, meaning the subject of this research project will resonate strongly. Furthermore, there is already significant public interest in pollinator and biodiversity declines. In 2010 it was estimated that nearly 6k people died prematurely in London alone as a result of NOx pollution. The public will benefit from this research because it is very likely to provide increased political pressure to ensure that current air pollution legislation is rigorously enforced and tightened. Additionally, because those ecosystem services that pollinators and other insect groups provide sustain the production of high value nutritious foods the positive impacts of this project for practitioners in food production will also have direct benefits on UK consumers.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Analysis of data from the project is ongoing. Results to date indicate that reaction of floral compounds, chemicals emitted by flowers and used by pollinators to find the flowers, can be significantly degraded by the reaction with tropospheric ozone. In particular, the reaction with ozone changes the relative mix of floral compounds (as some react faster than others) which may confuse the pollinators.

Fumigation of plants with ozone and diesel engine emissions has revealed that the presence of both types pollutants and their combination all result in a much reduced fertilisation of flowers. By contrast, the abundance of other (non-pollinating) insects was increased in the fumigated plots.
Exploitation Route The results are likely to providing insights into a further route for pollinator decline, via air pollution, which is currently not well understood, recognised or taken into account when developing air pollution policies.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

 
Description A novel Free-Air Diesel and Ozone Enrichment (FADOE) research platform
Amount £193,121 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/T009012/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2019 
End 04/2020
 
Title Nitrogen oxide and ozone concentrations, pollinator visitation frequencies and yield metrics of Brassica nigra, Sonning, UK, 2018-2019 
Description Measurements of NOX and ozone concentrations during the Free Air Diesel and Ozone Enrichment studies. The data set also includes the pollinator visitation rates and yield metrics for the brasica niagra plants within each of the eight treatment rings. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact The data shows significant reductions in pollinator visits and plant yield metrics when plants are exposed to ozone and NOX pollutions, both in isolation and in combination. 
 
Title Wind tunnel measurements of VOC plume interaction with ozone 
Description Dataset of fast-response measurements of concentrations across a VOC release plume into an ozone background field for the study of the effect of chemistry on plume characteristics and its effect on the ability of insect to follow pollinator attractants. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Dataset still to be analysed. 
 
Description DTP Studentship: Love isn't in the air: Assessing how air pollution interrupts insect sex pheromone signalling 
Organisation University of Reading
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our research team developed a NERC SCENARIO DTP to continue the work started within the DOMINO grant. We successfully filled the position and have a student who will be working with our new NERC FADOE facility on Sonning Farm.
Collaborator Contribution Reading University and CEH developed a studentship designed to exploit the new FADOE NERC facility which will investigate how air pollutants such as NOx and ozone disrupt pheromone signals used by insects.
Impact DTP Studentship: Love isn't in the air: Assessing how air pollution interrupts insect sex pheromone signalling
Start Year 2019
 
Description 13th UK Wind Engineering Society Conference Presentation 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentation by Alan Robins on "Wind tunnel experiments in support of DOMINO" at the 13th UK Wind Engineering Society Conference. This talk outlined the contribution of the university of Surry to the overall DOMINO project by outling the use of the 20 m EnFlo wind tunnel facility. The initial results from the wind tunnel experiments were presented to an audience of 100+.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description International Chemical Ecology Conference, Atlanta, 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Talk: Field assessments of the effects of elevated ozone and diesel exhaust emissions on insect pollination services

The talk generated wide interest and has led to the development of a permanent NERC research facility to continue the work undertaken in DOMINO
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.chemecol.org/programs/2019%20overview.pdf