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Flowers' Fragrance Diminished By Air Pollution, University of Virginia Study Indicates


April 10, 2008

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Air pollution from power plants and automobiles is destroying the fragrance of flowers and thereby inhibiting the ability of pollinating insects to follow scent trails to their source, a new University of Virginia study indicates. This could partially explain why wild populations of some pollinators, particularly bees--which need nectar for food--are declining in several areas of the world, including California and the Netherlands.Full Story

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University of Virginia

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