Get the latest Science News and Discoveries

Oxidant pollutant ozone removes mating barriers between fly species - EurekAlert


In a recent study published in Nature Communications, researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena, Germany, show that ozone levels, such as those found in many places on hot summer days today, destroy the sex pheromones of fruit fly species. As a result, some natural mating boundaries maintained by species-specific pheromones no longer exist. The research team has shown in experiments that flies of different species mate when exposed to ozone and produce hybrid offspring.  Since most of these offspring are unable to reproduce, the results could provide another explanation for the global decline of insects. 

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on Eureka Alert

Read more on:

Photo of fly species

fly species

Photo of EurekAlert

EurekAlert

Photo of mating barriers

mating barriers

Related news:

News photo

Automation and orchestration of zero trust architecture: Potential solutions and challenges - EurekAlert

News photo

Discovery brings all-solid-state sodium batteries closer to practical use - EurekAlert

News photo

Scientists pioneer autonomous robotic method for studying liquids suspended in air - EurekAlert