Insect Pollinators: Matchmakers of the Plant World
Photo StoryPublished : Aug 19, 2022Updated : Sep 30, 2023
Roughly 80 per cent of all flowering plants need the help of animals to reproduce. Tiny pollinators like bees, beetles, butterflies, and flies ensure that flowering plants continue their lifecycle
Text by: Samuel John
Roughly 80 per cent of all flowering plants need the help of animals to reproduce. Tiny pollinators like bees, beetles, butterflies, and flies ensure that flowering plants continue their lifecycle
Since the dawn of life on Earth about 4 billion years ago, living things have evolved fascinating ways to reproduce. Fast forward a few billion years from that single-cell reproduction, and you find jumping spiders dancing to attract a mate, baya weaver birds constructing nests to impress a potential suitor, and a primate species with the same end-goal as the baya, writing conceited self-descriptions on matrimonial websites. In the world of flowering plants, reproduction of many species occurs only with the help of dutiful matchmakers. Roughly 80 per cent of all flowering plants require the assistance of animals to reproduce. Through pollination, pollen from the anther (male parts) of a plant’s flower reaches the stigma (female parts) on the flower of another plant of the same species. This enables reproduction and the production of seeds — the plant’s first step to creating new life. As primary food producers, plants play an integral role in ecosystems everywhere.
Evolutionary processes have crafted mind-boggling relationships between pollinators and plants. In tropical countries like India, these incredible relationships and processes occur everywhere, from dense evergreen jungles to concrete cities. Even in a highly urbanised space, tiny pollinators are busy ensuring the continuity of flowering plants and the lives that depend on them. Bees explore flowers in home gardens; flies buzz onto flowers around homes and in open urban spaces; fig wasps actively travel between neighbourhood fig trees; moths and butterflies visit flowers on pavements and waysides. Aside from their critical ecological contributions, pollinators make vital economic contributions. Their primary role is to pollinate the crops we depend on for food and trade. A study published in the Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences links an estimated annual market value of crops worth $84 billion to animal pollinators — with over $22.5 billion linked directly to insect pollinators.
is the co-founder of Spiders and the Sea, a social enterprise working towards bridging people and nature - through research, outreach and creative storytelling.