Pollination and Food Security under a Changing Climate
P ollination is one of the most fundamental ecological processes supporting life on Earth and sustaining human food systems. It enables the sexual reproduction of flowering plants and directly influences the production of a large proportion of the world’s food crops. Despite its critical importance, pollination often remains undervalued in discussions of climate change and food security. As global temperatures rise, precipitation patterns shift, and extreme weather events become more frequent, the delicate relationships between plants and their pollinators are increasingly disrupted. These disruptions pose serious risks to agricultural productivity, nutritional security, rural livelihoods, and ecosystem stability, making pollination a key concern in the context of a changing climate. Pollination as an Ecological Process Pollination refers to the transfer of pollen from the male reproductive structures of a flower to the femal...