Buzzkill:
global warming shrinks range of pollinating bumblebees
Send a link to a friend
[July 10, 2015]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Global warming is
shrinking the terrain where bumblebees live in North America and Europe,
with these vital pollinators departing the southernmost and hottest
parts of their ranges while failing to move north into cooler climes,
scientists say.
|
Their study, published on Thursday, used records from 1901 to 2010
to track 67 bumblebee species, finding that the insects have
surrendered about 185 miles (300 km) from the southern end of the
regions they called home on both continents.
The researchers found no evidence pesticide use or habitat
destruction were to blame, instead implicating rising temperatures
recorded since climate change began accelerating in the 1970s.
"This is the 'climate vise,'" said University of Ottawa biologist
Jeremy Kerr, with the bumblebees "stuck at the northern edges of
ranges while the southern edges are crushed inward and those
populations are lost."
"Bumblebees are declining incredibly fast and the fingerprints of
human-caused climate change are all over these changes," Kerr added.
"Even more incredibly to us, these effects are often nearly
identical across continents, occurring at the same pace in both
Europe and North America."
The steep decline of bumblebees on a continental scale threatens
food security and the economic viability of some crops, the
researchers said. Bumblebees pollinate numerous plants that provide
food for people and wildlife.
"Wild bumble bees are important pollinators of agricultural crops
such as blueberry, apple, pumpkin and tomato, and declines in this
ecosystem service of pollination could lead to lower crop yields and
higher food costs, with consequences for both our food supply and
the economy," University of Vermont biologist Leif Richardson said.
[to top of second column] |
Bumblebees are losing the southernmost portion of their ranges amid
rising temperatures, but unlike other species they have not moved
further north into more hospitable territory.
"They are failing to colonize newly available environments created
by this warming. Climate change may be making things too hot for
them in the south, but warming conditions are not pulling them north
as we would expect," University of Calgary ecologist Paul Galpern
said.
Kerr said dramatic action should be considered: a proposal called
"assisted migration" involving a large-scale relocation of bee
populations into new areas where they might thrive.
"More generally, losing pollinators is a sign that we are playing
dangerously with life-support systems we can't do without," Kerr
added. "That is an experiment we should never have started."
The study appears in the journal Science.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Eric Walsh)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|