From flickering fireflies to lowly dung beetles, insects are vanishing
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[December 07, 2022]
By Gloria Dickie, Julia Janicki and Simon Scarr
(Reuters) -As a boy in the 1960s, David Wagner would run around his
family’s Missouri farm with a glass jar clutched in his hand, scooping
flickering fireflies out of the sky.
“We could fill it up and put it by our bedside at night,” says Wagner,
now an entomologist.
That’s all gone, the family farm now paved over with new homes and
manicured lawns. And Wagner’s beloved fireflies – like so many insects
worldwide – have largely vanished in what scientists are calling the
global Insect Apocalypse.
As human activities rapidly transform the planet, the global insect
population is declining at an unprecedented rate of up to 2% per year.
Amid deforestation, pesticide use, artificial light pollution and
climate change, these critters are struggling — along with the crops,
flowers and other animals that rely on them to survive.
“Insects are the food that make all the birds and make all the fish,”
said Wagner, who works at the University of Connecticut. “They’re the
fabric tethering together every freshwater and terrestrial ecosystem
across the planet.”
TREE OF LIFE
It’s easy to think insects are doing OK. After all, they’re nearly
everywhere — crawling through rainforest canopy, burrowing into soil,
skimming freshwater ponds or, of course, flitting through the air.
On the biological “tree of life” — which classifies organisms to
describe their evolutionary and genetic relationship to one another —
insects fall under the branch, or phylum, called Arthropods, one of the
40 branches of the Animal Kingdom.
In terms of diversity, insects are unrivaled, representing two-thirds of
the world’s more than 1.5 million documented animal species with
millions more bugs likely still undiscovered, scientists say. By
comparison, there are roughly 73,000 vertebrates, or animals with a
backbone from humans to birds and fish — these represent less than 5% of
the known Animal Kingdom, according to the International Union for
Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Their importance to the environment can’t be understated, scientists
say. Insects are crucial to the food web, feeding birds, reptiles and
mammals such as bats. For some animals, bugs are simply a treat.
Plant-eating orangutans delight in slurping up termites from a teeming
hill. Humans, too, see some 2,000 species of insects as food.
But insects are so much more than food. Farmers depend on these critters
pollinating crops and churning soil to keep it healthy, among other
activities.
* Insects pollinate more than 75% of global crops, a service valued at
up to $577 billion per year, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy
Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) says.
* In the United States, insects perform services valued in 2006 at an
estimated $57 billion per year, according to a study in the journal
BioScience.
* Dung beetles alone are worth some $380 million per year to the U.S.
cattle industry for their work breaking down manure and churning
rangeland soil, the study found.
With fewer insects, “we’d have less food,” said ecologist Dave Goulson
at the University of Sussex. “We’d see yields dropping of all of these
crops.”
And in nature, about 80% of wild plants rely on insects for pollination.
“If insects continue to decline,” Goulson said, “expect some pretty dire
consequences for ecosystems generally — and for people.”
BUGS IN DECLINE
Describing a stroll through Costa Rica’s Area de Conservacion Guanacaste
rainforest, evolutionary ecologist Daniel Janzen in 2019 wrote: “Gone
are the spiderwebs that decades back entangled those leaves. Gone is the
nighttime sparkle in the leaves reflected from thousands of lycosid
spider eyes.”
The world has lost 5% to 10% of all insect species in the last 150 years
— or between 250,000 and 500,000 species, according to a February 2020
study in the journal Biological Conservation. Those losses are
continuing, though estimates vary due to patchy data as well as
uncertainty over how many insects exist.
In the tropics, insects can be “extremely hard to identify, because
there are vastly more species than (we) are used to,” Janzen, a
University of Pennsylvania professor, told Reuters. “There are more
species within 100 kilometres of my dwelling in a national park in
northwestern Costa Rica than in all of Europe.”
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Beetles, which are sold as pets to
several countries around the world and traded with the Kmushicoin
cryptocurrency created by Tierra Viva, climb a trunk at the
company's production plant, where bio-compost and bio-fertilizer are
produced, in Tunja, Colombia, October 8, 2021. REUTERS/Luisa
Gonzalez/File Photo
Not knowing exactly what’s out there makes it harder to detect
trouble. One April 2020 analysis in the journal Science suggested
the planet is losing about 9% of its land-dwelling insect population
each decade. Another January 2021 paper tried to paint a clearer
picture by synthesizing more than 80 insect studies and found that
insect abundance is declining around 1% to 2% per year. For
comparison, the human population is growing at slightly less than 1%
per year.
“Even at the low end of 1% a year, after just 40 years you’re down
more than one-third of species and one-third of individuals — a
third of the entire tree of life lost,” said Wagner, who led the
2021 metastudy, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
But the reality is likely worse. Wagner’s team offered an
“incredibly conservative” loss estimate, he said, noting that many
insect studies are conducted in protected areas such as nature
reserves. Degraded farmland or cities would likely reveal far fewer
insects.
A WORLD OF DANGERS
The demise of insects can’t be attributed to any single cause.
Populations are facing simultaneous threats, from habitat loss and
industrial farming to climate change. Nitrogen overloading from
sewage and fertilizers has turned wetlands into dead zones;
artificial light is flooding out nighttime skies; and the growth of
urban areas has led to concrete sprawl.
“Until recently, loss of land was the single greatest driver” of the
decline, Wagner said. “But climate change is becoming a far more
severe and ominous threat by drying out parts of the planet that
were chronically wet. And that is absolutely catastrophic for a lot
of insects.”
The introduction of non-native plants, which can dominate new
environments, has also hurt insects. Because many insects have
evolved to feed on or fertilize a single plant species, the
disruption of the plant world can have an outsized effect.
For example, the Tegeticula moth species pollinates California’s
famed Joshua trees, with the succulent providing the only food
source for the moth’s offspring. If Joshua trees were to disappear,
so too could the moth. And vice versa.
WINNERS AND LOSERS
While the situation is bleak for insects at large, a few types of
insects are thriving.
“It’s generally the pest insects that are thriving because they’re
the ones that breed faster and are favored by human conditions, like
all the waste we produce for them to lay their eggs in,” said
Sussex’s Goulson.
Climate change is also giving some nuisance species a boost. Rising
temperatures are driving major outbreaks of mountain pine bark
beetles, which in two decades have decimated roughly 100,000 square
miles (260,000 square kilometers) of North American forest. And with
warmer, wetter weather, two disease-spreading mosquitoes Aedes
aegypti and Aedes albopictus are expected to expand in Asia, North
America and Europe, putting an additional 2.3 billion people at risk
from dengue fever by 2080, a June 2019 Nature Microbiology study
estimated.
LOSSES BEYOND INSECTS
As insects go, so go their predators.
In North America, nearly all songbirds feed insects to their young.
But since 1970, the number of birds in the United States and Canada
has fallen by 29%, or roughly 2.9 billion, which scientists theorize
is tied to having fewer insects in the world. Some research also has
linked insecticide use with declines in barn swallows, house
martins, and swifts.
“Nature is just eroding away very slowly,” Wagner said. As insects
disappear, “we’re losing the limbs and the twigs of the tree of
life. We’re tearing it apart. And we’re leaving behind a very
simplified and ugly tree.”
(Reporting by Gloria Dickie in London; Additional reporting by Julia
Janicki; Graphic by Simon Scarr and Jitesh Chowdhury; Editing by
Katy Daigle and Lisa Shumaker)
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