The Mercury News

Study shows massive global insect loss

- By Ben Guarino

Insects around the world are in a crisis, according to a small but growing number of long-term studies showing dramatic declines in invertebra­te population­s. A new report suggests that the problem is more widespread than scientists realized. Huge numbers of bugs have been lost in a pristine national forest in Puerto Rico, the study found, and the forest’s insect-eating animals have gone missing, too.

In 2014, an internatio­nal team of biologists estimated that, in the past 35 years, the abundance of invertebra­tes such as beetles and bees had decreased by 45 percent. In places where

long-term insect data are available, mainly in Europe, insect numbers are plummeting. A study last year showed a 76 percent decrease in flying insects in the past few decades in German nature preserves.

The latest report, published Monday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that this startling loss of insect abundance extends to the Americas. The study’s authors implicate climate change in the loss of tropical invertebra­tes.

“This study in PNAS is a real wake-up call — a clarion call — that the phenomenon could be much, much bigger, and across many more ecosystems,” said David Wagner, an expert in invertebra­te conservati­on

at the University of Connecticu­t who was not involved with this research. He added: “This is one of the most disturbing articles I have ever read.”

Bradford Lister, a biologist at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute in New York, has been studying rain forest insects in Puerto Rico since the 1970s.

“We went down in ’76, ’77 expressly to measure the resources: the insects and the insectivor­es in the rain forest, the birds, the frogs, the lizards,” Lister said.

He came back nearly 40 years later. “Boy, it was immediatel­y obvious when we went into that forest,” Lister said. Fewer birds flitted overhead. The butterflie­s, once abundant, had all but vanished.

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