Insect Explosion 'A Threat to Food Crops'
Food crops could be ravaged this century by an explosion in the numbers of insect pests caused by rising global temperatures, according to scientists who have carried out an exhaustive survey of plant damage when the earth last experienced major climate change.
Researchers found that the numbers of leaf-eating insects are likely to surge as a result of rising levels of CO2, at a time when crop production will have to be boosted to feed an extra three billion people living at the end of 21st century.
Scientists found that, during one of the last great episodes of global warming 55.8 million years ago, there was a significant increase in both the amount of damage caused by leaf-eating insects and the variety of injuries they inflicted on plants.
They believe that the 5C rise in global temperatures caused by a tripling of CO2 levels during the palaeocene-eocene thermal maximum (PETM) period sent insect numbers soaring and left an indelible impression on the fossilised leaves preserved since that time.
The percentage of leaves that suffered extensive insect damage rose dramatically during the PETM as foraging became more intensive. The researchers warned that the same effect might be seen during the present period of global warming caused by man-made emissions of CO2, which could double the pre-industrial concentration of the gas by the end of the century.
Ellen Currano of Pennsylvania State University, the lead author of the study, said that although the global warming experienced during the PETM occurred tens of millions of years ago, it is still the best analogy we have for what may happen in the future.
"By looking at the fossil record, we can observe the long-term - thousands to millions of years - response of ecosystems to abrupt warming and increased atmospheric CO2," she said. "Our study shows [that] ... when temperature increases, the diversity of insect-feeding damage on plant species also increases."
The scientists studied the five geological sites dating back to around the PETM that have well-preserved fossilised leaves. All five sites are in the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming.
The study found that the leaf damage recorded in about 5,000 different fossils jumped from between 15 and 38 per cent prior to the PETM to 57 per cent during the period of global warming. Leaf damage then returned to about 33 per cent after temperatures fell.
"We think that the warming allowed insect species from the tropics ... to migrate north," Ms Currano said.
In addition to migration from tropical regions, the scientists believe that insects had to eat more because the rising concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere made leaves less nutritious because they contained relatively smaller concentrations of nitrogen. "With more CO2 available to plants, photosynthesis is easier and plants can make the same amount of food for themselves without having to put so much protein in their leaves," Ms Currano said.
Consequently, when CO2 increases, leaves have less protein and insects need to eat more to acquire the nutrients they need. Plants can grow faster when CO2 levels rise, but they suffer from a disproportionate increase in damage, she said.
There is still debate over what caused the global warming during the PETM. One theory is that it resulted from a massive release of methane from frozen deposits under the seabed. Another is that it was caused by huge volumes of CO2 pumped out from volcanoes.
© 2008 The Independent
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29 Comments so far
Show AllKEM PATRICK
no, that one's spelled with an 'o'. btw it's another post on this site i meant to say............
When I came here to Southern Oregon ten years ago a large honeysuckle vine on my patio trellis was always covered with dozens of black bumblebees. The numbers have been shrinking ever since. Last year I counted only six, and those seemed unwell to me. In those ten years I've watched the other types of bee populations shrink as well.
I only destroy wasps nests in the first stages of being built, anywhere near doors, in and around my patio and in my bird houses, giving them time to find other sites. I didn't even kill the one that crawled into my glove that was laying on the patio floor after I'd smoked them out of a bird house one chilly morning. It later stung me on the finger when I put the glove on.(Guess it showed me!)
One of the neighbors puts up a bee catcher every year, and another has the killers come to spray every surface in their yard yearly.
In the past two years I've also seen a big drop in the larger spiders populations that had inhabited my yard along with the bees.
The largest bird populations I see here are crows, blackbirds, and sparrows. There were over two dozen robins out front a couple of days ago. That was amazing. I've never seen more than six at one time.
Actually, I don't see any population explosion of inscects in our state. Of course small fish eat a lot of mosquito larve and there may be a major problem where mosquitoes are always a problem, because not only are the birds dying off in alarming numbers all over the planet, so are fish, frogs and lizards. In our dry climate in the southwest, we never have had many mosquitoes however. We hardly saw any bugs last year of any types, nor so far this year.
Glad you put the 'S' in "wasps" CoCo.
With 2,000 specie of bees they may be one of any? Some look like big green flies and they spend the cold months under the bark of dead trees.
I'm no professional expert, but I seem to see a corelation between the loss of birds and the rising population of insects.
Toss some stale bread on the ground and the birds will go for it. If they are there, they are always hungry, and when they pick at that stale bread, they'll be picking at insects too. If there aren't as many trees, there aren't so many birds. If there aren't so many birds, there's a much greater possibility that there will an insect explosion.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't this a basic natural food-chain cycle problem?
The lesson of Science Fiction Movies is :
Don't piss off the insects!
Why didn't we listen?
"We can dig up rocks and gunk from the ground and burn it to stay warm and make machines work."
What I don't get is, did that REALLY sound like a good idea at the time?
Didn't ANYBODY say :
" What? With smoke going up into the air all the time? Nah, we breathe that stuff you dope! Get a new plan."
I guess the reply would've just been:
"No, gotta use the stuff in the ground -we're nearly out of trees up here."
Great species Homo Sapiens, really fun bunch sometimes.
-matti
CPCLT AND PAUL M
ah, those disorientating cells.............thankyou.
KEM PATRICK
i've taken your name in vain on another blog.....all in good fun. hope your bees come back............(and everyone else's) we have a few around here in southern europe but not sure what kind they are.........probably wasps.
Cell phones have been around for several years, at least 15. In spite of that fact, we have always had LOTS of bees, until just this LAST YEAR. If the problem was cell phones, I do believe the problem would have surfaced a long time ago.
Again, is is not just commercial honey bees that were scarce and there are over 20,000 specie of bees, most are not honey bees with stingers, but they do all pollinate flowers, including the veggie's flowers. There are no commercial honey bee hives within at least two hundred miles of our area, but plenty of wild honey bees. There NORMALLY are many other specie of bees, wasps and or hornets here. NOT LAST YEAR.
LAST year, 2007, for the FIRST TIME in our recorded history, almost no bees or hornets, wasps, and or, even lady bugs etc, arrived here and we have millions of red and white oak trees in our county and this year there were almost ZERO acorns.
The acorns are a very important food source for many specie of aninmals here, including javalina, deer, bear, fox, caoti-mundi and squirrels. So it is a serious problem, as has been well reported with many other articles published here at Common Dreams last year.
Many bloggers who commented on those articles reported like problems in states from Maine to Florida and west to Arizona and Washington state and others in between. A very few bloggers noted no major problem, __ that is the exception. Many scientists and biologists who spend their entire adult lives studying the issue, say we have a very serious problem.
I agree, with the scientists and with the articles I read, which are published by the Audobon Society, nature magazines, etc. ___ I agree, not becaue I'm an expert on the subject, but because I'm not totally blind and we can SEE what transpired LAST YEAR with our own EYES, along with ALL of the other people who live in our secluded mountain valley.
No one near here uses any pesticides and all of the few gardens are totally organic. Our weather was near perfect last year, wonderful weather, just right for the birds and the bees. We all have cell phones and have had them for many years.
The bees and other pollinators arrived in my gardens one month late last year. I plant only heirloom veggies. I also avoid exotic plants and plant only indigenous flowers. The humming birds did a good job last year. I noticed a decent number of butterflies as well. I also took great care not to harm the wasps or their nests. I coexisted with a wasp nest in one of my garden hose wheels the entire summer. That was an adventure.
I live in North America, and I note native American plants fruit just fine. I read an interesting explanation about bees, the problem is they have been bred to be very big to produce more honey, and they get sick too easily.
I only eat bugs accidentally, but vegetarian would work. I suspect I'd get used to more mixed in my diet.
There is a large greenish colored, flying roach in Indonesia and the Phillipines that taste very good ~Easy-flyer~. The ones that have an odor of bubble gum when you pull the head off. Roasted grasshoppers or locusts are not bad at all, if you remove the head, wings and feet.
We catch locusts at night with a shop vac and an umberella type of nozzle that has a 100 watt bulb near the suction opening and then use them for garden mulch and fertilizer. ___ Almost as good as fish for fertilizer and lots easier to catch.
There are 20,000 specie of bees, it is not just the honey bees which are leaving town. We didn't have any type of bees in our garden and orchard last year, we have seen a few wild honey bees recently, of course in our area of the States, all of those honey bee specie are killer bees.
Two years ago, one of our neighbors was killed by a swarm of them he suffered more than 500 stings. The local "Bee Man", found their hive in the walls of an abandoned nearby shed and there was twelve tons of honey in the hive. He gave half of it to the widow to use for funeral expenses. There is a wild hive at the Sonora Desert Museum, near Tucson AZ, which has approx 120 tons of honey. The honey comb would fill a four bedroon house. We do have a very serious, world wide inscect and bee problem.
chocolate-covered grasshoppers taste best.
I wonder what insect tastes the best?
"please explain disorientating cell signals……….for the unindoctrined"
Oh, it's the idea that bees somehow pick up radio frequency transmissions from cell phone towers. Note that the phrase "disorientating cell signals" is classic question-begging.
It's far more likely to be a pathogen, but at this stage no-one knows.
the ubiquitous cell phone o coco o
"Insects rule" - Indeed we do!
"On the positive side, insects are high in protein and low in fat." - That's me!
"Pass the locust legs please…" - Bite me!
While many in the swarm pray for the day that humans go extinct, I tell them, mostly in vain, that there are many humans with whom we can share the Earth with.
All too few locusts read CommonDreams, though. Many just watch tv and eat bad food and get fat and their tiny brains turn to rot. They could pass for humans.
CPCLT
please explain disorientating cell signals..........for the unindoctrined
here in NH. i keep losing my bees and think it is the rise in disorinenting cell signals.
I have been OG veg gardening since I was 15, I will turn 50 mid year. I have noticed a dramatically marked increase in pests and also pests that I have never seen before in this area.
It only means more money for Monsanto, GMO crop producers etc.
The cockroach will inherit the earth.
Last I saw, they were saying the bee problem was
caused by an "infection" (virus, mite, ???) that
affects bees in Israel.
coco,
We've had mosquitos and flies here in Maine into December and even January.
As for the bees...I don't think they know yet what's causing the colony crashes. It's a big one, though, since without them we're dead.
Plant diversity would come in handy during such an episode. Of course industrialized farming isn't contributing to this problem at all so we can all go back to sleep.
"On the positive side, insects are high in protein and low in fat."
Whether said in jest or not, this is true, as the third world knows. We may come to find out soon enough right here in River City.
Pass the locust legs please...
On the positive side, insects are high in protein and low in fat.
Already we are seeing humans with the intellect of insects in the White House.........
already mosquitoes are being seen in places they have not inhabited before; like the upper levels of mount kilimanjaro. also they are carrying malaria to greece and italy. 'we think that the warming allowed insect species from the tropics to migrate north' and that is exactly what is happening now. but i still don't understand what happened to the bees............
How unfortunate that the Bush Administration loves to quote scripture where it bolsters their rhetoric while ignoring the more prevalent biblical themes that would illluminate their sinister ideology such as hypocrisy, crooked moneylenders and locusts.
Insects rule.