Although endangered mammals get all the headlines, a new scientific report warns that over 40 percent of the world's insects are in danger of going extinct.f insects head toward precipitous decline and extinction, humans can't be far behind. We need to advance our thinking about insects, their importance and what can be done to save them.
Bug life: Photo credit: Pixabay
In a recent report, scientists warn of a precipitous drop in the world's
insect population. We need to pay close attention, as over time, this could
be just as catastrophic to humans as it is to insects. Special attention
must be paid to the principal drivers of this insect decline, because while
climate change is adding to the problem, food production is a much larger
contributor.
The report, released by researchers at the Universities of Sydney and
Queensland and the China Academy of Agricultural Sciences, concluded that 40
percent of insect species are now threatened with extinction, and the
world’s insect biomass is declining at 2.5 percent a year. In 50 years, the
current biomass of insects could be cut in half. Such a sharp decline could
trigger a catastrophic collapse of nature's ecosystems.
We have, it appears, a lot to learn to avert the looming insect apocalypse.
Here are five critical lessons.
1. Small things tend to get overlooked.
While the volume of scientific research on the threat of species extinction
is growing rapidly, most of the focus has been on the declining population
of fish and large mammals. Compared to larger species, insect species and
their populations get very little attention. In making their report, the
authors conducted a comprehensive review and found 73 historical studies of
insect decline. That's a tiny fraction of the reports written about the
population loss of larger species. Yet arthropods (insects, spiders,
crustaceans) account for about half of the world's animal biomass - 17 times
more than humans.
2. Small things matter.
When it comes to endangered species, large mammals get all the headlines,
but insects are essential to the underlying web of life on which larger
creatures depend. About 60 percent of bird species rely upon insects as a
primary food source, and birds consume up to 500 million tons of insects
every year. Moreover, it is estimated that 80 to 90 percent of wild plants
depend upon insects for pollination. And while some insects feed off
domesticated crops, other insects help to keep pest populations under
control. A 2006 study estimated that insects in the U.S. provided ecosystem
services worth $57 billion a year. These include pest control, crop
pollination, and serving as a vital food source for fish and small wildlife.
3. Environmental degradation is accelerating.
Climate change, pollution and the ongoing destruction of forests, wetlands,
reefs and other vital habitats are taking an ever-increasing toll on nature.
And it's not just insects; environmental degradation is accelerating and
rapidly diminishing non-human populations, including birds, fish and large
undomesticated mammals. The World Wildlife Fund estimates that wildlife
populations, on average, have declined 60 percentsince 1970. The
International Union for Conservation of Nature now classifies 26,000 species
as threatened with extinction, and leading scientists publicly warn that a "sixth mass extinction" has commenced.
4. It's not just our greenhouse gas emissions.
No one should underestimate the impact that rising greenhouse gas emissions
are having on the web of life, but the authors of the insect report indicate
that the three largest drivers of insect depopulation are, in order of
importance: 1) habitat loss attributable to agriculture and urbanization; 2)
pollution, mainly caused by pesticides and fertilizers and; 3) the
introduction of invasive species. Climate change, which many believe is the
largest driver of ecological ruin, ranked only fourth as a driver of insect
decline.
5. It's us.
The principal drivers of insect extinction have a common denominator. Simply
put, the insect decline, in one form or another (including climate change),
is attributable to humans. Our growing numbers and our appetites are driving
insects to extinction. There is no letup in sight. World population,
presently 7.6 billion, is expected to reach nearly 10 billion by
mid-century, and the world's middle class is expected to rise at an even
faster rate. Our demand for food, and particularly our appetite for meat
products, is leaving less room for other creatures, including insects.
Humans already use a land mass about the size of South America to produce
crops for consumption and an area nearly the size of Africa to feed our
livestock. Add in the pesticides and fertilizers that we depend upon to
boost crop yields, and it' no wonder that insect populations are suffering
mightily.
The authors of the report on insect loss warned that,"Unless we change our
ways of producing food, insects as a whole will go down the path of
extinction in a few decades." Curbing our reliance on pesticides and
fertilizers could reduce the loss of insects, but it's our ever-growing need
for higher crop yields that has given rise to their use in the first place.
Given enough time and capital investments, the farmers of the world might be
able to adopt sustainable farming practices without reducing crop yields,
but we may not have the luxury of time.
To avoid insect apocalypse, we need to reduce the size of our agricultural
footprint. That should begin by preventing runaway population growth and the
unsustainable food demand that would go with it. We should increase our
support for family planning programs that help to prevent unplanned
pregnancies at home and abroad. At present, nearly 40 percent of the
pregnancies in the world are unintended. We should also commit to reducing
our meat consumption, particularly beef. Meat-based diets require the use of
far more land and water and result in much bigger environmental impacts from
greenhouse gas emissions to land degradation than plant-based diets do.
If insects head toward precipitous decline and extinction, humans can't be
far behind. We need to advance our thinking about insects, their importance
and what can be done to save them.
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