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Stephen Beech

Climate Change Threatens Insect Communities, Disrupting Ecosystems And Food Supplies

Wasp. Climate change could lead to widespread chaos for insects and our food supplies, warns a new study. PHOTO BY JONAS ALLERT/UNSPLASH

Climate change could lead to “widespread chaos” for insects and our food supplies, warns a new study.

A warming world will have a major impact on ecosystems and derail the development of new species, say scientists.

Dr. Thomas Powell and his lab at Binghamton University, State University of New York, wanted to establish how global warming will affect insects.

He explained that in the 1850s, the apple maggot fly – a major agricultural pest – began to diverge into two populations in the Hudson Valley in the United States.

One continued to live on the fruit of the region’s native hawthorn trees. The other shifted to a new food source: apple trees, originally introduced to North America by English colonists.

Dr. Powell said: “The entomologist who discovered this actually corresponded with Darwin about it potentially being an example of the origin of species in real-time.

Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences Thomas H.Q. Powell. Binghamton University, State University of New York. He explained that in the 1850s, the apple maggot fly – a major agricultural pest – began to diverge into two populations in the Hudson Valley in the United States. PHOTO BY BINGHAMTON UNI/SWNS

“It wasn’t until the system was picked back up by researchers in the late 20th Century that we found out he was right.”

He said hawthorns fruit three or four weeks later than apples, resulting in a shift in the two populations’ reproductive schedules. That, in turn, has an impact on several species of parasitic wasps that feed on the maggot fly, demonstrating the delicate balance that undergirds ecosystems.

For their experiment, the researchers reared populations of apple- and hawthorn-based flies and parasitic wasps under conditions matching the seasonal average from the last 10 years of climate data, and then warmer conditions projected 50 to 100 years into the future.

Dr. Powell says the results, published in the journal Ecology Letters, have “important ramifications” for insect biodiversity.

Although in the same location, the two fly populations responded to that temperature shift in starkly different ways.

The hawthorn-dwellers appeared to have more resilience, possibly owing to more genetic diversity.

The lifecycle of the apple flies was thrown out of phase with their host plant, making their survival tenuous — potentially halting the speciation process.

However, the life cycles of parasitic wasps weren’t affected by the heat — which Dr. Powell says could spell “dire consequences” if they fall out of step with their prey’s lifecycle.

He said natural adaptation might be able to restore some balance in disrupted systems long-term, but there are major constraints on rapid evolution. Habitats tend to be smaller and fragmented, for example, limiting the amount of genetic variability that organisms need to respond to evolving pressures.

Dr. Powell, Assistant Professor of biological sciences, added: “It’s not just that climate change is disrupting evolution through the potential breakdown of this classic speciation story, but that the rapid evolution of the flies has a strong bearing on how susceptible they are to climate change.

“So, if we’re finding that the effects of these future conditions may be completely different, even for identical flies from the same habitat that have been evolving since just the 1800s, we may see widespread chaos in the ecological timing of insect communities in the coming decades.”

Produced in association with SWNS Talker

Edited by Saba Fatima and Asad Ali

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