Module 11 - Insect Conservation Flashcards
What is the goal of conservation biology?
To conserve threatened species and overall biodiversity
Are insects really in decline?
YES
- over 730 endangered insect species
- more and more scientists have recognized that some insect populations and species are being lost at an alarming rate
Why do we need insect conservation?
- Humans have an obligation to prevent harm to as many species as possible that are ‘in our hands;
- Insects play important roles in the maintenance of ecosystems
- several species influence terrestrial habitats
- pollinators - Predatory and herbivorous insects provide balance to an ecosystem
- Insects provide an important food source for larger predatory organisms in an ecosystem
Biomonitoring
Involves the assessment of ecosystem components, such as the types of habitats and species present
- this data is critical in conservation efforts
- insects used because they are widespread and sensitive to specific habitat requirements and respond quickly to enviro changes and are easy to sample
- helps up understand the impacts of natural and human-induced ecosystem changes on behaviour, diversity, and abundance of the target species, which in turn informs conservation efforts
Habitat Loss
Industrial, agricultural, and urban human developments continue to expand and destroy many natural habitats rich in biodiversity (ex. forests, grasslands, aquatic ecosystems)
- Research projects such as the EMEND project are critical in helping us understand the impacts of activities and how to create more sustainable forest management practices
Habitat Fragmentation
The process by which continuous natural habitats are broken into smaller patches, reducing the area of available habitat for organisms, and resulting in the physical isolation of populations.
- can result from natural phenomena but human-induced factors are even more widespread
- most severely impacts insects with poor dispersal capabilities
Inbreeding depression
Occurs when populations become so highly inbred that the health of individuals drastically declines
- An issue that arises when small populations become separated
- Lack of genetic diversity means that problematic genes can become ever more present in the population
- Individuals may struggle to even find eachother to mate
What 2 human-driven factors are the main causes of habitat fragmentation?
Agricultural development and urbanization
-increase in demand for food due to rising global human population = increase in amount of land devoted to agriculture
- highly modified landscapes, often monocultures, insects unable to survive or adapt
- industrial practices, such as creation of roads and survey lines
Urbanization: the movement of ppl from rural areas into towns and cities
- extensively modifies the landscape
- vehicle emissions, road salt, heat from buildings, light pollution all affect the surrounding habitat
- much of insect behaviour is dependent on circadian rhythm (a biological clock that directs behaviour and is primarily dictated by photoperiod); affected by light pollution; may be displaced from natural habitat and concentrated at artificial light source or repelled
Since insects are small ectothermic animals, temperature has a heavy influence on multiple aspects of their biology. How so?
Temperature affects insect metabolic and developmental rates, the timing and level of insect activity as well as their overall survival
- Climate change affects insect biology, population distributions, and biodiversity
Direct impacts of the changing climate on insect development and survival
- warmer temps promote faster rates of development = faster life cycles = more generations in a year
- metabolic activity increases = rate of food consumption will increase = rise in crop losses (not good w/ growing human pop)
- temperature-size rule: dictates that ectothermic animals in warmer conditions develop faster, mature earlier, and yet are smaller at maturity than those developing in colder climates; may be due to physiological constraints on growth at higher temperatures; body size influence’s lifespan, home range, and reproductive capability
- phenology
- shifts in the timing of insect activity are detrimental if similar shifts are not occurring in the timing of other ecosystem events
- or, climate change may induce a change in the phenology of the host plant without having the same impact on the insects; mismatch in timing of activity with resource availability = bad for insects with highly specific habitat requirements - insects that are habitat specialists or insects in tropical climates are at extreme risk
- in tropical climates temps are near optimal; if temps rise they may exceed optimum (inverse is true in temperate regions)
Temperature-size rule
dictates that ectothermic animals in warmer conditions develop faster, mature earlier, and yet are smaller at maturity than those developing in colder climates; may be due to physiological constraints on growth at higher temperatures
Indirect impacts of climate change on species distributions
- the species of plants that populate an ecosystem, as well as their growth and biology, can be determined by climate-driven environmental changes
- changing temps, CO2 levels, and precipitation can alter plant traits such as chemistry, biomass, or seed production
- change in range and distribution of plant species
- insect herbivores affected by change in biology and distribution of host plants - insects respond to climate-driven pressures by shifting natural ranges
- sometimes expand range, sometimes restrict; shift brings its own set of challenges
- genetic isolation can lead to inbreeding depression
- novel habitats may have sparse resources
- use physiology-based models to predict the responses of insect populations to changes in climatic conditions
Insect adaptations to climate change
Variance within a population, high numbers of offspring, and short generation times can allow rapid adaptive evolution
- this can allow some local insects to persist in a region despite climate change
- ex. Operophtera brumata (winter moth)
Invasive species
Any organism with established populations in an area outside of their native range that causes harm in the new range
- threat to ecosystems; dramatic effects on the composition, structure, and fxn of native ecosystems through resource competition and trophic interactions
- negatively impact local biodiversity through exploitation of resources and rapid population growth due to a lack of natural enemies and coevolved host defenses in the new range
- economic costs for humans
- unintentionally transported to new places in a variety of ways
- in some cases, purposefully introduced into new habitat
Impacts of Direct Harvesting of insects
- Another way humans negatively impact arthropod pops is through overexploitation
- We harvest wild insects for food, aesthetic purposes, scientific curiosity; leading cause of decline in some arthropod species
- Rarely the cause of insect decline alone, but in combination with other human-induced factors it can threaten populations