Insects are vital to ecosystems
but will lose almost half their habitat under current climate projections
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
Thu 17 May
2018 19.00 BSTLast modified on Fri 18 May 2018 00.55 BST
Global warming is on track to
cause a major wipeout of insects, compounding already severe losses, according
to a new analysis.
Insects are
vital to most ecosystems and a widespread collapse would cause extremely
far-reaching disruption to life on Earth, the scientists warn. Their research
shows that, even with all the carbon cuts already pledged by nations so far,
climate change would make almost half of insect habitat unsuitable by the end
of the century, with pollinators like bees particularly affected.
However, if climate change could
be limited to a temperature rise of 1.5C - the very ambitious goal included in
the global Paris agreement - the losses of insects are far lower.
The new research is the most
comprehensive to date, analysing the impact of different levels of climate
change on the ranges of 115,000 species. It found plants are also heavily
affected but that mammals and birds, which can more easily migrate as climate
changes, suffered less.
“We showed insects are the most
sensitive group,” said Prof Rachel Warren, at the University of East Anglia,
who led the new work. “They are important because ecosystems cannot function
without insects. They play an absolutely critical role in the food chain.”
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