Skip to main content

Climate-Change

Insects are ectotherms

  • All aspects of life histories determined by temperature
  • Rapid responses to changing climate
  • Evidence to date:
    • Behavioral changes
    • Voltinism shifts
    • Range expansion/contraction

Climate and biotic disturbance: it's complicated

Climate

  • Insect/pathogens (direct effect)
    • Survival
    • Reproduction
    • Disoersak
    • Geographic distribution
  • Tree physiology/resistance (indirect effects)
  • Competitors, natural enemies (indirect effects)

All additionally impacted by anthropogenic impacts (fragmentation, pollution, fire, alien ivnasives, etc.)

Potential effects of global warming on individual forest insects

PositivesNegatives
Reduced winter mortalityPhenological asynchrony
Increased thermally benign habitatReduced thermally benign habitat
Reduced host resistanceShift / depletion of hosts
Escape from competitors / predatorsCompetition/predation from invasive species
Increased host range (more host species)Dispersal costs to new habitats

Potential effects of global warming on eruptive insect populations

  • Altered outbreak frequency/duration
  • Modified herbivory/damage rates
  • Range expansion/contraction
  • Novel host species associations

Prehistoric responses by forest insects to climate change

  • Warming does not equal fitness benefit to all insects; however...
  • Significant increase in herbivory during PETM
    • Decline in herbivory with subsequent cooling
  • Assumption is that trends will follow suit
  • Significant warming throughout Western North America to Date
  • Considerably more warming predicted in the future
  • Growing evidence for increased insect disturbances