By
ABBEY GREENE/ecoRI
News contributor
Editor’s note: Fourth and
final story in an occasional series this summer by ecoRI News intern Abbey
Greene about threatened/endangered animals living in southern New England.
Thanks
to the efforts of third-graders at St. Michael’s Country Day School in Newport,
who helped get the American burying beetle named Rhode Island’s state insect
this year, more awareness has been raised for its protection. The
orange-spotted insect is on the brink of extinction.
The American burying beetle once populated 35 states, the District
of Columbia and large parts of Canada.
Today, the beetle can only be found in
five states — Rhode Island, Oklahoma, Arkansas, South Dakota and Nebraska — and
in one Canadian province, Ontario. Their numbers have dropped drastically, and
scientists are engaged in efforts to help save this colorful insect.
One characteristic that makes the American burying beetle stand out is its sense of care for its
young, which is uncommon amongst insects. Both parents become involved with
their young, providing them food as soon as they hatch inside their carrion
host.
“Every species is important, but the American burying beetle is
important in the ecosystem as a recycler,” he said. “They take dead decaying
things out of the landscape and turn it into nutrients for the soil and food
for its larva. So without insects like the burying beetle, we’d basically be
knee-deep in dead decaying matter.”
Perrotti said the American burying beetle is threatened because of
habitat loss and ecosystem fragmentation. When habitat is lost, the first
things to go are predators. With predators gone, scavengers become more
prevalent because they have nothing keeping them in check. In the American
burying beetle’s case, this insect is a specialist that needs carrion of a
smaller, specific weight.
The extinction of the passenger pigeon really impacted them, as the carcasses
of these birds were just the right host for the beetles. The loss of the
passenger pigeon and human impacts such as light pollution, bug zappers and
pesticides have taken a toll on beetle populations.
The key to saving the American burying beetle is to reintroduce
populations into habitats that can eventually sustain them. The insect is a
specialist, meaning it only uses specific carrion as larval hosts. The beetles
only use small- to medium-sized carcasses to bury and lay their eggs inside.
The successful reintroduction of the beetle has been carried out
on Nantucket and in Ohio. The largest population in the world is actually right
off the coast of Rhode Island, on the summer vacation hot spot Block Island.
“This is the only place east of the Mississippi (River) that it
still occurs naturally,” said Scott Comings, director of land and freshwater
conservation for The Nature Conservancy (TNC) of Rhode Island. The TNC has been
working with with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and the Rhode Island
Department of Environmental Management to protect the island’s beetle
population.
Comings said Block Island is a perfect habitat for the beetle.
With the right kind of carrion, little competition, less light pollution, and a
lot less herbicide and pesticide use, the island’s American burying beetle
population is thriving.
“The most recent population numbers are strong at over 900 beetles
on the island, which is an upward trend,” Comings said.