As
temperatures warm, bumble bees can't take the heat.
Bumble
bee populations are declining at a rate "consistent with a mass
extinction" and warming temperatures in Europe and North America are at
least partly to blame, according to a study published in Science.
Bumble
bees—one of the planet's most important pollinators for both wild plants and
farmed crops—have been declining for decades.
One estimate of North American bees found four species have declined by up to 96 percent and their range has been reduced by up to 87 percent. In Europe, an estimated 46 percent of bumble bee species are declining.
Researchers have pointed to many factors—habitat loss, declines in plant diversity, pesticides, and parasites—however, researchers from the University of Ottawa today report that populations are declining rapidly in areas where temperatures have gotten hotter, suggesting climate change may further drive down numbers of these important pollinators.
One estimate of North American bees found four species have declined by up to 96 percent and their range has been reduced by up to 87 percent. In Europe, an estimated 46 percent of bumble bee species are declining.
Researchers have pointed to many factors—habitat loss, declines in plant diversity, pesticides, and parasites—however, researchers from the University of Ottawa today report that populations are declining rapidly in areas where temperatures have gotten hotter, suggesting climate change may further drive down numbers of these important pollinators.
The researchers looked at data for 66 bumble bee species in North America and Europe from 1900 to 2015. They used the numbers from 1901 to 1974 as baseline data. They found, over the past few decades, the probability of bees being at sites they historically inhabit declined by about 46 percent in North America and roughly 17 percent in Europe when compared to the baseline time period.
They
also looked at climate change in the regions. Those places where temperatures
have risen to or near the bees' upper tolerable limits have the most drastic
declines.
Links
to precipitation patterns were not as strong, though areas that became drier
were more likely to have declines.
Lead
author Peter Soroye, a PhD student in the Department of Biology at the
University of Ottawa, said the study shows "climate chaos" is linked
to bee extinctions.
"We've
known for a while that climate change is related to the growing extinction risk
that animals are facing around the world," Soroye said in a statement.
"In this paper, we offer an answer to the critical questions of how and
why that is. We find that species extinctions across two continents are caused
by hotter and more frequent extremes in temperatures."
Some
insects thrive in a warmer climate, however, it seems warmer temperatures are
shrinking bumble bee habitat and they're not adjusting well.
This study builds on a 2015 paper that found, among 67 bumble bee species in North America and Europe, many species had stopped living at the southern limit of their habitat range and hadn't moved north (where warming temperatures had increased suitable habitat).
This study builds on a 2015 paper that found, among 67 bumble bee species in North America and Europe, many species had stopped living at the southern limit of their habitat range and hadn't moved north (where warming temperatures had increased suitable habitat).
The
authors of the 2015 study suggested that this poor adaptation to climate change
may be due to bumble bees' cool climate origins. Species that evolved in warm
climates such as the tropics have
The authors of the new study point out the "effects of climate change on bumble bees appear distinct from effects of land use" and that other impacts— intensive farming, pesticide use, and pathogens—will only "accelerate biodiversity loss for bumble bees."
"Understanding
how interactions between climate and land-use changes alter extinction risk is
vital to conservation of pollinator species," they wrote.
The
researchers hope their study is a model to study how climate change may impact
other at-risk species.
"This
work also holds out hope by implying ways that we might take the sting out of
climate change for these and other organisms by maintaining habitats that offer
shelter, like trees, shrubs, or slopes, that could let bumble bees get out of
the heat," said senior author and University of Ottawa researcher and
professor Jeremy Kerr in a statement.
See
the entire study at Science.