Global warming is putting the squeeze on bumblebees. In the most comprehensive study ever conducted of the impacts of climate change on critical pollinators, scientists have discovered that global warming is rapidly shrinking the area where these bees are found in both North America and Europe.
Researchers examined more than 420,000 historical and current records of many species of bumblebees 鈥 and confirm that bumblebees are in steep decline at a continental scale because of climate change. The new research is reported in the journal Science.
Economic threats
This shrinking range is bad news for more than bees. 鈥淏umblebees pollinate many plants that provide food for humans and wildlife,鈥 says Leif Richardson, a scientist at 日韩无码 who helped lead the new research. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 stop the decline in the abundance of bumblebees, we may well face higher food prices, diminished varieties, and other troubles.鈥
鈥淧ollinators are vital for food security and our economy, and widespread losses of pollinators due to climate change will diminish both,鈥 stated Jeremy Kerr, a biologist from the University of Ottawa, who led the new study. 鈥淲e need to figure out how we can improve the outlook for pollinators at continental scales, but the most important thing we can do is begin to take serious action to reduce the rate of climate change.鈥
With climate change, many species of animals, including butterflies, have been observed to expand their territory: the northern edge of their range marches toward the North Pole 鈥 while the southern edge remains in place. Not so with bumblebees. The team of fourteen scientists who conducted the new study found that northern populations of many bumblebee species are staying put 鈥 while the southern range edge is retreating away from the equator.
鈥淭his was a surprise,鈥 said Richardson, a bee expert at . 鈥淭he bees are losing range on their southern margin and failing to pick up territory at the northern margin 鈥 so their habitat range is shrinking.鈥
Clearly it鈥檚 climate
The new study shows that the culprit is not pesticides and it鈥檚 not land use changes 鈥 two other major threats to bumblebee populations and health. Instead, the research shows clearly that this 鈥渞ange compression,鈥 as the scientists call it, tracks with warming temperatures.
The team also found that bumblebees are shifting to areas of habitat at higher elevation in response to climate change. 鈥淢oving upslope doesn't necessarily mean they've lost area there yet,鈥 said 日韩无码鈥檚 Richardson, 鈥渂ut, eventually, they may simply run out of hill.鈥
To conduct their study, the scientists drew on geo-referenced databases from museum collections on both continents. In Vermont, Leif Richardson examined bee specimens at .
Evolutionary explanations
Over the 110 years of records that the team examined, bumblebees have lost about 185 miles (300 km) from the southern edge of their range in Europe and North America, the scientists estimate. 鈥淭he scale and pace of these losses are unprecedented,鈥 said Ottawa鈥檚 Jeremy Kerr.
There may be an evolutionary explanation for the problems bumblebees now face. Many other species of insects originated and diversified in tropical climates; as temperatures warm, their evolutionary history may allow them to better adapt. Bumblebees, however have 鈥渦nusual evolutionary origins in the cool Palearctic,鈥 the scientists write, which may help explain their rapid losses of terrain from the south and lagging expansion in the warming north.
Assisted migration?
To respond to this problem, the research team suggests that a dramatic solution be considered: moving bee populations into new areas where they might persist. This 鈥渁ssisted migration鈥 idea has been considered 鈥 and controversial 鈥 in conservation biology circles for more than a decade, but is gaining support as warming continues.
鈥淲e need new strategies to help these species cope with the effects of human-caused climate change, perhaps assisting them to shift into northern areas,鈥 said Kerr. But the most important message of this study is 鈥渢he need to halt or reverse climate warming,鈥 said Leif Richardson, a USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture postdoctoral research fellow in .
鈥淭hese findings could spell trouble for many plants 鈥 including some crops, like blueberries 鈥 that depend on bumblebees for pollination,鈥 said Richardson, a researcher in . 鈥淏umblebees are crucial to our natural ecosystems.鈥
Infographic courtesy of Ann Sanderson, Sheila Colla and Paul Galpern.
DOI 10.1126/science.aaa7031