by Marlowe HOOD
PARIS, France (AFP) — Climate change has contributed to a sharp drop in bumblebee populations across North America and Europe in recent decades, scientists said Friday.
Compared to the period 1900-1974, bumblebee numbers across dozens of distinct species dropped, on average, 46 percent during the first 15 years of the 21st century in Canada and the United States.
In Europe, the corresponding decline of the pollinators was 17 percent, they reported in the journal Science.
Many species of bees and other insects are in a downward spiral, previous research has shown.
Nearly half of all insect species worldwide are in decline and a third could disappear altogether by century’s end, scientists concluded last year in a landmark study, warning about dire consequences for crop pollination and natural food chains.
But the main drivers of extinction are thought to be habitat loss and pesticide use, and teasing out the possible impact of climate change — a more recent threat — “has proven exceptionally challenging,” researchers led by Peter Soroye, a biologist at the University of Ottawa, said in the new study.
To get around that problem, the scientists analyzed more than half-a-million geo-localized bumble bee sightings mapped onto a 100-km2 grid in each continent.
They analyzed population changes over time in each grid and matched those to average increases or decreases in temperature, as well as heat peaks beyond the threshold of bumblebee tolerance.
As expected, areas most affected by global warming showed the most acute declines in bumblebee density, while populations rose in regions that had previously been too cool for the bees to thrive.
But the numbers did not offset each other — even after taking into account the new bee colonies in cooler climes, the total population was way down.
The results, the scientists concluded, “suggest that recent climate change has driven stronger and more widespread bumblebee declines than have been reported previously.
“Climate change-related local extinction among species greatly exceeded those of colonization, contributing to pronounced bumble bee species decline across both Europe and North America.”
Insects are the world’s top pollinators — 75 percent of 115 top global food crops depend on animal pollination, including cocoa, coffee, almonds, and cherries, according to the UN.
One-in-six species of bees have gone regionally extinct somewhere in the world.
© Agence France-Presse