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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects
(www.theguardian.com)
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can a Science Understander please explain to me why insect species in particular (as opposed to plant species or vertebrate species) are dying off in such large numbers? is it just because of the new prevalence of pesticides, or is it because there are lots more insect species to begin with, or something else?
i know nothing about science
there's this classification called "trophic level", which is basically a breakdown of how far removed a species is from getting energy directly from the sun
So we're not seeing a planet wide die-off of plants because their source of energy is broadly unchanged (this becomes a different story when you start looking at how specific regions are changing). Insects are specifically vulnerable to a changing climate, as /u/beambrain points out. They tend to live short, fast lives and need a consistent intake of energy, water, and nutrients as they don't have much in the way of long term storage (specific species may vary, this is in general). Overall, they're immediately vulnerable to any large scale disruption in the environment, the first to feel those shocks.
Vertebrates tend to be one or two trophic levels removed from insects, with (comparatively) larger stores of energy to last them from meal to meal. This means they're also a level removed from any shock to the overall flow of energy. This doesn't mean they're immune, just that any consequences are delayed. The shock has to flow through the lower levels first.
this is exactly the explanation i was hoping for. thank you for teaching me something new!
happy to help!