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Reports of an insect apocalypse are overblown but still concerning

While an alarming 9 per cent of insects on land are being lost each decade, the state of the world’s insects is much more nuanced than warnings of an insect apocalypse
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Insects are under threat, but how much?
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Reports of the death of insects may have been greatly exaggerated. Research out today finds that while an alarming 9 per cent of land-dwelling insects are being lost each decade, the state of the world’s insects is much more nuanced than .

The issue came to the fore in 2017, when a found a 75 per cent decline in flying insects across parts of Germany due to environmental pressures such as intensive farming. But fears of an insect meltdown – and the impact on the food we all rely on – really took off last year with by Francisco Sánchez-Bayo at the University of Sydney and his colleagues that suggesting 2.5 per cent of insect biomass is being lost each year. Without action, the team cautioned: “Insects as a whole will go down the path of extinction in a few decades.”

A backlash ensued, with at least seven criticisms published in journals. A simple one was the authors had conducted keyword searches of literature for the “insect” and “decline”, but not for “increase”, which would bias their literature review.

So what is the true state of the world’s insects? Entomologists say a new analysis today gives a much more realistic, but no less concerning, picture.

Roel van Klink at the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research in Leipzig and his colleagues compiled data on the long-term abundance of thousands of insect species from 166 studies in 41 countries, covering declines and increases. Gergana Daskalova at the University of Edinburgh, UK, who was not involved in the study, says it is the most comprehensive to date.

The analysis concluded that the number and biomass of insects is declining at 0.92 per cent a year. While much lower than the number in last year’s paper, van Klink notes that out over the course of a human generation, or 30 years, it is a decline of a quarter. “I find that quite severe and quite alarming,” he says. “The most important thing for people to realise is it’s not going bad for insects everywhere, that it’s variable.”

Sánchez-Bayo says his paper last year was focused on species declines rather than biomass changes, meaning the two are not directly comparable.

Lynn Dicks at the University of Cambridge, who was involved in the study, says it fits with both anecdotal stories of insect losses, and data she has seen. “It’s not a story of horrific impending apocalypse but it’s a story of very serious environmental degradation that we have to turn around,” she says. While the idea all insects will vanish in decades is nonsense, says Dicks, Matt Shardlow at the UK charity Buglife says a 9 per cent loss per decade is unsustainable.

Getting an truly accurate idea of how insects are faring globally is impossible, because survey data is so patchy. The vast majority is from Europe and North America. “We lack data over time, we are heavily constrained geographically, and many studies tend to be focused on just a few of the very many different groups of insects,” says Adam Hart at the University of Gloucestershire, UK.

One positive finding, , is that freshwater insects are doing well – their numbers are up around 11 per cent per decade. Van Klink’s team believe that is likely down to improved water quality, due to laws such as the European Union’s Water Framework Directive. While that is welcome news, says Dave Goulson at the University of Sussex, UK he points out most insects are on land – only around a tenth are aquatic.

Still, all the entomologists èƵ spoke to agree on one thing: the recovery in freshwater species shows we can act and help insects. “It shows you can really make a difference. Nature will always respond, if you stop hammering it,” says Dicks.

Science

Topics: Environment / farming / Insects