Butterflies show signs of being affected by climate change in a way similar to plants and bees20/02/2013 15:58:31
The frosted elfin butterfly is one of the species covered in the study. Credit Ernest Williams, Hamilton College February 2013. In a new study, Hamilton College Biology Professor Ernest Williams and Boston University researchers have found that butterflies show signs of being affected by climate change in a way similar to plants and bees, but not birds, in the Northeast United States. The researchers focused on Massachusetts butterfly flight periods, comparing current flight periods with patterns going back more than 100 years using museum collections and the records of dedicated citizen scientists. Their findings indicate that butterflies are flying earlier in warmer years. Butterflies emerging earlier As a result, climate change could have negative implications for bird populations in the Northeast, which rely on butterflies and other insects as a food source. While the effect of climate change on plant and bird life cycles in eastern North America has been well examined, studies of the effects of climate change on insects are rare, so these findings represent an important contribution. This new study investigated whether the responses to climate warming in Massachusetts of ten short-lived butterfly species known as elfins and hairstreaks are similar to responses seen in plants, birds and bees. Another unique feature of this study is its use of data from museum collections as well as data gathered by the Massachusetts Butterfly Club, a group of dedicated citizen scientists who love butterflies. Use of this data gave the researchers an opportunity to compare butterfly flight periods dating back to the late 1800s. The researchers obtained more than 5,000 records of butterflies in flight using museum collections (1893-1985) and citizen science data (1986-2009), then analyzed the data using statistical models to determine how butterfly flight times are affected by temperature, rainfall, geographic location and year. Temperature directly linked to flight period The researchers also found that observations by citizen science groups such as the Massachusetts Butterfly Club were an effective and largely untapped source of information that could be used to investigate the potential impacts of climate change on butterflies. Such data provides an opportunity to inform conservation policies on these species and associated habitat. While data from museums was helpful, it was less abundant and therefore less useful than the citizen science dataset. The team, which also includes Richard Primack (Boston University), Caroline Polgar (Boston University), Sharon Stichter (Massachusetts Butterfly Club), and Colleen Hitchcock (Boston College), will publish its findings in the February 12 online edition of the journal Biological Conservation (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320712005228)
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It is well known that Butterflies are one of the most prominent phenology indicators. Should the climate change beyond all recognition, the first signs of which will come from our Butterflies. Conversely, as we poison our lands, Butterflies become some of the first creatures to suffer. It is shameful that, in this day and age, we still lose many members of our insectivorous communities.
Posted by: Tony Powell | 22 Feb 2013 13:36:48