Poster's note : this study invites repetition using GeoMIP scenarios. NB
cool images on link.

https://www.carbonbrief.org/rise-in-insect-pests-under-climate-change-to-hit-crop-yields-study-says/amp?__twitter_impression=true

Rise in insect pests under climate change to hit crop yields, study says[image:
D9KNEY Desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria). Image shot 06/2013. Exact
date unknown.]

Desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria), UK. Credit: Christopher Mills/Alamy
Stock Photo.

Global warming could increase both the number and appetite of insect pests,
new research finds, which could pose a serious threat to global crop
production.

The study finds that global warming of 2C above pre-industrial levels
– which is the limit set by the Paris Agreement
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/interactive-the-paris-agreement-on-climate-change>
– could
cause pest-related yield losses from wheat, rice and maize to increase by
46%, 19% and 31%, respectively.

And each additional degree of temperature rise could cause yield losses
from insect pests to increase by a further 10-25%, the research shows.

Losses from pest infestation are likely to be largest in China, the US and
France – three of the world’s most important grain producers, according to
the findings.
Soaring swarms

At present, around 10-16%
<https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2010.02411.x> of
global crop production is lost to pests – including insects, fungi and
bacteria.

Thousands of insect species are known to threaten food production. One of
the most well-known pests, the desert locust, feeds on a wide range of
crops – including rice, maize and sugarcane – and can swarm and strip a
crop field within an hour
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15623490>.

Other insects, such as the western corn rootworm, target specific crops.
The rootworm, for example, feeds on maize during both its larval and adult
beetle life stages and currently costs US farmers around $1bn a year
<https://pubag.nal.usda.gov/pubag/downloadPDF.xhtml?id=37279&content=PDF> in
lost revenue.

The new study, published in Science
<http://science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi/10.1126/science.aat3466>, explores
how climate change could alter the activity of 38 of the world’s
most-studied insect crop pests.

Climate change could increase the activity of insect pests in two ways,
according to the research team, which was led by Prof Curtis Deutsch
<https://environment.uw.edu/faculty/curtis-deutsch/>, an ecologist
from the University
of Washington <http://www.washington.edu/>.

First, rising temperatures boost the rate at which insects can digest food
– causing them to demolish crops at a faster rate.

Second, in temperate regions, warming temperatures could cause insects –
which are ectothermic
<http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royprsb/284/1849/20162328.full.pdf>,
or “cold-blooded” –  to become more active and, thus, more able to
reproduce.
Crop countdown

For the study, the researchers made of use of existing data on how
temperature is known to affect the population growth rate, food consumption
rate and overall survival of insect pests under laboratory conditions.

The researchers used this information to inform a set of models projecting
yield losses from insect pests for wheat, rice and maize under different
levels of temperature rise. The projections assumed that total global crop
yields will remain the same as today.

The charts below show the expected crop yield loss in megatonnes per year
as a result of increased insect food consumption – or “metabolic activity”
– (purple triangles) and population growth (orange circles and green
asterisks) for wheat (A), rice (B) and maize (C) under various levels of
global temperature rise. A dashed line is used to indicate the current loss
as a result of insect pests.
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Projected-crop-yield-losses.jpg>

Projected crop yield losses (megatonnes per year) as a result of increased
insect metabolic activity (purple triangles) and two estimations of
population growth using different demographic parameters (orange circles
and green asterisks) for wheat (A), rice (B) and maize (C) under
temperature rise of 1-5C above pre-industrial levels. A dashed line shows
the current amount of crop losses from insect pests. Source: Deutsch et al.
(2018)

The results show that, under 2C of global warming, pest-related yield
losses from wheat, rice and maize increase by 46%, 19% and 31%,
respectively, when compared to current levels of loss. Each additional
degree of temperature rise could cause global yield losses from insect
pests to increase by a further 10-25%, the results suggest.

Losses are projected to be largest for maize and wheat because these crops
are mostly grown in temperate regions – where warming is expected to boost
insect population numbers, the researchers say.

Rice, on the other hand, is grown mostly in tropical regions – where
temperatures are already optimal for insect reproduction. Further
temperature increases are therefore likely to cause small declines in
insect numbers, the research finds, leading to an overall smaller effect on
yield losses.

The maps below show the projected geographic pattern of insect-related
yield losses for wheat (A), rice (B) and maize (C) under 2C of global
warming. On the maps, dark red shows large percentage increases in crop
losses while dark blue shows large decreases.
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/projected-distribution-of-insect-related-yield-losses.jpg>

The projected distribution of insect-related yield losses for wheat (A),
rice (B) and maize (C) under 2C of global warming. Dark red shows increased
losses, while dark blue shows decreased losses. Source: Deutsch et al.
(2018)

The maps show how the largest losses to crop yields in percentage terms are
expected in Europe and North America, including in the US and France – two
of the world’s largest grain producers.

Europe’s wheat-growing regions – collectively the most productive in the
world – could be particularly affected by losses, the results show. Up to
11 European countries, including the UK, Sweden and Ireland, could face
insect-related losses of 75% or higher, the study finds.

Moderate losses are also projected across much of sub-Saharan Africa and
southeast Asia – two regions currently facing high levels of hunger.
Writing in their research paper, the authors say:

“Poor grain consumers and farming households, who account for a large share
of the world’s 800 million people living in chronic hunger, will suffer
most.”

Knowing the enemy

The findings should serve a “call for action on climate change mitigation
and adaptation”, Prof Markus Riegler
<https://www.westernsydney.edu.au/hie/people/researchers/associate_professor_markus_riegler>,
an insect biologist from Western Sydney University
<https://www.westernsydney.edu.au/>, writes in an accompanying perspectives
article <http://science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi/10.1126/science.aau7311>. He
says:

“Everyone must be involved in change: farmers, industries, policymakers,
and the wider society. There is also an increased need to focus on plant
protection, particularly given that many insecticides are being banned over
human and environmental health concerns.”

The research offers “a global perspective” of how climate change could
impact the damages caused by pests, says Prof Christer Björkman
<https://www.slu.se/en/cv/christer-bjorkman/>, an insect ecologist
from the Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences <https://www.slu.se/en/>, who was not
involved in the study. However, the study does have a few shortcomings, he
tells Carbon Brief:

“One is that the authors only model the pests themselves. This is a great
simplification because we know their host plants and their natural enemies
are affected by the same temperature changes.”

Research shows that climate change could impact many of these enemies
– including birds
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/double-threat-to-uks-birds-and-butterflies-from-climate-change-and-land-use>
, mammals
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/climate-change-to-become-greatest-pressure-on-biodiversity-by-2070>
 and parasites
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/climate-change-drive-third-parasites-extinction-2070>.
Björkman says:

“In other words, the study ignores many key ecological interactions of
potentially great importance. Another [unconsidered factor is] the
nutritional value of plants may change.”

Research covered by Carbon Brief
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/rising-co2-levels-could-push-hundreds-of-millions-into-malnutrition-by-2050>earlier
this week found that the nutritional value of key crops including rice,
wheat and maize is likely to fall as CO2 levels rise.

If crops become less nutritious, insects will have to consume more plant
matter to get the nutrients they need, Björkman says, potentially raising
yield losses further.
« Guest post: Six key policy challenges to achieving ‘negative emissions’
with BECCS
<https://www.carbonbrief.org/guest-post-six-key-policy-challenges-to-achieving-negative-emissions-with-beccs/amp>

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