Abstract
Severe insect declines make headlines, but they are rarely based on systematic monitoring outside of Europe. We estimate the rate of change in total butterfly abundance and the population trends for 81 species using 21 years of systematic monitoring in Ohio, USA. Total abundance is declining at 2% per year, resulting in a cumulative 33% reduction in butterfly abundance. Three times as many species have negative population trends compared to positive trends. The rate of total decline and the proportion of species in decline mirror those documented in three comparable long-term European monitoring programs. Multiple environmental changes such as climate change, habitat degradation, and agricultural practices may contribute to these declines in Ohio and shift the makeup of the butterfly community by benefiting some species over others. Our analysis of life-history traits associated with population trends shows an impact of climate change, as species with northern distributions and fewer annual generations declined more rapidly. However, even common and invasive species associated with human-dominated landscapes are declining, suggesting widespread environmental causes for these trends. Declines in common species, although they may not be close to extinction, will have an outsized impact on the ecosystem services provided by insects. These results from the most extensive, systematic insect monitoring program in North America demonstrate an ongoing defaunation in butterflies that on an annual scale might be imperceptible, but cumulatively has reduced butterfly numbers by a third over 20 years.
Highlights
Defaunation, or the drastic loss of animal species and declines in abundance, threatens to destabilize ecosystem functioning globally [1]
We show that the total butterfly abundance has declined by 33% over 20 years in Ohio
This study demonstrates that defaunation is happening in North America to Europe
Summary
Defaunation, or the drastic loss of animal species and declines in abundance, threatens to destabilize ecosystem functioning globally [1]. In comparison to studies of vertebrate populations, monitoring of changes in insect diversity is more difficult and far less prevalent [2,3]. A global analysis of long-term population trends across 452 species estimated that insect abundance had declined 45% over 40 years [1]. Losses of total biomass or total abundance across all species may be more consequential than local declines in species diversity, as common insect species contribute the most to ecosystem services, such as pollination [6]. We analyze long-term, region-wide trends in abundance across a diversity of species for an entire insect group in North
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