Abstract

Grasshoppers are preeminent herbivores and perhaps the most significant rangeland pests in the United States (US). Despite the important ecosystem functions they provide, grasshopper populations often obtain densities that cause significant economic harm to grazing operations and agricultural production. Although numerous studies conducted at the level of individual field sites have examined potential mechanisms contributing to grasshopper population “boom and bust” cycles, there has yet to be a large, regional scaled analysis that quantified grasshopper variation across the Western US as a whole. While taking steps to account for data collection biases, mediating effects, and variable confounding, we assessed the influence of Pacific Ocean sea surface temperature oscillations on a 40-year record of grasshopper density in the Western US. Central to our analysis was employing spatially varying coefficients to model time and location-specific variation in grasshopper response to climate. Our results quantitatively demonstrated interannual changes in grasshopper density to be indirectly effected by seasonal El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) variability and to exhibit spatial asynchrony and non-stationarity such that the relative influence of climate on grasshopper density varied through time and across geographic space. Our model is the first to incorporate climate indices as spatially varying coefficients for assessment of a terrestrial species and represents a critical step towards understanding causal drivers of regional grasshopper density.

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