Butterflies and
dragonflies with lighter colors are out-competing darker-colored insects in the
face of climate change. Scientists have shown that as the climate warms across
Europe, communities of butterflies and dragonflies consist of more lighter
coloured species. Darker coloured species are retreating northwards to cooler
areas, but lighter coloured species are also moving their geographical range
north as Europe gets warmer.
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Butterfly on Lavender Credit:© Gordan Jankulov / Fotolia |
In a new study published in Nature Communications,
scientists from Imperial College London, Philipps-University Marburg and
University of Copenhagen have shown that as the climate warms across Europe,
communities of butterflies and dragonflies consist of more lighter coloured
species. Darker coloured species are retreating northwards to cooler areas, but
lighter coloured species are also moving their geographical range north as
Europe gets warmer.
For example, several Mediterranean dragonfly species have
expanded their northern range and immigrated to Germany, such as the Southern
Migrant Hawker (Aeshna affinis), the Scarlet Darter (Crocothemis
erythraea) and the Dainty Damselfly (Coenagrion scitulum).
In 2010, the Dainty Damselfly was also sighted in England for the first time in
over 50 years. Butterfly species that thrive in warm climates, like the
Southern Small White (Pieris mannii), have dispersed to Germany during the
last ten years and are still continuing their northward shift.
As with lizards and snakes, the colour of an insect's body
plays a key role in how they absorb energy from the sun, and is crucial in
fuelling their flight as well as regulating their body temperature.
Dark-coloured insects are able to absorb more sunlight than
light-coloured insects, in order to increase their body temperature, and are
more likely to be found in cooler climates. In contrast, insects in hotter
climates need to protect themselves against overheating. Light-coloured insects
are more likely to be found in hotter climates as they can reflect the light to
prevent overheating their body and be active for longer periods of time.
Carsten Rahbek, from the Department of Life Sciences at
Imperial College London said: "For two of the major groups of insects, we
have now demonstrated a direct link between climate and insect colour, which
impact their geographical distribution."
"We now know that lighter-coloured butterflies and
dragonflies are doing better in a warmer world, and we have also demonstrated
that the effects of climate change on where species live are not something of
the future, but that nature and its ecosystems are changing as we speak,"
concluded Professor Rahbek, who is also Director of the Center for
Macroecology, Evolution and Climate at the University of Copenhagen. To
identify whether colour lightness was correlated to temperature, the scientists
combined digital image analysis, which scanned and measured colour values of
butterfly and dragonfly wings and bodies, with distributional data which mapped
where in Europe the species are found.
They looked at 366 butterfly species and 107 dragonfly
species across Europe, and showed a clear pattern of light-coloured insects
dominating the warmer south of Europe and darker insects dominating the cooler
north.
To test whether a warming climate had caused any shifts, they
looked at changes in species distributions over an 18-year period from
1988-2006. Results showed that on average insects were becoming lighter in
colour, and that darker-coloured insects were shifting towards the cooler areas
in Western margins of Europe, the Alps and the Balkans.
Research has previously suggested that climate change is
having an impact on the distribution of species, but this study provides
evidence of a direct link and confirms basic assumptions about how changes in
the climate can affect patterns of biodiversity.
Lead author Dirk Zeuss from Philipps-University Marburg in
Germany said: "When studying biodiversity, we lack general rules about why
certain species occur where they do. With this research we've been able to show
that butterfly and dragonfly species across Europe are distributed according to
their ability to regulate heat through their colour variation. Until now we
could only watch the massive changes in the insect fauna during the last 20
years. Now we have an idea of what could be a strong cause of the
changes."
Sources: Imperial London College & Science Daily
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