Something was wrong. As tropical ecologist Brad Lister walked through the Puerto Rican rainforest a few years ago, he wondered: Where are all the butterflies? When he’d last visited, 35 years before, there had been hundreds in the air, and his traps had quickly become covered in bugs. Now he and his colleague, Andrés García, caught only a few lonely insects, if anything at all.
“We were incredulous,” Lister says. “It was clear there had been a catastrophic collapse of the insect population.”
Lister’s research ultimately showed that 98 percent of the area’s ground insects had vanished since the 1970s. Other scientists have had similar findings in different locations; one global review published in February even suggested that insects as a whole might “go down the path of extinction in a few decades.”
Then, earlier this year, the United Nations released a shocking report: Insects aren’t the only ones in trouble. Humans are transforming Earth’s natural landscapes so dramatically, the assessment says, that as many as 1 million plant and animal species are now at risk of extinction. (Including insects, there are an estimated 8 million species on the planet in total.) In most major land habitats—from the savannas of Africa to the rainforests of South America—the average abundance of native plant and animal life has fallen by 20 percent or more, mainly over the past century.
As tropical ecologist Brad Lister walked through the Puerto Rican rainforest a few years ago, he noticed something was wrong. He couldn’t help but wonder: Where are all the butterflies? It had been 35 years since his last visit. Back then there had been hundreds of butterflies in the air and his traps had quickly become covered in bugs. Now he and his colleague, Andrés García, caught only a few lonely insects, if anything at all.
“We were incredulous,” Lister says. “It was clear there had been a catastrophic collapse of the insect population.”
Lister decided to look into what was driving the changes. His research showed that 98 percent of the area’s ground insects had disappeared since the 1970s. Other scientists have had similar findings in different locations. One global review published in February even suggested that insects as a whole might “go down the path of extinction in a few decades.”
Then, earlier this year, the United Nations released a shocking report. They discovered that insects aren’t the only ones in trouble. Humans are dramatically transforming Earth’s natural landscapes, the assessment says. Including insects, there are an estimated 8 million species on the planet in total. The rapid shift has put as many as 1 million plant and animal species at risk of extinction. The changes are also impacting major land habitats, from the savannas of Africa to the rainforests of South America. In most of these areas the average amount of native plant and animal life has fallen by 20 percent or more. And this drop has mainly taken place over the past century.