LAWRENCE — As delegates from 195 nations meet in Paris to debate mankind’s response to global climate change, scientists from the University of Kansas and Rothamsted Research in England today issue a study of a major crop pest that underlines how “climate is changing in more ways than just warming.”
Their paper, appearing in Nature Climate Change, shows how large-scale climatic changes drive a coordinated rise and fall of numbers of aphids across Great Britain, even when individual aphid populations in that nation are separated by great distance.
The researchers studied a phenomenon called “spatial synchrony,” revealing how changing climate can effect ecological populations through increases in average temperature and changes in how climatic fluctuations in different areas relate to each other.
“If you care about crops, you have a reason to care about how climate change affects crop pests like aphids,” said Daniel Reuman, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at KU and senior scientist with the Kansas Biological Survey, who co-authored the paper.
“If you eat, you have a reason to care about crops,” he said.
The scientists looked at decades’ worth of population surveys of 20 aphid species carried out with suction traps throughout Britain. In the data, they searched out triggers for shifts in spatial synchrony among aphid numbers over multiple timescales — triggers that, until now, have been hard for researchers to determine.
“There are a lot of possible causes. With so much complexity it can be hard to work out what’s driving things,” Reuman said. “It’s like a baseball team that might be great for a decade, but with good years and bad years within that decade — then they might be terrible for a decade. There are long-term changes and shorter-term fluctuations. We needed to separate these timescales from each other to understand that the causes of overall changes were linked to climate.”
Using “wavelets” — a statistical technique for dissecting variations by time and timescale — the researchers found the key influence on aphid flight timings are winter temperatures, even though aphids first fly in springtime.
“For most aphid species, winter temperatures were the main things that drove synchrony of when they first fly in spring or summer,” Reuman said. “That was interesting because winter temperatures are months apart from when they fly. Temperatures in January effect when they fly in May and June. April and May temperatures had much less impact on when they fly than these winter temperatures. The coldest times of year effect when they’re flying. If it gets colder, they fly later.”
The researchers linked their results to the North Atlantic Oscillation. The NAO is a large-scale climatic oscillation, like El Niño in that respect, but mostly over Europe and the North Atlantic.
“These oscillations affect many species and also human industries like fishing,” Reuman said.
The timing and population size of aphids have a major effect on a number of important commercial crops, according to the KU researcher.
“Aphids aren’t just a pest in Britain — they’re a pest worldwide,” Reuman said. “A pest aphid makes its living sucking sap out of the crops. When they get to high levels, they can suck enough to stunt plant growth, and they spread plant viruses. Cowpea aphids, also called black aphids, effect alfalfa in Kansas. The wheat aphid, also known as the Greenbug, has been a serious wheat pest in Kansas for more than 100 years and attacks other crops.”
Beyond aphids, Reuman said the team’s findings would deepen understanding of how climate influences spatial synchrony in many different species of animals and could have implications for public health and commercial endeavors.
“Synchrony can be seen in all sorts of species and in human disease epidemics,” he said. “There’s good reason to believe that similar phenomena to what we observed in aphids may occur in other species. We should look to El Niño for similar effects, as a next step.”
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Reuman’s collaborators on the research were Lawrence W. Sheppard at KU and James R. Bell and Richard Harrington at Rothamsted Research.
The UK Natural Environment Research Council, National Science Foundation and KU supported this work.
Journal
Nature Climate Change