AI Article Synopsis

  • Tropical insects, particularly those in the montane environments of Borneo, are showing significant altitude increases in response to climate change, highlighting their sensitivity to temperature shifts.
  • A study repeated a historical transect on Mount Kinabalu found that the average elevation of 102 moth species rose by approximately 67 meters over 42 years.
  • These findings emphasize that tropical species might be as affected by climate change as temperate ones, suggesting a potential crisis for biodiversity if similar trends continue.

Article Abstract

Physiological research suggests that tropical insects are particularly sensitive to temperature, but information on their responses to climate change has been lacking-even though the majority of all terrestrial species are insects and their diversity is concentrated in the tropics. Here, we provide evidence that tropical insect species have already undertaken altitude increases, confirming the global reach of climate change impacts on biodiversity. In 2007, we repeated a historical altitudinal transect, originally carried out in 1965 on Mount Kinabalu in Borneo, sampling 6 moth assemblages between 1,885 and 3,675 m elevation. We estimate that the average altitudes of individuals of 102 montane moth species, in the family Geometridae, increased by a mean of 67 m over the 42 years. Our findings indicate that tropical species are likely to be as sensitive as temperate species to climate warming, and we urge ecologists to seek other historic tropical samples to carry out similar repeat surveys. These observed changes, in combination with the high diversity and thermal sensitivity of insects, suggest that large numbers of tropical insect species could be affected by climate warming. As the highest mountain in one of the most biodiverse regions of the world, Mount Kinabalu is a globally important refuge for terrestrial species that become restricted to high altitudes by climate warming.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2635813PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0809320106DOI Listing

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