Back to Search Start Over

Environmental drivers of annual population fluctuations in a trans-Saharan insect migrant

Authors :
Constantí Stefanescu
Jason W. Chapman
David B. Roy
Tom H. Oliver
Don R. Reynolds
Chris van Swaay
Tom Brereton
Gao Hu
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Significance The painted lady butterfly is an annual migrant to northern regions, but the size of the immigration varies by more than 100-fold in successive years. Unlike the monarch, the painted lady breeds year round, and it has long been suspected that plant-growing conditions in winter-breeding locations drive this high annual variability. However, the regions where caterpillars develop over winter remained unclear. Here, we show for the European summer population that winter plant greenness in the savanna of sub-Saharan Africa is the key driver of the size of the spring immigration. Our results show that painted ladies regularly cross the Sahara Desert and elucidate the climatic drivers of the annual population dynamics.<br />Many latitudinal insect migrants including agricultural pests, disease vectors, and beneficial species show huge fluctuations in the year-to-year abundance of spring immigrants reaching temperate zones. It is widely believed that this variation is driven by climatic conditions in the winter-breeding regions, but evidence is lacking. We identified the environmental drivers of the annual population dynamics of a cosmopolitan migrant butterfly (the painted lady Vanessa cardui) using a combination of long-term monitoring and climate and atmospheric data within the western part of its Afro-Palearctic migratory range. Our population models show that a combination of high winter NDVI (normalized difference vegetation index) in the Savanna/Sahel of sub-Saharan Africa, high spring NDVI in the Maghreb of North Africa, and frequent favorably directed tailwinds during migration periods are the three most important drivers of the size of the immigration to western Europe, while our atmospheric trajectory simulations demonstrate regular opportunities for wind-borne trans-Saharan movements. The effects of sub-Saharan vegetative productivity and wind conditions confirm that painted lady populations on either side of the Sahara are linked by regular mass migrations, making this the longest annual insect migration circuit so far known. Our results provide a quantification of the environmental drivers of large annual population fluctuations of an insect migrant and hold much promise for predicting invasions of migrant insect pests, disease vectors, and beneficial species.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28a7b2cb219632e35a6cacac86197cc9