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In Ecuador, butterflies gauge climate change
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In Ecuador, butterflies gauge climate change

AFP

CUYABENO, ECUADOR—Biologists on a trail in the Ecuadoran Amazon hold their breath as they distribute a foul-smelling delicacy to lure butterflies, critical pollinators increasingly threatened by climate change.

A team has hung 32 traps made of green nets, each baited with rotting fish and fermented bananas. They are meant to blend in with the forest canopy. Their pungent odor clearly does not.

Since last August, a team of biologists and park rangers has been monitoring butterfly numbers in the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve, a park famed for its abundant flora and fauna.

They catch and document the colorful insects, releasing most with an identifying mark on their wings. Some of them, possibly from previously unknown species, are kept for further study.

The results of the team’s work, however, have been discouraging.

Butterflies are “bioindicators,” living organisms whose well-being provides a measure of the health of their surrounding ecosystem, and their numbers are decreasing, biologist Maria Fernanda Checa told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

While the number of species may not have declined by more than 10 percent, in terms of absolute butterfly numbers “the decrease is very significant… maybe 40/50 percent,” she said.

Butterflies are seen inside a trap in the protected Amazon rainforest of Cuyabeno, Ecuador, on March 28, 2024. The smell of rotting fish fills part of the trail where a team of biologists and park rangers has hung 32 green traps that blend into the thick of the forest in the Cuyabeno Wildlife Production Reserve. Since August, they have been developing a butterfly monitoring project to measure the effects of climate change with the support of the American NGO Rainforest Partnership. (Photo by Daniel MUNOZ / AFP)

“It is something that alarms us.”

Under expedition leader Elisa Levy, a team checks the nets for captured butterflies.

They hold the insects delicately by their tiny abdomens and manipulate their legs and wings with tweezers.

Some are bright red and blue, others have what resemble zebra stripes. Some are see-through, like glass.

About three-quarters of fruit- or seed-producing crops for human consumption depend on pollinators, which provide a free service worth billions of dollars.

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The United Nations has warned that 40 percent of invertebrate pollinators—particularly bees and butterflies—risk global extinction, posing certain risks to humanity itself.

Butterflies, said Checa, are “very sensitive, even to small changes in the ecosystem” throughout their short lifespan from egg to caterpillar to reproductive adult.

Levy explained that tropical plants—unlike ones in regions with distinct seasons—are not accustomed to extreme weather variations.

If they do not adapt to a fast-changing climate, these plants could be lost, along with the butterfly larvae that feed on them.

Ecuador, relatively small but extremely biodiverse, hosts about 4,000 butterfly species—nearly as many as its much larger neighbors Peru and Colombia. —AFP


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