Drivers and Repercussions of UK Insect Declines (DRUID)

Lead Research Organisation: UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
Department Name: Biodiversity (Wallingford)

Abstract

Due to their vast numbers and diversity, insects dominate natural ecosystems and processes. Wholesale insect declines could have profound consequences. Yet despite growing public concern about a possible "insect Armageddon," evidence of widespread insect declines remains fragmentary, even in the UK (arguably one of the best studied countries on Earth); nor do we understand the value that insects provide for wider society. A far stronger evidence-base is required to provide a secure basis for policy, to devise methods to reverse insect declines and protect the roles that insects play in multiple ecosystem services.

We have assembled four of the UK's leading insect dynamics research teams to assess the causes, consequences and potential remedies of insect declines. We will combine data from standardised insect monitoring programmes of a wide range of taxa, modelled outputs of biodiversity databases, and novel assays using weather radar signals to assess shifts in insect abundance, diversity, functional composition and biomass in both terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems across Britain. Species-level trend data will be assessed relative to a range of potential driver variables and species' traits in an overarching synthesis of decline patterns across taxa and environments. The team has unrivalled access to the latest UK datasets and modelling developments covering insects and environmental drivers down to 1-km resolution or finer, through a wide range of on-going environmental research projects and collaborating partner organisations. Our results will be used to inform mechanistic models to predict the dynamics of insect species and functional-groups across the UK in space and time. Functional consequences of insect declines will be assessed, with particular focus on trophic roles as prey in aerial (bird/bat) and aquatic (fish) systems, pollination and pest control functions, and in nutrient transport between freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems. How alterations in insect communities are linked to economic and cultural values will be assessed through a review of existing studies, augmented with participatory valuation approaches for ecosystem services that are poorly studied, such as cultural services. The population, community and functional models developed above will be applied to a diverse set of contrasting future climate, land-use and policy scenarios, to predict insect dynamics with and without specific mitigation measures. Both scenarios and mitigation options will be co-designed together with relevant stakeholders and linked to existing climate scenarios and planned agri-environmental schemes. Consequences of recent past, current and future scenarios for human welfare and natural capital will be estimated, using stakeholder-based valuations. Our novel, integrated approach will guarantee high quality and high impact research outputs, which will be widely disseminated to the scientific and stakeholder communities, and the general public. By engaging relevant policy and decision-makers at an early stage of the project, results will be tailored and directly relevant to on-going policy development in land management, biodiversity conservation and the implementation of natural capital approaches, maximising the likelihood of substantial impacts on both society and the natural world.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description It is still early in the award to list the projects discoveries or achievements. There are growing sets of results showing positive and negative trends in specific insect species and groups, and responses to key environmental and management drivers. We have compiled datasets covering a wide range of UK insect taxa (including Aquatic bugs; Bees; Butterflies; Caddisflies; Carabids; Craneflies; Dragonflies; Earwigs; Empid & Dolichopodid Flies; Fungus gnats; Grasshoppers and allies; Hoverflies; Ladybirds; Longhorn beetles; Mayflies; Moths; Shield bugs; Soldierflies; Stoneflies; Wasps), both from existing recording schemes and from standardised monitoring programs -- including new data from suction trap by-catch. We have run hierarchical occupancy models for 14 of the above groups, giving species-specific annual times-series of occupancy (estimating the proportion of occupied UK/GB grid cells from 1970 to 2020+) for >2500 species and providing the most comprehensive update of its kind. The DRUID team at UKCEH have co-led development of a new framework for assessing risk-of-bias in studies of temporal trends (ROBITT). Such assessments are common in many disciplines, notably medical research, but until now have been lacking in ecology. We have developed an initial version of a shiny app designed to facilitate feedback from taxonomic group experts on the annual occupancy outputs and bias assessments described above and their associated trends.
We have also compiled data on many of the key potential drivers of insect change, and are linking these to local and national insect dynamics.

Many of our achievements so far are methodological. For example, a recently accepted paper in Methods in Ecology and Evolution applies Artificial Neural Net (ANN) methods to link species' traits to responses to environmental drivers. Our ANN builds on species traits and, as such, constitutes a Joint Species Distribution Model (JSDM), able to identify not only species-specific responses to the environment, but also shared responses across the community that are mediated by species traits. Model performance evaluated at the species level quantifies not only the reliability of species predictions, but also how much of a species' responses is dictated by its traits and how much it deviates from a stereotyped response. These developments bring ANNs unmatched predictive capabilities to the field of JSDM, at the same time of lifting their reputed drawback of poor explainability.
Exploitation Route Too early to say.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

 
Description It is still early in the award to list non-academic achievements, however, we are engaging with stakeholders that include BASF, Bat Conservation Trust, Environment Agency, Buglife, Butterfly Conservation, Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), The Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC), Natural England, The Natural History Museum, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and the volunteer-led national recording schemes and societies. With these and other stakeholders we have and will continue to update them on the project's outcomes informally and via dedicated stakeholder meetings.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Environment
 
Title ROBITT tool. 
Description ROBITT is a structured tool for assessing the 'Risk-Of-Bias In studies of Temporal Trends in ecology'. It is made up of a set of questions designed to elicit information on the potential for bias in key study domains. 
Type Of Technology Webtool/Application 
Year Produced 2022 
Open Source License? Yes  
Impact Multiple citations of the ROBITT tool now exist. This is early evidence that researchers are beginning to adopt this tool to improve their analyses. 
URL https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/2041-210X.13857
 
Title wrappeR R package 
Description An R package designed to increase the functionality and ease of use of three other R packages (BRCindicators, Sparta & TrendSummaries), which are used to create and summarise species trends from ad hoc occurrence data 
Type Of Technology Webtool/Application 
Year Produced 2022 
Open Source License? Yes  
Impact This package plays a key role in the production of standardised trend outputs for the host of insect groups covered by the DRUID project. It was also used to help produce the D1c Pollinating Insect indicator as part of the UK Gov. 2022 UK Biodiversity Indicators (https://jncc.gov.uk/our-work/uk-biodiversity-indicators-2022/) 
URL https://github.com/BiologicalRecordsCentre/wrappeR
 
Description NIAB Research Tours at Fruit Focus event 2022 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Two demonstrations given as part of the NIAB Research Tours at Fruit Focus , the industry's premier fruit event, 2022. Primary focus was on surveying pollinators on crops and other flowers using the FIT Count app, but with reference and discussion of the SMOOPS experimental mixtures and results.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Plenary lecture at the NW European IUSSI meeting: 20 years of bumblebee research at UKCEH 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Plenary lecture at the NW European IUSSI meeting: 20 years of bumblebee research at UKCEH
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Risk-of-bias workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Hosted two workshops where we worked with an international team to develop a risk-of-bias tool for ecology. Risk of bias assessments are common in many disciplines, notably medical research, where they are used to highlight potential bias and the mitigation approaches within the given study. Such assessments tend to be conducted and reported when research is published using potentially biased data. Biodiversity datasets tend to suffer from a range of biases that can inhibit the estimation of robust trends. In these workshops we developed a formalised risk of bias tool 'checklist' for research studies examining temporal trends in biodiversity based on aggregated biodiversity data. The risk-of-bias tool is proposed and described in a paper we submitted to Methods in Ecology & Evolution (Dec 21).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Royal Entomological Society Ento'21 meeting talk: E-Planner: a web-based decision support tool for planning environmental enhancement 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited talk in session on Insect declines - impacts and responses
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021