Zürcher Nachrichten - US bat decline triggered pesticide surge, 1,300 baby deaths: study

EUR -
AED 3.832684
AFN 72.959602
ALL 98.462959
AMD 410.45402
ANG 1.873047
AOA 957.921829
ARS 1062.031565
AUD 1.668562
AWG 1.878277
AZN 1.784801
BAM 1.956057
BBD 2.098476
BDT 124.196346
BGN 1.95543
BHD 0.392152
BIF 3072.704402
BMD 1.043487
BND 1.411486
BOB 7.181945
BRL 6.350643
BSD 1.039337
BTN 88.357629
BWP 14.364891
BYN 3.401248
BYR 20452.35176
BZD 2.089175
CAD 1.498735
CDF 2994.808319
CHF 0.931781
CLF 0.03736
CLP 1030.865674
CNY 7.613704
CNH 7.60587
COP 4549.298739
CRC 524.369013
CUC 1.043487
CUP 27.652414
CVE 110.279514
CZK 25.108428
DJF 185.074358
DKK 7.458116
DOP 63.288329
DZD 140.667513
EGP 53.089373
ERN 15.65231
ETB 129.556951
FJD 2.417812
FKP 0.826423
GBP 0.829839
GEL 2.932642
GGP 0.826423
GHS 15.278011
GIP 0.826423
GMD 75.13081
GNF 8979.181761
GTQ 8.008054
GYD 217.438617
HKD 8.11073
HNL 26.382472
HRK 7.484837
HTG 135.967895
HUF 414.03543
IDR 16874.546735
ILS 3.801242
IMP 0.826423
INR 88.646863
IQD 1361.479186
IRR 43917.772492
ISK 145.170484
JEP 0.826423
JMD 162.611401
JOD 0.739936
JPY 163.242118
KES 134.177659
KGS 90.783029
KHR 4176.549681
KMF 486.395546
KPW 939.138018
KRW 1509.320727
KWD 0.321342
KYD 0.866114
KZT 545.821836
LAK 22747.993892
LBP 93069.24896
LKR 305.14016
LRD 188.634826
LSL 19.134218
LTL 3.081147
LVL 0.631195
LYD 5.106672
MAD 10.460077
MDL 19.14352
MGA 4903.645375
MKD 61.5431
MMK 3389.206159
MNT 3545.769827
MOP 8.320295
MRU 41.33344
MUR 49.25222
MVR 16.052761
MWK 1802.137182
MXN 20.931771
MYR 4.704048
MZN 66.682732
NAD 19.134218
NGN 1616.92545
NIO 38.245033
NOK 11.810924
NPR 141.372606
NZD 1.846749
OMR 0.401533
PAB 1.039337
PEN 3.870109
PGK 4.214555
PHP 61.430102
PKR 289.288974
PLN 4.258903
PYG 8104.066586
QAR 3.788799
RON 4.979106
RSD 117.045935
RUB 107.244587
RWF 1448.790677
SAR 3.91966
SBD 8.748133
SCR 14.551486
SDG 627.662417
SEK 11.505215
SGD 1.414024
SHP 0.826423
SLE 23.787187
SLL 21881.410825
SOS 593.978174
SRD 36.65877
STD 21598.081035
SVC 9.094197
SYP 2621.793487
SZL 19.129518
THB 35.780887
TJS 11.369896
TMT 3.662641
TND 3.311736
TOP 2.44395
TRY 36.710281
TTD 7.053928
TWD 34.050018
TZS 2468.324859
UAH 43.588037
UGX 3812.501768
USD 1.043487
UYU 46.356101
UZS 13399.76356
VES 53.713772
VND 26561.970104
VUV 123.884906
WST 2.882934
XAF 656.043343
XAG 0.035154
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.820076
XDR 0.792804
XOF 656.043343
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.263155
ZAR 19.096059
ZMK 9392.640903
ZMW 28.762786
ZWL 336.002496
  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.56

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    45.47

    -0.68%

  • SCS

    -0.5800

    11.74

    -4.94%

  • RBGPF

    59.9600

    59.96

    +100%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    33.6

    +0.51%

  • AZN

    0.9100

    65.35

    +1.39%

  • NGG

    0.8200

    58.5

    +1.4%

  • RIO

    -0.0900

    58.64

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    122.75

    -0.21%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.86

    +0.08%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    23.16

    +0.22%

  • BTI

    0.1131

    36.24

    +0.31%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    8.39

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.27

    -0.14%

  • BP

    0.1900

    28.6

    +0.66%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.06

    +0.91%

US bat decline triggered pesticide surge, 1,300 baby deaths: study
US bat decline triggered pesticide surge, 1,300 baby deaths: study / Photo: Handout - US FISH & WILDLIFE SERVICE/AFP/File

US bat decline triggered pesticide surge, 1,300 baby deaths: study

A collapse in North America's bat population led to a surge in pesticide use by farmers as an alternative way to protect crops from insects -- in turn triggering a rise in infant mortalities, a study revealed Thursday.

Text size:

The paper, published in Science, provides concrete evidence supporting predictions that global biodiversity decline will have severe consequences for humans.

"Ecologists have been warning us that we're losing species left and right... and that will potentially have catastrophic impacts on humanity," author Eyal Frank, of the University of Chicago, told AFP.

"However, there was not a whole lot of empirical validation to those predictions because it is very hard to go and manipulate an ecosystem at a very large spatial scale," added the environmental economist.

- Bats are pest control -

For his work, Frank took advantage of a "natural experiment" -- the sudden emergence of a deadly bat disease -- to quantify the benefits that bug-eating bats provide in pest control.

White-nose syndrome (WNS), caused by an invasive fungus, began spreading across the United States from New York in 2006 -- killing bats by waking them during hibernation in winter, when they lack insects to feed on, and trying to stay warm saps their energy.

The loss of millions of bats shocked the ecosystem.

To investigate, Frank tracked the spread of WNS in the eastern US and compared insecticide use in affected counties versus unaffected ones.

He found a massive 31 percent increase in pesticide use where bat populations had declined.

Given the link between pesticides and poor health outcomes, Frank examined whether increased pesticide use correlated with higher infant mortality rates.

With more pesticides, the infant mortality rate rose by nearly eight percent, translating to 1,334 additional infant deaths since the bat disease took hold -- with contaminated water and air likely serving as pathways for the chemicals to enter humans.

Frank emphasized that the staggered spread of the wildlife disease supports his inference that the bat die-off directly caused the spike in infant mortality, rather than it merely being a coincidence that could be explained by other rural hardships such as drug abuse or poverty.

Any other explanation would have to align with the same expansion path and timing of WNS.

- Cascading impacts -

"We need better data on the presence of pesticides in the environment," Frank said, adding that his findings also underscore the need to protect bats.

Vaccines are being developed against WNS, but bats are also threatened by habitat loss, climate change and wind farms.

The new work adds to the body of evidence showing the cascading impacts of wildlife loss on ecosystems.

A recent study found that reintroducing wolves in Wisconsin reduced vehicle collisions with deer as wolves establish their patrols along highways.

In Central America, declines in amphibians and snakes have led to spikes in human malaria cases.

"Stemming the biodiversity crisis is crucial to maintaining the many benefits that ecosystems provide for which technological substitutes cannot readily, or perhaps, ever replace," scientists at the University of California, Santa Barbara and University of British Columbia wrote in a commentary.

"Studies like that of Frank are important for understanding the benefits of allocating scarce resources for biodiversity conservation."

F.Schneider--NZN