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Geographic Variation in Migratory Grasshopper Recruitment under Projected Climate Change

Author

Listed:
  • John M. Humphreys

    (Pest Management Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, 1500 N. Central Avenue, Sidney, MT 59270, USA)

  • Robert B. Srygley

    (Pest Management Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, 1500 N. Central Avenue, Sidney, MT 59270, USA)

  • David H. Branson

    (Pest Management Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, US Department of Agriculture, 1500 N. Central Avenue, Sidney, MT 59270, USA)

Abstract

Climate change is expected to alter prevailing temperature, precipitation, cloud cover, and humidity this century, thereby modifying insect demographic processes and possibly increasing the frequency and intensity of rangeland and crop impacts by pest insects. We leveraged ten years of migratory grasshopper ( Melanoplus sanguinipes ) field surveys to assess the response of nymph recruitment to projected climate conditions through the year 2040. Melanoplus sanguinipes is the foremost pest of grain, oilseed, pulse, and rangeland forage crops in the western United States. To assess nymph recruitment, we developed a multi-level, joint modeling framework that individually assessed nymph and adult life stages while concurrently incorporating density-dependence and accounting for observation bias connected to preferential sampling. Our results indicated that nymph recruitment rates will exhibit strong geographic variation under projected climate change, with population sizes at many locations being comparable to those historically observed, but other locations experiencing increased insect abundances. Our findings suggest that alterations to prevailing temperature and precipitation regimes as instigated by climate change will amplify recruitment, thereby enlarging population sizes and potentially intensifying agricultural pest impacts by 2040.

Suggested Citation

  • John M. Humphreys & Robert B. Srygley & David H. Branson, 2022. "Geographic Variation in Migratory Grasshopper Recruitment under Projected Climate Change," Geographies, MDPI, vol. 2(1), pages 1-19, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jgeogr:v:2:y:2022:i:1:p:3-30:d:735372
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    1. Humphreys, John M. & Srygley, Robert B. & Lawton, Douglas & Hudson, Amy R. & Branson, David H., 2022. "Grasshoppers exhibit asynchrony and spatial non-stationarity in response to the El Niño/Southern and Pacific Decadal Oscillations," Ecological Modelling, Elsevier, vol. 471(C).

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