HomeScienceChanges to El Niño occurrence causing widespread tropical insect and spider declines

Changes to El Niño occurrence causing widespread tropical insect and spider declines

A new study in Nature reveals alarming declines in insect and arthropod populations in pristine tropical forests, driven by intensified El Niño events linked to climate change.

August 07, 2025 / 10:23 IST
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Tropical forest arthropods and the functions that they provide may be vulnerable to intensified El Niño events under climate change. (Image Credit: Marco Chan)
Tropical forest arthropods and the functions that they provide may be vulnerable to intensified El Niño events under climate change. (Image Credit: Marco Chan)

They are tiny, tireless, and often overlooked — but insects, spiders, and their arthropod relatives are vital to life on Earth. These creatures form the beating heart of ecosystems, responsible for pollination, decomposition, and feeding countless larger animals.

Now, in a sobering study published in Nature, scientists have confirmed what many ecologists feared: even untouched tropical rainforests — long considered refuges of biodiversity — are showing steep declines in arthropod populations. And the culprit? Not logging or pesticides, but the growing fury of El Niño, intensified by climate change.

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“We were shocked,” said Dr. Adam Sharp of the University of Hong Kong, lead author of the study. “We expected some stability in these pristine forests, but the data revealed consistent and widespread losses in insect diversity and function.”

A Whole-Tropics Wake-Up Call
The international team, including Professors Roger Kitching and Nigel Stork from Griffith University in Australia, pooled data from over 80 previous studies spanning tropical forests across South America, Africa, Asia, and the Pacific. All study sites were classified as undisturbed — meaning no commercial logging, agriculture, or human interference.