In Quebec’s strawberry fields, a tiny insect may forecast big climate impacts: study
A bug encroaching on Quebec’s strawberry fields could help forecast climate change’s impact on agriculture, a new study suggests, the latest to consider what the authors called the “colossal task” of sustainable farming on a warming planet.
Researchers out of Laval University say migratory leafhoppers – small cicada-like insects that benefit from temperature increases – appear to be arriving earlier in the season and dominating fields around Quebec City. They suggest the leafhopper’s migratory patterns, expanded territory and potential to carry plant diseases help make the insect an ideal model species for scientists to study how climate change is affecting agriculture.
“What we thought was a local study could have a significant impact on the way we trace the implications of climate change on agriculture and how we will manage the imminent biological invasions already happening in places such as Canada,” read the study published Friday in the journal Cell Reports Sustainability.
The research adds to the science about how climate-driven pest invasions could threaten food security and exacerbate agriculture’s environmental impact due to increased pesticide use, the study said.