Elevated extinction risk in over one-fifth of native North American pollinators

Author:

Cornelisse Tara1ORCID,Inouye David W.23ORCID,Irwin Rebecca E.4ORCID,Jepsen Sarina5,Mawdsley Jonathan R.6,Ormes Margaret1,Daniels Jaret7ORCID,Debinski Diane M.8ORCID,Griswold Terry9,Klymko John10ORCID,Orr Michael C.1112ORCID,Richardson Leif5ORCID,Sears Nicole1,Schweitzer Dale1,Young Bruce E.113ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Conservation Science Department, NatureServe

2. Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory

3. Department of Biology, University of Maryland

4. Department of Applied Ecology, North Carolina State University

5. Endangered Species Program, The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation

6. Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies

7. McGuire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity, Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida

8. Department of Ecology, Montana State University

9. Pollinating Insects Research Unit, United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Utah State University

10. Atlantic Canada Conservation Data Centre

11. Entomologie, Stuttgart Naturkundemueseum

12. Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

13. Guanacaste Dry Forest Conservation Fund

Abstract

Pollinators are critical for food production and ecosystem function. Although native pollinators are thought to be declining, the evidence is limited. This first, taxonomically diverse assessment for mainland North America north of Mexico reveals that 22.6% (20.6 to 29.6%) of the 1,579 species in the best-studied vertebrate and insect pollinator groups have elevated risk of extinction. All three pollinating bat species are at risk and bees are the insect group most at risk (best estimate, 34.7% of 472 species assessed, range 30.3 to 43.0%). Substantial numbers of butterflies (19.5% of 632 species, range 19.1 to 21.0%) and moths (16.1% of 142 species, range 15.5 to 19.0%) are also at risk, with flower flies (14.7% of 295 species, range 11.5 to 32.9%), beetles (12.5% of 18 species, range 11.1 to 22.2%), and hummingbirds (0% of 17 species) more secure. At-risk pollinators are concentrated where diversity is highest, in the southwestern United States. Threats to pollinators vary geographically: climate change in the West and North, agriculture in the Great Plains, and pollution, agriculture, and urban development in the East. Woodland, shrubland/chaparral, and grassland habitats support the greatest numbers of at-risk pollinators. Strategies for improving pollinator habitat are increasingly available, and this study identifies species, habitats, and threats most in need of conservation actions at state, provincial, territorial, national, and continental levels.

Funder

NatureServe Canada

Park Foundation

Regina Bauer Frankenberg Foundation

Sarah de Coizart Article TENTH Perpetual Charitable Trust

US Forest Service

NSF | National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Reference61 articles.

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