In July 2015 the journal Science published Kerr et al’s Climate Change
Impacts On Bumblebees Converge Across Continents. It was a woeful analysis
hyped by the media. It did very little to further our understanding of the
causes of bumblebee declines and more likely obscured the real problems. But it
did illustrate why the public is becoming increasingly suspicious of
“scientific claims” regards catastrophic climate change as well as demonstrating
the inadequacy of the peer review process.
There were 4 major problems.
1) By employing a skewed statistical
methodology and using inappropriate metrics, Kerr 2015 contradicted the biologists’
consensus (Goulson
2015) to argue bumblebees declines are independent of land use changes, pesticides
and introduced pathogens.
2) Kerr 2015 results demonstrated that bees
are not tracking their climate niche
and are not responding to climate
changes as predicted. Their data strongly suggests range shifts have been independent of climate change. Either
the bees are insensitive to decades of climate change or climate change has had
little impact on the bees’ critical microclimates. Nonetheless based on bad
statistical modeling, they claimed range shifts were “independent of changing
land uses or pesticides”, and then spun a climate catastrophe scenario by simply
asserting the default cause must be climate change.
3) Kerr 2015 totally ignored the leading hypothesis that points to
introduced pathogens as the cause of sudden declines and shifts in a select
group of related North American Bees (Cameron 2014, The
Xerces Society 2008). Kerr’s climate interpretation suggests transporting
bumblebees to new northerly habitat, knowing it poses greater risks by spreading
pathogens and further endangering susceptible species.
4) Kerr 2015 demonstrate that the journal Science strayed from objectivity into
climate change advocacy. Science not
only failed to properly edit this paper, they added an additional “news”
commentary Bumblebees
Aren’t Keeping Up With A Warming Planet and quote Kerr’s catastrophic
view, “Climate change is crushing species in a vise”. The other global warming
advocacy journal Nature ran a simultaneous
apocalyptic story “Climate
Change Crushes Bee Populations” encouraging wide spread media fear
mongering.
1. Kerr
2015’s Inappropriate Statistical Methodology
The first statistical violation was Kerr’s categorization
of time periods that prevented their models from accurately detecting the
effects of land use change. They analyzed changes in bees’ latitudinal and
thermal limits using records for
31 North American and 36 European species. To create a “pre-climate change”
baseline for each species, they averaged 5, 10 or 20 extreme observations
(depending on availability) for the time period 1901-1974. For example to
determine a species’ most southerly latitude, they averaged the 5 most
southerly records across the continent. However those averages would be
dominated by the earliest decades and could hide any northward retractions that
happened in the baseline’s later decades. To determine the bees’ warmest
thermal limits, they likewise averaged 5 modeled temperatures from the warmest occupied
sites. They similarly averaged observations restricted to 3 later 11-year periods
of purported human caused climate change spanning 1975-1986, 1987-1998, and
1999-2010, and then compared those averaged results with the baseline averages.
However
their asymmetrical categorization of a 74‑year baseline period vs. three 11‑year
“climate change” periods is highly problematic. If their intent was to
determine the timing of any significant shifts, their analysis should have
compared equal decade-long periods. Instead because their technique averaged the most extreme
southern latitudes, the baseline would easily be dominated by the earliest 20th
century observations. Any range retractions that happened later during the
baseline period would not be “statistically detected” until the 1975-1986 “climate
change” period. Any editor or peer reviewer should have required a correction, knowing their
asymmetrical categorization could cause such misleading results.
Many
researchers from both North America and Europe (Fitzpatrick
2007) have documented that the period between 1940-1960 encompassed the
greatest shift in agricultural expansion and intensity that has gravely affected
bee populations. For example, studies in Illinois (Grixti
2009) determined that the greatest loss of bumblebee abundance, species
richness and shifting ranges occurred between 1940-1960 due to agricultural
intensification. After 1960, only minimal shifts occurred for the following 2
decades as agricultural expansion waned. But Kerr’s baseline categorization
would not detect those range shifts until the 1975-86 period. The resulting
statistical illusion of their model then created the incorrect perception that
major range shifts were independent of those agricultural changes.
Kerr’s main
paper only provided graphs for the final 1999-2010 period, so in my Figure 1
below, I have also added the 1975-1986 graphs from their supplemental data to also
compare the recent decadal shifts. Oddly their results contradict their assertion
that landscape restrictions were preventing bees from migrating, and therefore climate
change was “crushing bees in a vise”. Their data clearly show half of the European
species (green dots) were moving northward while most of the North American
species (red dots) were shifting southward. In a
NY
Times’ interview, bumblebee expert Dr. Sydney Cameron also noted this lack
of correspondence between assertions and evidence, diplomatically stating
Kerr’s suggestion of thwarted northward migration was “a surprising conclusion given the data.” Clearly the bees are not caught in any such
vise. The average shift in latitudinal positions was simply contradicting
global warming theory.
Second if
the 1940-1960s land use changes were the major driving factor, instead of
climate change, we would expect dramatic range shifts in the 1975-1986 period, but
only minor range shifts between 1975 and 2010. In contrast if climate change
was the driver, we would expect increasing range shifts between 1975 and 2010 as
purported climate change intensified. The data does not support a climate
change interpretation.
The 2 graphs
on Figure 1’s left (A’s) illustrate shifts in each species’ average extreme northern
latitude, while the 2 graphs on the right (C’s), illustrate the change in their
southern extremes. The X-axis represents the species latitudinal extremes in
terms of distance (kilometers) from the equator during the base-line period. (Figure
2 helps the reader visualize the geographic location for those distances.) The
Y-axis represents the species latitudinal deviation
from the baseline period. A positive number means the species’ extreme latitude
shifted northward and a negative number means it shifted southward. The dashed
line at “0” represents the 1901-1974 base line latitude. Species that have not
shifted their latitudinal margins will be located on that dashed lines.
For example,
I added blue arrows to highlight that one European species’ northern-most
latitude, originally located about 6400 km north of the equator (X-axis), had
already shifted northwards by 1000 km (Y-axis) by the 1975‑period. Assuming the
second arrow points to the same species, there was no further shift through the
1999-2010 period, suggesting no effect from recent climate change. Readers
should also note that a majority of the species on both continents had
retracted their northern limit southwards by the 1975-1986 period, again the
opposite of what global warming predicts. By 1999-2010, half the species still
exhibited ranges that had retracted southwards, although there was a slight
increase in species that expanded northward.
The graphs
on Figure 1’s right side represent shifts in the species most southerly
margins. Again the bees are shifting differently on each continent, suggesting
regional drivers, not global climate change. Because Kerr’s graphs have a
different scale, I added a blue line to highlight any northerly retraction exceeding
400 km. By the 1975-period (top
right), nearly all the North American species (red dots) had already retracted
their southern range northward to some degree. By the 1999-2010 period, the
greatest North American retraction remained at 1000 km, while 3 species
expanded their range southward, again contradicting a global warming interpretation.
The remaining North American latitudinal shifts are not noticeably different between
1975 and 2010. Furthermore, it should be noted that any retractions in the southeast
USA are probably not linked to global warming because most of that area has
been deemed a “warming
hole” with a 20th century cooling trend for maximum temperatures
(see Fig 13 Menne 2009).
In Europe (green
dots), half the species had expanded southward by the 1975-1986 period again
contradicting global warming theory. By the 1999-2010 period more species began
retracting northwards while the 2 most northerly species move southward
retracing their earlier retractions. Because some declining species have
shifted northwards while others shifted southward, most European researchers
had rejected the hypothesis that climate change has been driving declining bee
populations. (Willliams
2007)
Unfortunately
from Kerr’s results, we cannot determine which dot represents which species,
and thus we are prevented from using additional research that might elucidate
why an individual species shifted its range when another species did not. Meta-analyses
such as this only create average trends from a lumped set of species but
typically obscure the variety of confounding factors that may be driving these diverse
and complex range shifts. Yet such meta-analyses are often the preferred method
for researchers advocating climate change disruption because they assume the
variety of confounding factors cancel out, leaving only a climate change
footprint (Dr. Singer, personal communication) A
problematic IPCC meta-analysis is discussed here.
In addition to skewed temporal categories,
Kerr 2015 used an inappropriate metric to dismiss land use changes. Kerr compared
recent satellite data with past characterizations of the landscapes to
determine changes in cropland and pasture extent.
But extent, or acreage, is not the
only land use factor that could impact bees. The major factor is the loss of
flowers.
Due to cheaper synthetic fertilizers, many
croplands no longer plant crops of bee-nourishing alfalfa to rotate with crops
of wind-pollinated corn or wheat. Planting alfalfa had partially offset the
loss of flowers when native grasslands were cultivated. Additionally pastures
and grasslands are managed to reduce insect pollinated flowers and promote more
wind‑pollinated grasses.
Furthermore methods for producing silage have
increasingly replaced traditional hay‑making. Traditional hay‑making requires a
good stretch of dry weather that lowers the hay’s water content, so mowing typically
occurs in late summer. In contrast silage fermentation requires greater water
content than hay, so fields are mowed earlier and sometimes more often. Earlier
mowing removes nourishing flowers so bee species that emerge later in the
season from “hibernation” are critically impacted (Fitzpatrick
2007). Additionally wind-pollinated corn has increasingly become a major
source of silage replacing alfalfa and soybean.
These agricultural practices have increased
production over the past few decades without cultivating more land, so those land
use changes would not be detected as changes in cropland or pasture “extent”. But
those changes most certainly impact bees. Again any editor or peer-reviewer familiar with the plight of
the bumblebees should have been aware that “extent” was likely a meaningless
metric. Yet by using the “extent” metric, Kerr’s models incorrectly asserted
that landscape changes had no impact, contradicting a wealth of research demonstrating
a heavy toll by landscape changes.
Still Kerr schizophrenically embraced landscape
changes to help explain why so many bee species had contradicted climate change
theory by shifting to lower elevations (Figure
3 below). Bees that moved to higher elevations were touted as confirmation of
climate change induced shifts. But to dismiss the contradictory evidence, Kerr
2015 nebulously suggested global warming could
increase forest growth at higher elevations and that resulting landscape change
could eliminate bee habitat thus
forcing bees to lower levations. But that begs the question of why half the
bees still migrated to higher elevations. Reforestation may eliminate some warm
sunny bee habitat, but in Europe the dominant cause of reforestation has been
the abandonment of marginal farmlands (Gehrig-Fasel
2007). Furthermore the downward shift in elevation seen in Europe’s high
latitude bee species is consistent with Scandinavian tree ring data that
suggests temperatures have been cooler since the 1950s (Esper
2012). In agreement with “cooling” tree rings, many butterflies in Finland that
had expanded northward during peak warming of during the 1930s to 50s, have also
retreated southward. (Poyry
2009).
In North America, many bee species have also
moved to lower elevations in the most recent decades (Figure 3) and this is
consistent with shifts to lower elevations by several other species. In the
United States vegetation in the Sierra Nevada has been moving down‑slope (Crimmins
2011). Montane butterfly populations that Parmesan claimed had gone extinct
due to global warming have now returned and there is no longer a statistical
shift to higher elevations (discussed
here). A high percentage of newly discovered pika populations have been
observed at much lower elevations than had been observed during the 1920s (discussed
here). And mirroring bumblebees’ shifts, 20% of California’s bird species
have moved upslope, while 20% moved down‑slope while most have not shifted at
all during the 20th century (Tingsley
2012).
2. Bumble
Bees Move Independently of Climate Change
Assuming that species are in equilibrium with
their environment, ecologists infer a species’ temperature tolerances based on the
most extreme temperatures throughout their range and then construct a bioclimatic envelope. However the usefulness
of bioclimatic envelopes has been increasingly debated (Hampe
2004) and Kerr’s data demonstrates why. Theory predicts that if a habitat
warms or cools, species must shift in order to remain within their temperature envelope’s boundaries. In Kerr’s graph
below (Figure 4), the dashed line, at zero on the Y-axis, represents each
species’ baseline limit for cold temperature tolerance (Fig. 4’s graphs on
left, B’s), and for warmth tolerance (graphs on right, D’s).
Bumblebee Changes in Extreme Temperature LImits |
If a species’ range tracked its thermal
limits, its representative dot would sit on the dashed line. Any dot above that
line means they have retreated to warmer habitat. Any dot below the dashed line
means the species retreated to cooler habitat. The X-axis represents the
species thermal limit determined by the base line period. For example, for
species’ extreme cold limits, several species persisted in regions experiencing
winter extremes of -10°C
during the base line period (X-axis). But during all the later periods, the coldest temperatures
experienced by most species were 2 to 6 degrees warmer, (-8 to -4°C). So
the bees are said to be lagging climate change because they are remaining in warmer
regions.
Regards the bees’ extreme warm limits, the
opposite is happening for most species. Nearly all of North America’s species
(red) retracted their range by 1975 and inhabit much cooler regions than required
by their bioclimatic envelope. Those bees now inhabit regions where maximum temperatures
are 1 to 12 degrees cooler than their baseline period. In contrast, many
European species expanded into warmer regions although the majority also retracted
to cooler areas. With few species sitting on the dashed line, the data clearly
shows most bee species are not tracking climate change and have shifted their
ranges independently of calculated thermal limits. An alternative
interpretation would argue the baseline observations never accurately defined the
bioclimatic envelope. Whatever the case, clearly factors other than climate were
forcing bees to alter their thermal ranges.
3. Failure
to Address Pathogen Spillover Hypothesis
In North America a few closely
related species in the same subgenus began a rapid decline in the late 90s. Abundance
declined by up to 96% and geographic ranges contracted by 23‑87%, mostly within
the last 20 years (Cameron 2011).
Species once designated as abundant or common, declined to being rare or absent
in just 7 to 10 years. In addition to the rapid decline, only certain species were
affected while others remained abundant. So many researchers rejected climate
change as a causative factor and suggested the importation of a novel pathogen was
the likely cause (Thorp
2008). Commercially grown bumblebees were being transported around the
world, and in the late 90s North American native bees, were reared for commercial
purposes in European facilities and then re-introduced to America. Those
species are believed to have been infected by a novel pathogen that they
introduced to North America. One species, Bombus
occidentalis that widely inhabited western North America, began a sudden sharp
decline at the same time commercially raised B. occidentalis populations in greenhouses were also exhibiting declines
due to the parasite Nosema bombi.
Shortly thereafter two other closely related bee species began to rapidly
decline. By 2010, over 60 top bee biologists petitioned the USDA’s Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service to regulate the commercial bumblebee industry
to ensure transported bees were disease free.
Although the specific strain of pathogen
driving these observed declines has not been determined with full certainty,
there has been growing support for the pathogen hypothesis as declining species
are observed to harbor heavier pathogen loads than stable bee populations (Cameron 2011, Szabo
2012, Colla
2006, Malfi 2014).
Understanding and preventing the
spread of deadly disease should be a major societal focus because it severely affects
all species. Introduced pathogens wreaked havoc in the Americas ever since
Europeans brought smallpox to the western hemisphere and decimated Native
American populations. More recently, an introduced chytrid fungus has inflicted
a wave of global amphibian extinctions. An introduced European fungus is now decimating eastern USA bats. In the
80s, scientists were transporting the African Clawed Frog around the world to
use in pregnancy testing and embryological studies. The African Clawed Frog harbors
the deadly chytrid but is unaffected by it and so served as a carrier. As the
fungus was inadvertently spread to new environments, susceptible species like Costa
Rica’s Golden Toad and other closely related species rapidly went extinct.
While ecologists embarked on efforts to minimize the spread of the disease and
save the most vulnerable amphibian species, one of the IPCC’s specially
selected biologists, Alan Pounds, denigrated those efforts because he falsely
believed the extinctions were a result of catastrophic climate change (discussed
here). He oddly argued that by blaming the pathogen, scientists were redirecting
the public’s attention from addressing a speculative CO2 climate catastrophe.
But Pounds’ remedy, reducing our carbon footprint, would never have stopped the
spreading disease, nor saved a single frog and CO2 advocates were hindering the
development of real solutions. Likewise controlling our carbon footprint will
do precious little to remedy the plight of the bumblebees.
Not only does Kerr 2015 completely ignore the
devastating impacts of introduced pathogens, their climate change remedy argues
for transporting species northward into habitats where global warming models
suggest species should have shifted. In
contrast, in a NY
Times interview, bumblebee expert Dr. Sydney Cameron took issue with Kerr’s
suggestion that we should intervene with “assisted migration”, because that
remedy risks spreading pathogens.
Dr. James Strange added. “I did not come away
convinced that climate change is causing these movements.” Strange also worries
that Kerr 2015 might cause people to blame climate change entirely for bee
population destruction and ignore potential factors such as parasites,
pesticides and habitat destruction. “There’s a bit of me that’s nervous someone
will pick this up and say ‘They figured it out: It’s climate change,’ ”
Dr. Strange said. “But really, we haven’t figured it out yet.”
Indeed Dr. Strange should be concerned. If
there is anything we have learned from the Golden
Toad extinctions, Edith’s
Checkerspot extirpations, or the Emperor
Penguins, advocacy for CO2 caused catastrophic climate change has blinded
people from all walks of life to the more urgent conservation issues.
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