- Insect biodiversity
Insect biodiversity accounts for a large proportion of all
biodiversity on the planet, with over 1,000,000insect species described.Agriculture
In agricultural
ecosystem s, biodiversity is instrumentally important not only for the production of food, but for other ecological services as well, including the recycling ofnutrient s, regulation ofmicroclimate and local hydrological processes, suppression of undesirable organisms anddetoxification of noxious chemicals.In the United States alone,
pollination by bees accounts for over US$9 billion ofeconomic revenue [cite journal |quotes=no |author=W. S. Robinson, R. Nowogrodski & R. A. Morse. |title=Pollination parameters |journal=Gleanings in Bee Culture |volume=117|year=1989 |unused_data=|pages148–152] . According to some estimates, over ⅓ of the human diet can be traced directly or indirectly to bee pollination [Cite book |author=S. E. McGregor |title=Insect pollination of cultivated crop plants |publisher=USDA Agriculture Handbook 496, Washington, D.C.|year=1976 |url=http://gears.tucson.ars.ag.gov/book/] . Losses of key pollinators have been reported in at least one region or country on every continent except Antarctica, which has no pollinators. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment [cite book |title=Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005. Ecosystems and Human Well-being: Biodiversity Synthesis |publisher=World Resources Institute , Washington, D. C.] concluded that with the global decline in the amount of pollinators, there is not a complete loss of fruit or seeds, but a significant decrease in quantity and viability in fruits, and a lower number of seeds.Food
Over 1000 species of insects are, or have been used as food somewhere in the world.
Entomophagy is common in central andsouthern Africa ,Asia ,Australia , andLatin America .Termite s,cricket s,grasshopper s,locust s,beetle s,ant s,bee brood , andmoth larva e are examples of insects that are used as food sources. Insects are high inprotein ,energy , and a number ofmineral s andvitamin s and can form up to 5-10% of the annual animal protein consumption of certain indigenous groups [cite book |author=P. S. Cranston & P. J. Gullan |title=The Insects: An Outline of Entomology |publisher=Blackwell, Oxford |year=2005 |id=ISBN 1-405-11113-5] . Many insects are said to have a nutty flavour, along with a highnutritional content .Human culture
Early human civilisations held insects as an important element within their cultures. Most famously,
scarab beetle s were central religious artifacts within Egyptian culture.Insect symbolism , such as thedung beetle portrayed as apotter , is seen in the East as well. The Chinese viewedcicada s as a symbol of birth or immortality, the San of theKalahari believe that thepraying mantis represents creation and patience, and the Greeks also created beautiful representations of scarab beetles using colourful stones.The scope
Over 1 million species of insects have been described, but current estimates of total insect diversity vary from 5-80 million species of insect. Beetles (Coleoptera) make up 40% of described insect species, but some entomologists suggest that flies (Diptera) and Hymenoptera (
wasp s,bee s andant s) could be as diverse or more so. Five orders of insects stand out in their levels of species richness: Hymenoptera, Diptera, Coleoptera,Lepidoptera , and theHemiptera .Conservation
There are two approaches to the conservation of insects. Either humans set aside large portions of land using "wilderness preservation" as the motive, or confronting the particular processes that affect the charismatic vertebrates in order to achieve indirect conservation of insects. With biodiversity loss being a global problem, conserving habitat simply for species of insects is of low priority in the current environmental culture.
Single-species conservation is said to preserve many other species indirectly, this preservation by default is referred to as the
umbrella effect . "Charismatic species", such as butterflies or large, colourful beetles, calledflagship species , can expand public awareness and financial contributions for conservation efforts.Migratory species, such as the well-known monarch butterfly ("
Danaus plexippus "), are in need of special conservation methods. One species may require several habitat locations for different periods in their migratory patterns.Insect conservation has been labeled in the past as a concern only for the affluent. The developing country of
Papua New Guinea has a "happily ever after" ending in their attempts to preserve the world's largest butterfly,Queen Alexandra's Birdwing ("Ornithoptera alexandrae"). This species is restricted to a very small range of habitat due to specificity in their diet. In the international market of insect collecting, the butterfly can retrieve up to US$2000. In 1978, the government of Papua New Guinea set up the Insect Farming and Trading Agency (IFTA) to regulate the exploitation and conservation of Queen Alexandra's Birdwing and other valuable butterflies.References
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