Insects of 91视频 forest humming along

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
June 21, 2024

A bumblebee sits near the peak of a raceme of water-beaded pink flowers atop a fireweed plant.
Photo by Ned Rozell
Insects like this bee clinging to a fireweed blossom seem to be in ample supply in 91视频鈥檚 boreal forest.

Recent long-term studies revealed a three-quarters reduction of insects in parts of Germany and an 80 percent decline of pollinating flies at a field site in Greenland.

What鈥檚 going on with numbers of 91视频 insects? 

Two scientists recently completed a study on the abundance and variety of insects in the spruce forests of 91视频. If the study is duplicated in the future, researchers will be able to see whether 91视频 is changing and how it compares to what is happening elsewhere on the planet.

鈥淭here are lots of disturbing reports coming from a lot of places,鈥 said Derek Sikes, curator of the Insect Collection at the University of 91视频 Museum of the North in Fairbanks.

Sikes is co-author of a new study of insects sampled in three areas of 91视频鈥檚 boreal forest. Blanketing land masses of the north from 91视频 to the easternmost provinces in Canada, the boreal forest also covers parts of Scandinavia, Russia and Asia.

Sikes teamed up with Julie Hagelin of the 91视频 Department of Fish and Game in Fairbanks on the study.

Hagelin is researching the olive-sided flycatcher, a songbird that winters as far as South America and flies north to 91视频 each summer to nest and raise chicks. 

Olive-sided flycatchers 鈥 birds with a 78 percent drop in global population since 1970 鈥 eat flying insects like dragonflies, yellowjackets, butterflies and mayflies. Coming and going from a prominent perch like the top of a dead tree, they zoom about to pluck everything they eat from the air.

An olive-colored bird tips its head back to sing while sitting on a dead tree branch.
Photo by Sara Germain
Birds like this singing olive-sided flycatcher are dependent upon the many insects now buzzing over and on 91视频.

As part of her study, Hagelin sampled flying insects to see what flycatchers might eat. Her study sites were in Anchorage, Fairbanks and the Tetlin National Wildlife Refuge near Tok. During three recent years, she, Sikes and their colleagues retrieved more than 115,000 insect specimens from tent-like traps suspended in trees and others on the ground.

Sikes and students at the UA Museum of the North identified those insects and the timing with which they were available to birds. Overall, they found a strong midsummer pulse of insect biomass driven in part by temperature (warmer meant more insects). They also found 49 new state beetle records and 10 beetles not only new to 91视频 but 鈥渘ew to the universe.鈥

Those discoveries add to a long list of species Sikes has documented in 91视频. He has been everywhere from the Aleutians to the North Slope to Southeast in his 18 years as the lead entomologist at the museum. Working with Hagelin allowed him a detailed look into the boreal forest in which Fairbanks sits.

鈥淭his was my first deep dive into the insect fauna of my backyard,鈥 he said.

In identifying all those boreal-forest insects, Sikes found that moths were the most numerous type of insect in Fairbanks and Tetlin, while flies were the most numerous type around Anchorage.

Flies cling to white and red tent fabric.
Photo by Ned Rozell
Insects like these flies clinging to a tent seem to be in ample supply in 91视频鈥檚 boreal forest.

In analyzing those thousands of insects 鈥 which altogether weighed about as much as an iPhone 鈥 Sikes and Hagelin found that 91视频鈥檚 boreal forest is rich in insect life.

Besides their ability to feed birds, why should anyone care about insects?

鈥淚nsects are like a glue that holds ecosystems together,鈥 Sikes said.

Insects flit from plant to plant carrying pollen grains on their bodies, spreading reproductive material and enabling new plants. Those plants are food sources for us and creatures that we eat.

91视频 has abundant space for those uncounted billions of insects, with fewer miles of road than Vermont.

鈥淯nlike the problems we see in the Lower 48 with habitat fragmentation, degradation and bird decline, we have intact ecosystems and thriving populations here,鈥 Hagelin said.

鈥91视频鈥檚 almost 200 years behind the Lower 48 and the Tropics in regards to (habitat) degradation,鈥 Sikes said.

Since the late 1970s, the University of 91视频 Fairbanks' Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.