Global warming is rescuing the once-rare brown Argus butterfly, according to a study in the journal Science.
Keith Warmington / Butterfly Conservation via The
WASHINGTON â" Man-made climate is threatening the existence of many species, such as the giant polar bear. But in the case of a small drab British butterfly, it took a species in trouble and made it thrive. Scientists say global warming is rescuing the once-rare brown Argus butterfly.
Itâs all about food. Over about 25 years, the butterfly went from in trouble to pushing north in Britain where it found a veritable banquet. Now the butterfly lives in twice as large an area as it once did and is not near threatened, according to a study in Fridayâs issue of the journal Science.
Decades ago, the brown Argus âwas sort of a special butterfly that you would have to go to a special place to see and now itâs a butterfly you can see in regular farmland or all over the place,â said study co-author Richard Fox, an ecologist at Butterfly Conservation, a science and advocacy group in the United Kingdom.
Global warming helping the brown Argus is unusual compared to other species and thatâs why scientists are studying it more, said study co-author Jane Hill, a professor of ecology at the University of York.
Biologists expect climate change to create winners and losers in species. Stanford University biologist Terry Root, who wasnât part of this study, estimated that for every winner like the brown Argus there are three losers, like the cuckoo bird in Europe. Hill agreed that itâs probably a three-to-one ratio of climate change losers to winners.
As the world warms, the key interactions between species break down because the predator and prey may not change habitats at the same time, meaning some species will move to cooler climes and wonât find enough to eat, Root said.
What makes the brown Argus different is that it found something new to eat, something even better than its old food, the less common rockrose plant, Hill said. The new food is a geranium and it is more widespread.
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