Changing patterns of the East Asian monsoon drive shifts in migration and abundance of a globally important rice pest

Author:

Lv Hua12,Zhai Meng‐Yuan12,Zeng Juan3,Zhang Yi‐Yang3,Zhu Feng4,Shen Hui‐Mei5,Qiu Kun6,Gao Bo‐Ya12,Reynolds Don R.78ORCID,Chapman Jason W.19ORCID,Hu Gao12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing China

2. State Key Laboratory of Biological Interactions and Crop Health Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing China

3. China National Agro‐Tech Extension and Service Center Beijing China

4. Plant Protection Station of Jiangsu Province Nanjing China

5. Shanghai Agricultural Technology Extension and Service Center Shanghai China

6. Plant Protection Station of Anhui Province Hefei China

7. Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich Chatham UK

8. Rothamsted Research Harpenden UK

9. Centre for Ecology and Conservation, Environment and Sustainability Institute University of Exeter Cornwall UK

Abstract

AbstractNumerous insects including pests and beneficial species undertake windborne migrations over hundreds of kilometers. In East Asia, climate‐induced changes in large‐scale atmospheric circulation systems are affecting wind‐fields and precipitation zones and these, in turn, are changing migration patterns. We examined the consequences in a serious rice pest, the brown planthopper (BPH, Nilaparvata lugens) in East China. BPH cannot overwinter in temperate East Asia, and infestations there are initiated by several waves of windborne spring or summer migrants originating from tropical areas in Indochina. The East Asian summer monsoon, characterized by abundant rainfall and southerly winds, is of critical importance for these northward movements. We analyzed a 42‐year dataset of meteorological parameters and catches of BPH from a standardized network of 341 light‐traps in South and East China. We show that south of the Yangtze River during summer, southwesterly winds have weakened and rainfall increased, while the summer precipitation has decreased further north on the Jianghuai Plain. Together, these changes have resulted in shorter migratory journeys for BPH leaving South China. As a result, pest outbreaks of BPH in the key rice‐growing area of the Lower Yangtze River Valley (LYRV) have declined since 2001. We show that these changes to the East Asian summer monsoon weather parameters are driven by shifts in the position and intensity of the Western Pacific subtropical high (WPSH) system that have occurred during the last 20 years. As a result, the relationship between WPSH intensity and BPH immigration that was previously used to predict the size of the immigration to the LYRV has now broken down. Our results demonstrate that migration patterns of a serious rice pest have shifted in response to the climate‐induced changes in precipitation and wind pattern, with significant consequences for the population management of migratory pests.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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