• This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
home_icon-01_outline
star
  • Earth.Org Newsletters

    Get focused newsletters especially designed to be concise and easy to digest

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Earth.Org PAST · PRESENT · FUTURE
Environmental News, Data Analysis, Research & Policy Solutions. Read Our Mission Statement

Rare Insect Breeding Programme Gears Up for Record-Breaking Season

by Earth.Org Europe Apr 15th 20212 mins
Rare Insect Breeding Programme Gears Up for Record-Breaking Season

The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) is gearing up for a potentially record-breaking breeding season for a rare insect breeding programme, as keepers care for more critically endangered pine hoverflies than ever before at Highland Wildlife Park near Aviemore. 

What is Happening?

You might also like: Only 6.5% of Global Forests are Adequately Protected, Study Finds

Dr Helen Taylor, conservation programme manager at RZSS said, “Our charity’s conservation breeding programme at Highland Wildlife Park is currently the best hope for the survival of this critically endangered species. The last sighting of an adult pine hoverfly in the wild was over eight years ago. Every individual matters, so it is really exciting to have more larvae pupating than ever before and nerve-wracking to have to wait and see how many complete the full cycle, from egg, to larva, to pupa, to adult. ”

“The process they go through is extraordinary. Inside the pupa case, these animals are breaking most of their body down into goo and then totally reassembling it to transition from a larva to an adult fly. Most people will be familiar with this idea from caterpillars turning into butterflies, but it really is a magical transformation. Invertebrates are a fundamentally understudied, underacknowledged and under-loved group of animals that fuel the food chain, pollinate plants and break down organic waste. They hold our ecosystems together, making them an important focus for conservation efforts. Without them, the world would be very different,” she continued.

Featured image by: RZSS

Tagged:
Subscribe to our newsletter

Hand-picked stories weekly or monthly. We promise, no spam!

SUBSCRIBE
Instagram @earthorg Follow Us