-
Ganna wins time-trial in Giro shake-up
-
Drone attack kills 28 at market in southern Sudan
-
Putin lands in China for trip that aims to show unshakeable ties after Trump pomp
-
Israel finance minister says ICC seeks arrest warrant against him
-
Kentucky primary vote tests Trump's grip on Republican base
-
Alcaraz withdraws from Wimbledon with wrist injury
-
Indie game plunges players into sci-fi epic 'Battlestar Galactica'
-
Trump shows off site of new $400-mn ballroom
-
Israeli troops in Iraq: what do we know?
-
Iran warns against new US attacks as Trump says held off assault
-
Oil dips, stocks mixed after Trump holds off on Iran attack
-
India rest Bumrah for one-off Test against Afghanistan
-
G7 finance ministers vow cooperation to face 'heightened risks'
-
Ghana, Ivory Coast to clash in 2027 AFCON qualifying
-
King Charles III makes unannounced visit to N. Ireland
-
Ukraine war widow buries her daughters killed by Russia
-
Ukraine war widow buries her daughers killed by Russia
-
Power of Siberia 2: The giant gas pipeline Russia wants to build to China
-
Taijul puts Bangladesh on brink of Test series win over Pakistan
-
Iran warns against renewed US attacks as Trump says held off assault
-
France says G7 finance talks 'frank, sometimes difficult'
-
England sweat on skipper Sciver-Brunt's fitness before T20 Women's World Cup
-
Ronaldo, 41, leads Portugal into his sixth World Cup
-
Stocks rise, oil dips after Trump holds off on Iran attack
-
Pakistan court sentences man to death for killing teen influencer
-
Nicaragua's exiled Sergio Ramirez: Autocrats 'don't care' about novels
-
Robertson and McGinn in Scotland squad bidding for World Cup breakthrough
-
Spanish ex-PM Zapatero under investigation for influence peddling
-
Pep Guardiola: Catalan genius who changed football
-
Long-running conflicts muddy DR Congo Ebola response
-
Bayeux Tapestry to be shown flat for first time in London exhibit
-
Albania appoint coach Rolando Maran as Sylvinho's successor
-
Germany starts sale of bailed-out energy firm Uniper
-
Iran civilians learn assault rifle basics to fend off US
-
Beijing says China, US should work together to promote AI governance
-
Mango founder's son arrested in Spain over father's death
-
Neuer set for return to Germany World Cup squad: reports
-
US police investigating deadly mosque shooting as hate crime
-
WHO worried about 'scale and speed' of deadly Ebola outbreak
-
Seabird habitats shrink as ocean heats up: study
-
Government encourages women to report rape in French star's assault probes
-
Germany starts sales process for bailed-out energy firm Uniper
-
Europe-China spacecraft launches to study Earth's 'invisible armour'
-
Tech stocks retreat, oil dips after Trump holds off on Iran attack
-
Stellantis joins race to build mini-EVs for Europe
-
How might this World Cup be won on the pitch?
-
Malians tell of torture and killings by army, Russian fighters
-
EU-China spacecraft takes off on mission to probe solar winds
-
Under Trump pressure, EU eyes deal to end trade standoff
-
'We're here solely to play football,' insists North Korean coach
US bat decline triggered pesticide surge, 1,300 baby deaths: study
A collapse in North America's bat population led to a surge in pesticide use by farmers as an alternative way to protect crops from insects -- in turn triggering a rise in infant mortalities, a study revealed Thursday.
The paper, published in Science, provides concrete evidence supporting predictions that global biodiversity decline will have severe consequences for humans.
"Ecologists have been warning us that we're losing species left and right... and that will potentially have catastrophic impacts on humanity," author Eyal Frank, of the University of Chicago, told AFP.
"However, there was not a whole lot of empirical validation to those predictions because it is very hard to go and manipulate an ecosystem at a very large spatial scale," added the environmental economist.
- Bats are pest control -
For his work, Frank took advantage of a "natural experiment" -- the sudden emergence of a deadly bat disease -- to quantify the benefits that bug-eating bats provide in pest control.
White-nose syndrome (WNS), caused by an invasive fungus, began spreading across the United States from New York in 2006 -- killing bats by waking them during hibernation in winter, when they lack insects to feed on, and trying to stay warm saps their energy.
The loss of millions of bats shocked the ecosystem.
To investigate, Frank tracked the spread of WNS in the eastern US and compared insecticide use in affected counties versus unaffected ones.
He found a massive 31 percent increase in pesticide use where bat populations had declined.
Given the link between pesticides and poor health outcomes, Frank examined whether increased pesticide use correlated with higher infant mortality rates.
With more pesticides, the infant mortality rate rose by nearly eight percent, translating to 1,334 additional infant deaths since the bat disease took hold -- with contaminated water and air likely serving as pathways for the chemicals to enter humans.
Frank emphasized that the staggered spread of the wildlife disease supports his inference that the bat die-off directly caused the spike in infant mortality, rather than it merely being a coincidence that could be explained by other rural hardships such as drug abuse or poverty.
Any other explanation would have to align with the same expansion path and timing of WNS.
- Cascading impacts -
"We need better data on the presence of pesticides in the environment," Frank said, adding that his findings also underscore the need to protect bats.
Vaccines are being developed against WNS, but bats are also threatened by habitat loss, climate change and wind farms.
The new work adds to the body of evidence showing the cascading impacts of wildlife loss on ecosystems.
A recent study found that reintroducing wolves in Wisconsin reduced vehicle collisions with deer as wolves establish their patrols along highways.
In Central America, declines in amphibians and snakes have led to spikes in human malaria cases.
"Stemming the biodiversity crisis is crucial to maintaining the many benefits that ecosystems provide for which technological substitutes cannot readily, or perhaps, ever replace," scientists at the University of California, Santa Barbara and University of British Columbia wrote in a commentary.
"Studies like that of Frank are important for understanding the benefits of allocating scarce resources for biodiversity conservation."
S.AbuJamous--SF-PST