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Saturday, March 02, 2019


Webspinners: New order of insects sets up home in UK

By Helen Briggs for BBC News Science and Environment

27 February 2019

The UK has a new order of insects, thanks to stowaways that set up home in the warmth of a glasshouse. The silk-spinning insects, known as webspinners, seemingly hitched a ride on imported plants. They survived undetected until a botanist at RHS Garden Wisley, Surrey, noticed webs appearing on the roots of orchids. The creepy crawlies were subsequently identified as the first "full thriving colony" of webspinners in the UK. Since webspinners are unlikely to survive outdoors, their arrival is "neither good nor bad news", rather "interesting", said principal entomologist, Dr Andy Salisbury. The colony came to light last summer when several mystery insects and their young were found inside silk webs in the orchid collection at the garden. They were subsequently identified as webspinners in what appears to be the first discovery of an established colony in the UK.

Dr Salisbury said as a tropical insect they are unlikely to survive outdoors in Britain, but may be found elsewhere in plant collections inside glasshouses. While a few of the insects have been intercepted in the past on imported plants and stone, this is the first time a "full thriving colony" has been discovered. It is not clear when the webspinners first arrived, but they do not appear to be causing any damage to living plants. Scientists say the insects are "exotic" rather than "invasive". "The difference is that the former means they came from somewhere else, by human trade in this case, but they are not highly competitive with native species," said Janice Edgerly-Rooks, professor of biology at Santa Clara University. "They do not damage the ecosystem or ecological community of the new region." Matt Shardlow, chief executive of the charity Buglife, said the find highlighted the risk of imported insects that can survive in the British climate becoming established. He said there had been reports of crickets, grasshoppers, moths, beetles and slugs emerging from the soil of imported plants. "It's an indication of some of the stuff that is arriving and the unpredictability of what's going to come next," he said.

[How interesting, and strange! Oh, what a tangled web we spin…..]

4 comments:

mudpuddle said...

ma nature doesn't miss a trick...

Judy Krueger said...

You could say this is another consequence of globalization but it has been going on forever. The question is would one rather be exotic or invasive, as an insect, as a human?

CyberKitten said...

@ Mudpuddle: Always inventive and always full of surprises...

@ Judy: Of course things like this have been going on ever since we began trading across any distance. Naturally they've been happening more often in such a connected world. You have to wonder though what will turn up and how much it will bite us in the future as things get warmer.

mudpuddle said...

"bite us in the future" haha... love puns