Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumIn Bath UK, 30 Species Unknown Or Occasional Just Eight Years Ago Now Permanent Residents
The crickets that chirp in the meadows are newcomers, as are the elegant wasp spiders and the colourful Jersey tiger moths. A city farm in the Georgian city of Bath is the latest conservation organisation to highlight the creatures that would have been unheard of in the area before the climate emergency.
Volunteers have recorded 1,250 species on the 37-acre Bath City Farm over the last eight years and experts have been surprised and concerned to find about 30 species that have moved in or have been found there in the winter where previously they would have visited only in the summer. Ecologist and trustee Mike Williams, who led the wildlife recording, said insects and arachnids were important indicator species that help ecologists understand the effect of a changing climate on the natural world. Spiders are a classic example as due to their short lifespan and mobility they react to changes in weather.
Three years ago, the wasp spider was recorded on the farm for the first time ever and is now increasingly common in the area. In the early 1990s we only ever saw the wasp spider on the south coast of England, in Dorset, said Williams. This was at the extreme north of their range because it was too cold for them. I would never have imagined then that one day they would be found as far north as Bath as we live with the realities of climate change.
The Jersey tiger moth used to be found on the Channel Islands, but has become an increasingly common sight across the south of England, including on the farm. Other recent new arrivals include the green meshweaver spider, the ivy bee and the lesser hornet hoverfly.
EDIT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/nov/22/bath-city-farm-30-new-species-climate-crisis
marybourg
(13,181 posts)Whatever could this mean? Even I, who have the most tenuous of ties to Britain (I read British mysteries) know that Bath is a Roman-founded city. I dont have much respect for the current-day Guardian (I remember when it was the Manchester Guardian) but this is ridiculous.
hatrack
(60,935 posts)It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site, IIRC.
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flying_wahini
(8,011 posts)Easterncedar
(3,524 posts)Its why I subscribe. Id missed this story, though, so thanks for posting!