Insects, Trees, and Climate:
The Bioacoustic Ecology of Deforestation and
Entomogenic Climate Change


Al Gore describes entomogenic climate change on Meet The Press, 20 July 2008.
“Pop Chirp Bite Crunch Chew”, Science News 174:5 (30 August 2008).

David D. Dunn
Art and Science Laboratory
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501

James P. Crutchfield
Complexity Sciences Center &
Physics Department
University of California Davis
One Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616

ABSTRACT: Accumulating observational evidence suggests an intimate connection between rapidly expanding insect populations, deforestation, and global climate change. We review the evidence, emphasizing the vulnerability of key planetary carbon pools, especially the Earth's forests that link the micro-ecology of insect infestation to climate. We survey current research regimes and insect control strategies, concluding that at present they are insufficient to cope with the problem's present regional scale and its likely future global scale. We propose novel bioacoustic interactions between insects and trees as key drivers of infestation population dynamics and the resulting wide-scale deforestation. The bioacoustic mechanisms suggest new, nontoxic control interventions and detection strategies.


David D. Dunn and J. P. Crutchfield, "Insects, Trees, and Climate: The Bioacoustic Ecology of Deforestation and Entomogenic Climate Change", in en Resonancia: Noves Fronteres De La Ciencia, L'Art I El Pensament, J. Perello, editor, Tallers Grafics Hostench., Venecuela (2009) 106-142 [Catalan], 233-253 [English].
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Santa Fe Institute Working Paper: 06-12-055.
arxiv.org: q-bio.PE/0612019.