クモ類・昆虫の生態的重要性と保全状況の警鐘(Scared of Spiders? The Real Horror Story is a World Without Them)

2026-03-02 マサチューセッツ大学アマースト校

マサチューセッツ大学アマースト校の研究者は、クモをはじめとするクモ形類が生態系に不可欠な存在であり、もし彼らがいなくなれば深刻な影響が生じると指摘した。クモは世界中で膨大な数の昆虫を捕食し、農業害虫の抑制や感染症媒介昆虫の増加防止に寄与している。これにより農作物被害の軽減や化学農薬使用量の抑制にもつながっている。また、クモは多様な生物の餌資源として食物網を支え、生態系の安定性維持にも重要な役割を果たす。人間に恐れられがちな存在だが、実際には生物多様性と環境バランスを守る“縁の下の力持ち”であり、その減少は害虫の爆発的増加や生態系崩壊を招く恐れがある。研究は、クモの保全の重要性を再評価すべきだと訴えている。

クモ類・昆虫の生態的重要性と保全状況の警鐘(Scared of Spiders? The Real Horror Story is a World Without Them)

Spider on a web outside. Credit: Getty Images<関連情報>

データ不足、分類上の偏り、経済的利益が米国における昆虫とクモ類の保護を阻害している Data deficiency, taxonomic bias, and economic interests curtail insect and arachnid conservation in the United States

Wes Walsh and Laura L. Figueroa

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:March 2, 2026

Significance

A comprehensive evaluation of North American insect and arachnid species assessments and US endangered species legislation shows the conservation needs of most North American insect and arachnid species are unknown, and US state and federal legal protections are minimal and taxonomically biased. Extractive industries appear to limit policy implementation while positive public attitudes toward the environment are correlated with more protected insect and arachnid species. This quantitative assessment of US insect and arachnid conservation needs highlights that scientists, government, nonprofit organizations, and community members must work collectively to increase data collection, strengthen local conservation policies, diversify the taxa receiving protections, and generate a broad base of public support to effectively protect invertebrate biodiversity and the crucial services they provide.

Abstract

Earth is experiencing a biodiversity crisis. Among the declining taxa are insects and arachnids, which account for most of the world’s animal species, and are ecologically and economically vital. Thus, understanding the factors influencing insect and arachnid conservation policies is urgently needed. Here, we review conservation assessments for 46,257 North American insect and arachnid species and examine the factors that affect state and federal legal protections for species in the United States. We find the conservation status of 88.5% of described insect and arachnid species in North America is unknown, and that unassessed insect and arachnid species are unlikely to receive protection. Of US insects and arachnids known to be at-risk throughout their range, 94.7% are not protected by any state or federal law; only 2.5% are protected nationwide under the federal Endangered Species Act compared to 27.7% of range wide at-risk US bird species. Insect and arachnid protections are taxonomically biased, favoring dragonflies and damselflies (Odonata) and butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) while overlooking other vulnerable taxa. We find that socioeconomic factors are the strongest predictors of state-level conservation policies: states with economies more reliant on mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction are less likely to protect insects and arachnids. In states where protections exist, more insect and arachnid species are protected when more residents hold eco-centric values. This quantitative assessment of US insect and arachnid conservation rectifies a previous dearth of data and highlights specific, addressable issues which have left countless species vulnerable to decline and possible extinction.

1903自然環境保全
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