Can insects survive winters?-Read

Many of us have either read to heard the story of The Ants and The Grasshopper, the same applies to all insects in real winter time

Updated On – 25 December 2024, 04:44 PM



Harmonia Axyridis Asian Ladybeetle Insect

Hyderabad: As soon as winter approaches and the intensity of cold increases, we suddenly realize the pests or broadly speaking the insects, including mosquitoes, cockroaches, and even ants that have earlier annoyed us, have disappeared. The insects that normally fly or crawl in warmer weather are nowhere to be seen.

One might assume that insects do not survive the seasonal shift. After all, temperatures are too low for them to forage and the plants or other insects they’d eat are scarce anyway.


But that is not the case.

They are still all around you: in the bark of the trees and bushes, in the soil, and some may even be attached to plants. The snow acts as a blanket for these insects in places where it snows.

Winter is the time for insects to hibernate. Scientists call this a “diapause” and it is how insects, which in most cases cannot generate their heat like we mammals can survive the cold winter months.

Insects prepare for winter before the temperature gets too low. This allows a species to have several generations a year in which only one experiences winter

Most insects get the cue to hibernate from their environment such as temperature and day length.

If an insect fails to make the right decision on time it may freeze, starve, or spend all of its hard-earned energy before safely emerging from hibernation.

Hibernation has allowed approximately 5.5 million species, to cope with the cold.

Some insects hibernate in places that conceal them from low temperatures while others undergo changes within their bodies to avoid or tolerate freezing.

Almost no food is available at this time of year and insects generally do not eat during their hibernation. Winter can last for months, so insects gain additional weight before winter and consume this energy stored slowly by lowering their metabolic rate. Many insects pause their development during hibernation.

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