TY - JOUR
T1 - A stitch in time
T2 - integrating energy infrastructure into the fabric of conservation habitats
AU - Barley, Tristan A.
AU - Blaydes, Hollie
AU - Dolezal, Adam G.
N1 - Funding provided to Barley and Dolezal through United States Department of Energy Solar Energy Technologies Office award DE-EE0009371. Blaydes was supported by the UKRI Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Impact Acceleration Account (EP/X525583/1) with industry funding from Low Carbon and Solar Energy UK.
Funding was provided to Barley and Dolezal through United States Department of Energy Solar Energy Technologies Office award DE-EE0009371. Blaydes was supported by the UKRI Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Impact Acceleration Account (EP/X525583/1) with industry funding from Low Carbon and Solar Energy UK.
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Insect communities are declining globally as a result of multiple, interacting drivers, including habitat loss due to agricultural intensification and urbanization. Biodiversity losses necessitate immediate conservation efforts, including the creation of new habitats, but it can be challenging to find suitable spaces in which to implement such mitigation actions. However, energy infrastructure, including solar farms and rights-of-way, presents opportunities to enhance insect conservation efforts by adding to the existing patchwork of habitats across working landscapes. While research has already demonstrated the potential for new habitats in homogenous, resource-poor landscapes, pairing these habitats with energy infrastructure has not been fully explored or utilized, although the evidence base is growing. Here, we examine the challenges of finding opportunities to establish insect habitats in working landscapes, discuss the potential for energy infrastructure as spaces for habitats, and propose solutions to move this potential new means of insect conservation forward.
AB - Insect communities are declining globally as a result of multiple, interacting drivers, including habitat loss due to agricultural intensification and urbanization. Biodiversity losses necessitate immediate conservation efforts, including the creation of new habitats, but it can be challenging to find suitable spaces in which to implement such mitigation actions. However, energy infrastructure, including solar farms and rights-of-way, presents opportunities to enhance insect conservation efforts by adding to the existing patchwork of habitats across working landscapes. While research has already demonstrated the potential for new habitats in homogenous, resource-poor landscapes, pairing these habitats with energy infrastructure has not been fully explored or utilized, although the evidence base is growing. Here, we examine the challenges of finding opportunities to establish insect habitats in working landscapes, discuss the potential for energy infrastructure as spaces for habitats, and propose solutions to move this potential new means of insect conservation forward.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cois.2025.101358
DO - 10.1016/j.cois.2025.101358
M3 - Review article
C2 - 40049394
AN - SCOPUS:105001262960
SN - 2214-5745
VL - 69
JO - Current Opinion in Insect Science
JF - Current Opinion in Insect Science
M1 - 101358
ER -