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Sunday, March 15, 2026

Scared of Spiders? The Real Nightmare Is a World Without Them

We NEED spiders, believe it or not

By University of Massachusetts Amherst

Wes Walsh With Spider
Lead author Wes Walsh, his tattoo of Agelenopsis
pennsylvanica (the Pennsylvanian grass spider) and
one of the inspirations for this study, a live Platycryptus
undatus (tan jumping spider). Credit: Wes Walsh
Arachnids, including spiders, scorpions, and harvestmen (daddy long-legs), often inspire fear or disgust. Despite their reputation, these animals play an essential role in keeping ecosystems functioning. 

As global biodiversity declines in what some researchers call the “insect apocalypse,” two ecologists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst set out to evaluate how insects and arachnids are faring across the United States. What they found was not reassurance, but a striking lack of basic information.

Their study, recently published in PNAS, underscores the urgent need to better measure, safeguard, and recognize the value of insects and arachnids as a foundation of planetary health.

“Insects and arachnids are fundamental for human society,” says Laura Figueroa, assistant professor of environmental conservation at UMass Amherst and the paper’s senior author. 

“They help with pollination and biological control of pests; they can serve as monitors of air and water quality, and they have worked their way deeply into many cultures throughout the world”— think of Aragog in the Harry Potter book series, for example. 

“Many people care about popular charismatic animals on the planet, like lions and pandas, which, justly, have received international conservation attention. Given that insects and arachnids don’t usually get the same attention, we wanted to know how they were doing.”

A Startling Data Gap

To get a clearer picture, Figueroa and her graduate student, Wes Walsh, who led the study, compiled conservation assessments for 99,312 known species of insects and arachnids found in North America, north of Mexico. The scale of what they uncovered surprised them.

“Almost 90%—88.5% to be precise—of insect and arachnid species have no conservation status,” says Figueroa. “We simply have no idea how they are doing. Almost nothing is known about the conservation needs of most insects and arachnids in North America.”

In practical terms, that means the vast majority of these species have never been formally evaluated for risk, leaving scientists and policymakers without the information needed to guide protection efforts.

Bias in Protection Efforts

The limited data that do exist are unevenly distributed. Aquatic insects used to gauge water quality, including mayflies, stoneflies and caddisflies (mayflies, stoneflies, and caddisflies), are far more likely to be studied. More visually appealing groups, such as butterflies and dragonflies, also receive a disproportionate share of conservation attention.

“Arachnids, in particular, are really missing from conservation; most states don’t even protect a single species. We need more data and protection for insects, but also arachnids,” says Walsh.

The researchers also identified political and economic patterns. States that depend heavily on extractive industries such as mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction were less likely to offer protections to insects or arachnids. In contrast, states where public attitudes are more eco centric tended to safeguard a greater number of species.

Lessons from Bird Conservation

By way of comparison, Figueroa points to bird conservation, which has been far more successful in protecting and preserving species. “The research shows that you get the best conservation efforts when broad, diverse coalitions come together,” she says. “In the case of birds, it was hunters, bird watchers, nonprofit organizations and many other constituencies who banded together to reach a common goal.”

“Insects and arachnids are more than objects of fear,” says Walsh, who sports a beautiful spider tattoo on his arm. “We need to appreciate them for their ecological importance, and that begins with collecting more data and considering them worthy of conservation.”

Reference: “Data deficiency, taxonomic bias, and economic interests curtail insect and arachnid conservation in the United States” by Wes Walsh and Laura L. Figueroa, 2 March 2026, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2522779123