About this Research Topic
Every species needs to reproduce to maintain viable populations. Despite being critical players in ecosystems around the world, the impact of environmental stressors on insect fertility is often overlooked. In this Research Topic, we aim to collate new research to help close this knowledge gap. Our goal is to better understand how our changing environment – particularly climate change, pollution, and xenobiotic exposure – is affecting insect reproduction, and therefore their ability to maintain their populations and distributions.
We welcome the submission of reviews and original research articles that address stressor-induced shifts in insect fertility. Reviews should broadly cover what is known about the effects of environmental stressors on insect fertility, drawing parallels to mammalian systems where appropriate. Authors may choose to focus on male fertility, female fertility, or both. Original research articles should investigate effects of environmental stressors including, but not limited to: temperature stress, xenobiotic exposure, and other pollutants on topics such as sperm function, sperm viability, related aspects of male fertility, ovariole development, egg provisioning, oviposition, or other aspects of female fertility. Articles involving stored sperm within females, reproductive behavior, sex-biased stressor tolerance, and transgenerational effects of stressors are also welcome.
Keywords: fertility, sperm viability, abiotic stressors, insecticides, climate change
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.