Journal of Entomological Research
SCOPUSWeb of Science
  • Year: 2025
  • Volume: 49
  • Issue: suppl

Social insects as bioindicators of environmental health in urban landscapes

  • Author:
  • Abhisek Tripathy1, Abhay Ghatage*, Debanjana Prasad2, Akshaykumar Kadam3, L. Inbathamizh4
  • Total Page Count: 7
  • Page Number: 1266 to 1272

1Department of Plant Pathology, Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Siksha ‘O’ Anusandhan (Deemed to be University), Bhubaneswar - 751 030, Odisha, India, E-mail: abhisektripathy@soa.ac.in

2Department of Biotechnology and Microbiology, Noida International University, Greater Noida, Gautam Buddha Nagar - 201 310, Uttar Pradesh, India, E-mail: debanjana.prasad@niu.edu.in

3Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Krishna Institute of Pharmacy, Krishna Vishwa Vidyapeeth “Deemed to be University”, Karad, Satara - 415 539, Maharashtra, India, E-mail: ranjitjadhav705@gmail.com

4Department of Biotechnology, Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai - 600 119, Tamil Nadu, India, E-mail: inbathamizh.bte@sathyabama.ac.in

Krishna Institute of Science and Technology, Krishna Vishwa Vidyapeeth “Deemed to be University”, Karad, Satara - 415 539, Maharashtra, India

*Corresponding authors’ E-mail: abhayghatage8@gmail.com

Online published on 18 February, 2026.

Abstract

Social insects such as ants, bees, termites, wasps are excellent for monitoring how ecosystems evolve in metropolitan areas as being so sensitive to factors that stress them out, like pollution, habitat loss, temperature change, and chemical exposure. These fast and simple responses to environmental changes reveal a great deal about the lifespan and general condition of ecosystems. This work investigates the use of social insects as bioindicators using case studies and real-world data. While bees highlight how contaminated the air is and how the range of flowers is changing, ants demonstrate how wonderful the land is and how much area is being lost. Wasps enable us to monitor changing insect populations and the urban heat island effect; termites reveal a much about the state of the planet and how things breakdown. These examples highlight the close relationship among the diversity of social insects, the changes in population over time, and external stimuli. Including surveillance of social insects in their designs and environmental legislation helps cities better regulate the surroundings and promote sustainable development.

Keywords

Bioindicators, Ecological indicators, Environmental health, Habitat fragmentation, Pollution, Social insects, Urban biodiversity, Urban ecosystems, Urbanization