Climate-fueled El Niño events are devastating butterflies, beetles and other tropical insects. Insects are arguably the most important animals on the planet. Their variety is unparalleled in nature, and they carry out vital tasks such as pollinating plants and providing food for other animals.

Changes to El Niño occurrence causing widespread tropical insect and spider declines - EurekAlert!

Ancient El Niño patterns hint at future climate trends

El Niño and La Niña climate swings threaten mangroves worldwide

Study shows how El Niño and La Niña climate swings threaten mangroves worldwide - EurekAlert!

It's not just El Niño: New climate phenomenon impacts Hawai'i rainfall

Duke Scientists Uncover Stronger, Ancient Versions of El Niño and La Niña

Weather-changing El Niño oscillation is at least 250 million years old - EurekAlert

El Niño–southern oscillation caused the spike in 2023 temperatures, new study found - EurekAlert

El Niño fingered as likely culprit in record 2023 temperatures

El Niño linked to accelerated ice loss in tropics

El Niño pattern can bring wet weather to UK one year later

One in two El Niño events could be extreme by mid-century

Mega El Niño Events Caused End-Permian Mass Extinction, Researchers Suggest

When Mega El Niño Rewrote Earth’s Fate: The Untold Story of the Largest Mass Extinction

Mysterious 'New El Niño' Was Just Discovered South of The Equator

The End of El Niño: What It Means for Our Climate

Early-onset El Niño means warmer winters in East Asia, and vice versa

Early-onset El Niño means warmer winters in East Asia, and vice versa - EurekAlert

El Niño forecasts extended to 18 months with innovative physics-based model