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Showing Original Post only (View all)THE INSECT APOCALYPSE IS HERE [View all]
The New York Times Magazine, Nov. 27, Excerpts: Sune Boye Riis was on a bike ride with his youngest son, enjoying the sun slanting over the fields and woodlands near their home north of Copenhagen, when it suddenly occurred to him that something about the experience was amiss. Specifically, something was missing. It was summer. He was out in the country, moving fast. But strangely, he wasnt eating any bugs.
For a moment, Riis was transported to his childhood on the Danish island of Lolland, in the Baltic Sea. Back then, summer bike rides meant closing his mouth to cruise through thick clouds of insects, but inevitably he swallowed some anyway. When his parents took him driving, he remembered, the cars windshield was frequently so smeared with insect carcasses that you almost couldnt see through it.
But all that seemed distant now. He couldnt recall the last time he needed to wash bugs from his windshield; he even wondered, vaguely, whether car manufacturers had invented some fancy new coating to keep off insects. But this absence, he now realized with some alarm, seemed to be all around him. Where had all those insects gone? And when? And why hadnt he noticed?
Riis had not been able to stop thinking about the missing bugs. The more he learned, the more his nostalgia gave way to worry. Insects are the vital pollinators and recyclers of ecosystems and the base of food webs everywhere. Riis was not alone in noticing their decline. In the United States, scientists recently found the population of monarch butterflies fell by 90 percent in the last 20 years, a loss of 900 million individuals; the rusty-patched bumblebee, which once lived in 28 states, dropped by 87 percent over the same period.
With other, less-studied insect species, one butterfly researcher told me, all we can do is wave our arms and say, Its not here anymore! Still, the most disquieting thing wasnt the disappearance of certain species of insects; it was the deeper worry, shared by Riis and many others, that a whole insect world might be quietly going missing, a loss of abundance that could alter the planet in unknowable ways. We notice the losses, says David Wagner, an entomologist at the University of Connecticut. Its the diminishment that we dont see. -MORE...
Read More, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/27/magazine/insect-apocalypse.html
