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Page added on November 8, 2020

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Is ‘insect apocalypse’ close-by?

Is ‘insect apocalypse’ close-by? thumbnail

The global health of insect populations is far more complicated than previously thought, new data suggests. Previous research also indicated an alarming decline in numbers in all parts of world, with losses of up to 25% per decade.

Reports of the rapid and widespread decline of insects globally have caused great worry to scientists.

This new study, the largest on insect change to date, aims to give a more complete understanding of what’s really happening to bugs worldwide. Drawing on data from 166 longterm surveys across 1,676 sites, it paints a highly nuanced and variable picture of the state of insect health.

The compilation indicates that insects like butterflies, ants and grasshoppers are going down by 0.92% per year, which amounts to 9% per decade.

That is extremely serious, over 30 years it means a quarter less insects, said Dr Roel Van Klink, from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research.

Many people have an instinctive perception that insects are decreasing – often informed by the so-called ‘windscreen phenomenon’, where you find fewer dead bugs splattered on cars. The researchers say it’s real.

While land-based species are declining, the new study also shows that insects that live in fresh water, like midges and mayflies, are growing by 1.08% per year. The researchers believe this is because of legislation that has cleaned up polluted rivers and lakes.

However the increase in water based insects will not compensate for land losses.

“They are just a fraction of land based insects, not more than 10%,” said Dr Van Klink, adding that the area of freshwater we have on earth is just a small percentage of the total land mass, so the numbers of freshwater insects will never be able to compensate for the terrestrial insects. The scientists say there is no smoking gun on insect declines but they find the destruction of natural habitats due to urbanisation, to be key. This finding about habitat destruction has been echoed in other major pieces of research on biodiversity, including last year’s IPBES Global Assessment.

Ann Swengel, who has spent more than 30 years studying butterflies in the US, says, “We’ve seen so much decline, including on many protected sites. But we’ve also observed some sites where butterflies are continuing to do well.”

While the findings are complicated the authors believe they offer hope for the future. The nice thing about insects is that most have incredibly large numbers of offspring, so if you change the habitat in the right way we will see them recover really fast, said Dr Van Klink.

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One Comment on "Is ‘insect apocalypse’ close-by?"

  1. FamousDrScanlon on Sun, 8th Nov 2020 2:37 pm 

    Scientists Confirm the Culprit Behind Earth’s Biggest Extinction

    A chain of calamities caused the planet’s biggest extinction, the greatest mass dying ever. Greenhouse gases explain how.

    “It happened because atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) levels rose dramatically over thousands of years, turning the seas ever more acidic, to precipitate dangerous changes in oceanic conditions. In this, so far the greatest of life’s periodic extinctions, 95% of all the sea creatures perished, along with three-quarters of all life on land.

    The evidence of dramatic change at a particular level in the geological record − the Permian-Triassic boundary, now more precisely dated at 251.9 million years ago − has been teasing geologists for decades. And climate change through one agency or another has been a favoured candidate from the start.

    That moment in vanished history was marked by a long, slow but world-changing series of volcanic eruptions − the evidence lies in great sheets of basalt known to geologists as the Siberian Traps − and since outgassing of carbon dioxide is associated with all volcanic eruption, a greenhouse effect driven by carbon dioxide has long been a favourite.

    Seeking proof

    So devastating was this release of heat from the deep crust that ancient coal deposits laid down in the Carboniferous may have ignited, to create the first-ever fossil fuel emissions.

    But circumstantial evidence was not the same thing as proof. Dramatic ozone loss − ozone forms a shield against potentially lethal ultra-violet radiation in the upper atmosphere − has also been named as a suspect. Until somebody could deliver clear evidence of the machinery that ensured the extinction, the verdict could only be “not proven.”

    Right now, with human help, the planet Earth is undergoing what has been termed a sixth great mass extinction, and evidence from the Permian extinction provides a lesson for what could happen in a changing climate, but so far simply that: an awful warning, rather than a dreadful example.”

    https://scheerpost.com/2020/11/08/scientists-confirm-the-culprit-behind-earths-biggest-extinction/

    Told ya – for over a decade I dun tole folks what dun it. Now they have confirming evidence/proof.

    Hothouse extinctions, mass & lesser, are the rule on this carbon planet, not the exception.

    Buckle up.

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