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A photo of a Red-headed Cardinal beetle, with wings spread, about to take off. There are three species of Cardinal beetle in the UK; the other two being Black-headed Cardinal beetles; one of which is extremely rare and can only be found in Wales.

A photo of a Red-headed Cardinal beetle, with wings spread, about to take off. There are three species of Cardinal beetle in the UK; the other two being Black-headed Cardinal beetles; one of which is extremely rare and can only be found in Wales.

Red-headed Cardinal Beetle Pyrochroa serraticornis, from the family Pyrochroidae.

I'd wanted to take a photo, but got lucky as it spread its wings with a view to taking off.

#CardinalBeetle #Beetle #Insect #UKWildlife #InsectThursday #Insectageddon #NoInsectinction

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Even untouched ecosystems are losing insects at alarming rates, new study finds A new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shows that insect populations are rapidly declining even in relatively undisturbed landscapes, raising concerns about the health of eco...

The #ClimateEmergency and #NatureCrisis are intimately interlinked.

And #Insectageddon really matters:
"Insects are necessary for terrestrial and fresh-water ecosystems to function."

phys.org/news/2025-09...

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Henk Tennekes: “Het gif werkt langzaam, maar het werkt wél” - Down to Earth magazine Met een klein ingezonden stuk zette toxicoloog Henk Tennekes het gevaar van neonicotinoïden voor bijen op de kaart, en raakte hij al zijn inkomsten kwijt.

Wat moet er nog meer gebeuren? #ADisasterInTheMaking #Insectageddon Voorlichting tot in de #TweedeKamer door wetenschappers #SiccoMansholt
#HetGelijkVanToxicoloogHenkTennekes r.i.p.
Het gif werkt langzaam maar het werkt wel! downtoearthmagazine.nl/henk-tennekes/

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Achteruitgang van insecten,een opkomend wereldwijdmilieurisico
#Insectageddon
sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877343520300671

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Intensieve landbouw en het gebruik hierbij van de grote hoeveelheden landbouwgif #pesticiden #neonicotinoiden zijn voornamelijk de oorzaak van de #insectageddon

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Original post on sfba.social

But nice lawns and golf courses and unblemished flower gardens are so important. We can't possibly give up routine use of #pesticides.

Yet it's clear that even "benign" pesticides, like #pyrethroids, have adverse impacts. Even if they are harmless to people and pets, they have serious adverse […]

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‘Could become a death spiral’: scientists discover what’s driving record die-offs of US honeybees Experts scrambling to understand losses in hives across the country are finally identifying the culprits. And the damage to farmed bees is a sign of trouble for wild bees too

www.theguardian.com/environment/...

#Insectageddon #Famine #Food

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4. So you get people saying "here's how we can increase yields to ensure there remains enough food for everyone."
Yes, but where's the water going to come from?
How will you protect the soil?
What about #Insectageddon?

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Half the tree of life is going extinct Light traps have long been used to monitor nocturnal insect numbers. In a photograph of one taken in 1978, about 3,000 species were identifi...

volewica.blogspot.com/2025/06/half...

#ClimateCrisis #ClimateChange #Insectageddon

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Half the tree of life is going extinct --- Light traps have long been used to monitor nocturnal insect numbers. In a photograph of one taken in 1978, about 3,000 species were identified. Photograph: Patrick Greenfield/The Guardian This is one of the most depressing and dispiriting pieces I've seen in a long time. From The Guardian. Lightly edited] > **In front of him was a world seething with life. Every branch of every tree seemed to host its own small metropolis of creatures hunting, flying, crawling, eating. The research facility lay in a patchwork of protected rainforest, dry forest, cloud forest, mangroves and coastline covering an area the size of New York, and astonishingly rich in biodiverse life. Here, the bugs gorged, coating the leaf litter with a thick carpet of droppings.** > > **But the real show was at night: for two hours each evening, the site got power and a 25-watt bulb flickered on above the porch. Out of the forest darkness, a tornado of insects would flock to its glow, spinning and dancing before the light. Lit up, the side of the house would be “absolutely plastered with moths – tens of thousands of them”, Janzen says.** > > **Inspired, he decided to erect a sheet for a light trap with a camera – a common way to document flying insect numbers and diversity. In that first photograph, taken in 1978, the lit-up sheet is so thickly studded with moths that in places the fabric is barely visible, transformed into what looks like densely patterned, crawling wallpaper.** > > **Scientists identified an astonishing 3,000 species from that light trap, and the trajectory of Janzen’s career was transformed, from the study of seeds to a lifetime specialising in the forest’s barely documented populations of caterpillars and moths.** > > **Now 86, Janzen still works in the same research hut in the Guanacaste conservation area, alongside his longtime collaborator, spouse and fellow ecologist, Winnie Hallwachs. But in the forest that surrounds them, something has changed. Trees that once crawled with insects lie uncannily still.** > **The hum of wild bees has faded, and leaves that should be chewed to the stem hang whole and un-nibbled. It is these glossy, untouched leaves that most spook Janzen and Hallwachs. They are more like a pristine greenhouse than a living ecosystem: a wilderness that has been fumigated and left sterile. Not a forest, but a museum.** > > **Over the decades, Janzen has repeated his light traps, hanging the sheet, watching for what comes. Today, some moths flutter to the glow, but their numbers are far fewer.** > > **“It’s the same sheet, with the same lights, in the same place, looking over the same vegetation. Same time of year, same time of the moon cycle, everything about it is identical,” he says. “There’s just no moths on that sheet.”** > **The declines witnessed by Janzen – and described by others around the world – are part of what some ecologists call a “new era” of ecological collapse, where rapid extinctions occur in regions that have little direct contact with people.** > > **Reports of falling insect numbers around the world are not new. International reviews have estimated annual losses globally of between 1% and 2.5% of total biomass every year.** > > **Widespread use of pesticides and fertilisers, light and chemical pollution, loss of habitat and the growth of industrial agriculture have all carved into their numbers. Often, these were deaths of proximity: insects are sensitive creatures, and any nearby source of pollution can send their populations crumbling.** > > **But what Janzen and Hallwachs are witnessing is a part of a newer phenomenon: the catastrophic collapse of insect populations in supposedly protected regions of forest. “In the parts of Costa Rica that are heavily hit by pesticides, the insects are completely wiped out,” Hallwachs says.** > **“But what we see here in the preserved areas – that as far as we can tell, are free of even these destructive insecticides and pesticides – even here, the insect numbers are going down horrifyingly dramatically,” she says.** > > **Long-term data for insect populations – particularly less charismatic species – is still patchy, but Janzen and Hallwachs join a number of scientists that have recorded huge die-offs of insects in nature reserves around the world.** > > **They include in Germany, where flying insects across 63 insect reserves dropped 75% in less than 30 years; the US, where beetle numbers dropped 83% in 45 years; and Puerto Rico, where insect biomass dropped up to 60-fold since the 1970s. These declines are occurring in ecosystems that are otherwise protected from direct human influence.** > **When David Wagner stepped out into the US’s southern wilderness this spring, he found landscapes emptied of life. The entomologist has devoted much of his career to documenting the vast diversity of US insect life, particularly rare caterpillars. He traverses the country to find specimens, often on long road trips searching for caterpillars by day and moths by night.** > > **Now, he finds himself coming home empty-handed. “I just got back from Texas, and it was the most unsuccessful trip I’ve ever taken,” he says. “There just wasn’t any insect life to speak of.”** > > **It was not only the insects missing, he says, it was everything. “Everything was crispy, fried; the lizard numbers were down to the lowest numbers I can ever remember. And then the things that eat lizards were not present – I didn’t see a single snake the entire time.”** > > **Wagner recalls when a series of international reviews began hitting headlines in 2019, saying global insect biomass was declining at a rate of 1% a year (although some estimates put itas high as 2.5%).** > > **“We [entomologists] were thinking conservatively,” he says, looking at the data that has emerged in the five years since then.** > > **“I now think that that’s too low. Now I would say that 2% is happening in some areas, and we’re seeing some places threatened by climate change or urbanisation or agriculture get as high as 5% decline per year.”** > **Those who doubt there is sufficient species data to prove the “insectageddon” can now track it by proxy, Wagner says: via the sharp declines in birds, lizards and other creatures that depend on them for food.** > > **Scientists in the US, Brazil, Ecuador and Panama have now reported the catastrophic declines of birds in “untouched” regions – including reserves inside millions of hectares of pristine forest. In each case, the worst losses were among insectivorous birds.** > > **At one research centre – falling within a 22,000-hectare (85 sq mile) stretch of intact forest in Panama – scientists comparing current bird numbers with the 1970s found 70% of species had declined, and 88% of these had lost more than half of their population.** > **In 2019, researchers found that almost a third of US birds – about 3 billion – had disappeared from the skies since the 1970s. The losses, however, were not evenly distributed: those birds that ate insects as their main food had declined by 2.9 billion. Those that didn’t depend on insects had actually gained, increasing by 26 million.** > > **More recent research from the US found a decline in three-quarters of nearly 500 bird species studied – with the steepest downward trend in stronghold areas, where they once thrived.** > > **In Puerto Rico’s Luquillo rainforest, scientists in 2018 mapped how the loss of insects set other dominoes falling: as bugs declined, so too did the populations of lizards, frogs and birds. Their disappearance, they wrote, had triggered “a bottom-up trophic cascade and consequent collapse of the forest food web”.** > > **In Costa Rica, Janzen described the fall in numbers of insectivorous birds in the reserve as “cratering”. A colony of about 20 nectar-eating bats have long nested in the dark nooks of Janzen and Hallwachs’ house, but Janzen has noticed the flowers they used to feed from are now failing to bloom.** > > **Hallwachs began to find their small, emaciated bodies lying on the floor. “Over a period of five days, I found three of these bats dead,” she says. Researchers at another site 20 miles away told her they were witnessing the same thing.** > **** > **Behind the steepening declines, a clear culprit is beginning to emerge: global heating. A tropical forest ecosystem is “a finely tuned Swiss watch”, Hallwachs says – perfectly engineered to sustain a vastly biodiverse system of creatures.** > > **Each element is delicately tuned and interlocks with the rest: the heat, the humidity, the rainfall, the unfolding of leaves, the length of the seasons, the start and stop of the life cycles of insects and animals.** > > **With each incremental turn of one cog, the rest of the system responds. Insects and animals have evolved to time their hibernations and breeding times precisely to small signals from the system: a change in humidity, a lengthening of the light hours of the day, a small rise or fall in temperature.** > **But now, the system has one gear spinning wildly out of time: the climate.** > > **“When I arrived here in 1963 the dry season was four months. Today, it is six months,” Janzen says. Insects that typically spend four months underground, waiting for the rains, are now forced to try to survive another two months of hot, dry weather. Many are not succeeding.** > **Alongside the changing seasons are other shifts, such as in rainfall or humidity. “It’s just a general disruption of all the little cues and synchronies that would be out there,” Janzen says. Across the entire clock of the forest, plants and creatures are falling out of sync. In the background, the temperature is rising.** > > **“The killer – the cause that’s pulling the trigger – is actually water,” says Wagner. For insects, staying hydrated is a unique physiological challenge: rather than lungs, their bodies are riddled with holes, called spiracles, that carry oxygen directly into the tissue.** > > **“They’re all surface area,” says Wagner. “Insects can’t hold water.” Even a brief drought lasting just a few days can wipe out millions of humidity-dependent insects.** [Read more here.] Already, alternating droughts, floods and heatwaves are affecting the production of food. But without insects, there _will_ be no food. Mankind is too stupid, too greedy, and too ignorant, to stop the processes that are leading to the destruction of the Earth and of ourselves. We could stop emissions which cause global heating and catastrophic collapses in insect populations. But we do not. We could reduce or even stop using pesticides and insecticides. We do not. We could stop producing plastics in the quantities we do. But we don't. Meanwhile, it's not just insects which are dying, but also the seas. Millionaires, billionaires and large corporations control our politics, and they stop our politicians taking action on global heating, insecticides, and plastics. If you think that is too pessimistic a view, consider that Australia's Labor Party has just won a landslide in an election, wiping out the right-wing, anti-climate L/NP coalition. A key difference between Labor and the L/NP was, supposedly, their different attitudes to climate change. Yet, as soon as the election was over, it approved a massive expansion in the life of a gas extraction and exporting facility in NW Australia. The emissions from the extension of this project _alone_ will produce another 6 billion tonnes of greenhouse gases. Australia's total CO2 emissions in 2023 were 383 _million_ tonnes. I needn't even discuss the situation in the USA. And even in countries which purport to do something about climate change, fossil fuel subsidies continue. We're _encouraging_ people to destroy us and our civilisation. I despair.

Half the tree of life is going extinct

volewica.blogspot.com/2025/06/half-tree-of-lif...

#ClimateCatastrophe #ClimateChange #Insectageddon

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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides

“We’re at a new point in human history. The major drivers of biodiversity loss around the planet were land degradation and land loss, habitat loss. But climate change is now far exceeding that.”

– Professor of ecology & evolutionary biology at UConn and entomologist David Wagner. #Insectageddon

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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides

#Insectageddon

www.theguardian.com/environment/...

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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides

#Insectageddon. "We’re talking about nearly 1/2 the tree of life disappearing in one human lifetime. That is absolutely catastrophic."

A clear culprit emerged: global heating causing lack of water. (wake up humans, we're not far behind) 🐛
#ActonClimate

www.theguardian.com/environment/...

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'Scientists in the US, Brazil, Ecuador and Panama have now reported the catastrophic declines of birds in “untouched” regions – including reserves inside millions of hectares of pristine forest. In each case, the worst losses were among insectivorous birds.'

#insectageddon

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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides

How is this crisis any less existential than climate change?

'A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides.'

#insectageddon
www.theguardian.com/environment/...

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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides

Our planets insects are dying at an alarming rate, soon there will be few left. When we lose them, we lose the birds and what then?

#climatechange #climatecatastrophe #insectsdying #lossofinsectlife #insectageddon

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The rise of end times fascism | Naomi Klein and Astra Taylor The governing ideology of the far right has become a monstrous, supremacist survivalism. Our task is to build a movement strong enough to stop them

Well great.

Another plague.
Another horseman.

We keep summoning the apocalypse by design—
and then act surprised when it rides in.

Collapse isn’t coming.
It’s here.
And we’re still feeding it.

#Insectageddon #EndTimesFascism

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#ClimateReality #Insectageddon

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‘Some insects are declining but what’s happening to the other 99%?’ Insects are the dominant form of animal life on our planet, providing humans and wildlife with pollination, food, and recycling services but, despite concerns about population declines, little is known about how 99% of species globally are faring. A new approach is needed to better monitor species and protect them from the impacts of climate and land use change, pollution and invasive non-native species as soon as possible, according to a study led by the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH) and ZSL (Zoological Society of London).

3-Apr-2025
‘Some #insects are declining but what’s happening to the other 99%?’
Despite fears over ‘#insectageddon’, there is a lack of data about virtually all insect species globally, so a research rethink is needed

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1079213 #science #ecology #conservation

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Alarm bells ringing & the next 4 years aren’t hopeful, so it’s on each to change our banks & CC to ones that don’t invest in fossil fuels & defund broligarchy, start composting & men especially: eat less meat/dairy. Save the insects, save us🌱 #ClimateWarming #Biodiversity #Insectageddon #Butterfly

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A Small Blue butterfly (small in size, but not blue in colour) on a marjoram leaf.

A Small Blue butterfly (small in size, but not blue in colour) on a marjoram leaf.

I led a study day on butterflies for Kent WT today. Afternoon spent at Burham Downs where we had a good variety, inc Small Blue (pictured), Grizzled Skipper, Green Hairstreak, etc. But numbers alarmingly low, tho' site looked great & the weather was warm. #butterflies #kentnature #insectageddon

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Pollination. Soil health. Water health. All dependent on #insects
#Insectageddon #BiodiversityEmergency

www.theguardian.com/environment/...

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‘Insect apocalypse’ poses risk to all life on Earth, conservationists warn Report claims 400,000 insect species face extinction amid heavy use of pesticides

Selon une étude scientifique conduite au Royaume-Uni, « 23 espèces d'#abeilles et de guêpes ont disparu au cours du siècle dernier, tandis que le nombre d'applications de #pesticides a presque doublé au cours des 25 dernières années ». #Insectageddon

bit.ly/2Kkdbd5

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'Alarming' loss of insects and spiders recorded A new study shows hundreds of different butterflies, bugs and flying insects are declining across Germany.

[DÉCLIN DES INSECTES] Une nouvelle étude scientifique publiée dans le magazine @nature révèle que l'#agriculture intensive est l'un des principaux facteurs à l'origine de la diminution du nombre d'espèces des #insectes et de leur abondance. #insectageddon

bbc.in/2NtTtwo

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Protéger les insectes, c'est protéger notre futur « Protéger les insectes et plus largement la nature, c'est protéger l'Homme et son avenir », écrit l'autrice de cette tribune. Et cela passe par quelques gestes simples : leur donner de l'eau, éliminer tous les biocides, laisser pousser des herbes folles dans son jardin...

« L’enjeu planétaire est connu. Protéger les #insectes et plus largement la #nature, c’est protéger l’Homme et son avenir. Jamais on n’a détruit la vie aussi vite et aussi fort. » #insectageddon

bit.ly/2GbQXrE

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Great to see the wildflowers at Killard, Co Down, today including these Pyramidal Orchids but shocked at the extremely low levels of pollinators. Yes, good numbers of Common Blues and a handful of other butterfly species but where were the bees and hoverflies #insectageddon

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Humanity must save insects to save ourselves, leading scientist warns Insects are ‘the glue in nature’, says Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson, underpinning the food and water we rely on

«Il ne fait pas bon être un #insecte aujourd'hui». Selon la spécialiste Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson, la destruction des environnements naturels pour créer des terres agricoles et les #pesticides sont les causes principales de déclin des insectes. #insectageddon

bit.ly/2VPaIOY

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Alarmist by bad design: Strongly popularized unsubstantiated claims undermine credibility of conservation science “Unless we change our ways of producing food, insects as a whole will go down the path of extinction in a few decades.” or “Our work reveals dramatic rates of decline that may lead to the extinction of 40% of the world's insect species over the next few decades.” These are verbatim conclusions of the recent paper by Sánchez-Bayoa and Wyckhuys (2019) in Biological Conservation. Because of fundamental methodological flaws, their conclusions are unsubstantiated. Like noted by The Guardian, the conclusions of the paper were set out in unusually forceful terms for a peer-reviewed scientific paper. The current case has already seen corrections and withdrawals in print and social media. We are concerned that such development is eroding the importance of the biodiversity crisis, making the work of conservationists harder, and undermining the credibility of conservation science.

Despite the flaws in the #insectageddon paper https://rethinkingecology.pensoft.net/article/34440/ the decline of #insects continues: 'Widespread losses of pollinating insects in Britain’ https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-08974-9

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Widespread losses of pollinating insects revealed across Britain Wild bees and hoverflies lost from a quarter of the places they were found in 1980, study shows

Disparition des #insectes : une nouvelle étude britannique montre que plus de 353 espèces d'#abeilles sauvages et de syrphes ont disparu dans un quart des lieux où ils se trouvaient en 1980... Qu'attendons-nous pour réagir ? #insectageddon À lire ici :

bit.ly/2WoKtLN

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It's rare that I get an entire hour to talk about #extinctions, #sustainability, & #palaeoecology on air https://t.co/uqf0x5wlEo Thanks Sue & Clayton @radioadelaide #extinctionrebellion @cabahCoE @FlindersMedia @Flinders #insectageddon #arthrogeddon

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