The Silent Decline of Insects If Insects Disappear, Almost Everything Else Follows
The Silent Decline of Insects If Insects Disappear, Almost Everything Else Follows When I was a child, one of my jobs on a Sunday afternoon drive was to clean the insects off the windscreen. It sounds like a small memory, almost comic now. A bucket of water, a cloth, and the front of the car covered with the remains of flies, moths, beetles and other flying insects collected during an ordinary journey through the countryside. Today, that job has almost disappeared. Many people have noticed the same thing. Long journeys that once left the windscreen speckled with insects now often leave it almost clean. It is easy to dismiss this as nostalgia, or to suggest that cars are more aerodynamic, roads are different, or we simply notice less. Some of that may be true. But the wider evidence points in a much more worrying direction. There are fewer insects around us. And that matters far more than most people realise. Insects are not just background noise. They are not just things that buz...