Author

Topic: Imminent Insect Demise Means Global Food Web Is On Verge Of Collapse (Read 40 times)

legendary
Activity: 3990
Merit: 1385
There are multiple reasons why the insects are dying. Some are incidental, like plastics making their way into nature. Others include things like chemtrails, formal spraying of chemicals into the atmosphere to induce global cooling, and to create military ease of control of the weather with HAARP installations around the world.

This reminds me of something that is said in Revelations in the Bible. Revelation 11:18:
The nations were angry, and your wrath has come. The time has come for judging the dead, and for rewarding your servants the prophets and your people who revere your name, both great and small—and for destroying those who destroy the earth.”


Imminent Insect Demise Means Global Food Web Is On Verge Of Collapse



https://cleantechnica.com/2024/04/01/imminent-insect-demise-means-global-food-web-is-on-verge-of-collapse/
The newest report from the World Entomology Body (WEB) is absolutely frightening. Buried in the late Friday afternoon news cycle, the most recent annual assessment available of insect health indicates that loss of whole insect communities is imminent — which will have disastrous effects for the global food web.

The collapse of the insect population is due to a series of factors: loss and fragmentation of habitat; pollution from light, microplastics, and synthetic pesticides; the spread of pathogens and parasites; and the climate crisis. These stressors drove the demise of the world’s insect biodiversity.

Now the human ability to grow enough food to sustain the world’s population is truly at risk.

“These significant declines in populations of managed and native bees and other pollinators are destroying production agriculture,” Ken Chandler, director of agricultural studies at Iowa’s Gadwall University, “that are going to result in billions of dollars of economic losses to the sector and the national economy by the end of the 2024 growing season.” He paused. “Our ability to grow food is no longer a given.”
...



Cool
Jump to: