Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAnnual Survey Shows UK Butterfly Populations Down By 50%; Worst Totals In Survey History
The collapse in British butterfly populations is a warning from nature about the resilience of the UKs ecosystems, says Englands nature chief, raising concerns about threats to national food security as the planet continues to heat.
Tony Juniper, the chair of Natural England, says new data showing a sharp fall in butterfly populations this summer was probably the consequence of habitat loss and the use of pesticides, making the insects less resilient to extreme weather fluctuations: the scorching heat and wetter weather driven by global heating.
Figures from Butterfly Conservation this week showed observed butterfly numbers had almost halved to 935,000 the lowest ever total in the 14-year history of the UK count. Species including the common blue, the small tortoiseshell and Scotch argus recorded their lowest ever figures, according to the data.
The butterfly data from 2024 is an early signal of what lies ahead, says Juniper . Its a warning from nature as to how far down the track weve gone towards taking the resilience out of natural systems. Of course, this circles back on people in the end in terms of our food security and other factors that depend on that web of life still functioning.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/sep/20/tony-juniper-uk-nature-chief-ecosystem-collapse-as-butterfly-numbers-halve
erronis
(17,180 posts)I started noticing that my car windshield wasn't getting splatted very much during the summer months about 4-5 years ago. Then there was scientific discussion of the decline in general insect populations.
Fine to have a clean(er) windshield, but the birds don't have their protein, the flowers and agricultural crops don't have their pollinators.
The die-off has been predicted for at least 20 years - mainly due to the insecticides used in commercial farming, as well as monocultures, etc.