FEBRUARY
10, 2020
by
Marlowe Hood
The
disappearance of bugs that fly, crawl, burrow, jump and walk on water is part
of a gathering mass extinction event
Half of
the one million animal and plant species on Earth facing extinction are
insects, and their disappearance could be catastrophic for humankind,
scientists have said in a "warning to humanity".
"The
current insect extinction crisis is deeply worrying," said Pedro Cardoso,
a biologist at the Finnish Museum of Natural History and lead author of a
review study published Monday.
"Yet,
what we know is only the tip of the iceberg," he told AFP.
The
disappearance of bugs that fly, crawl, burrow, jump and walk on water is part
of a gathering mass extinction event, only the sixth in the last half-billion
years.
The last
one was 66 million years ago, when an errant space rock wiped out land-based
dinosaurs and most other life forms.
This time
we are to blame.
"Human
activity is responsible for almost all insect population declines and
extinctions," Cardoso told AFP.
The main
drivers are dwindling and degraded habitat, followed by pollutants—especially
insecticides—and invasive
species.
Over-exploitation—more
than 2,000 species of insects are part of the human diet—and climate change are
also taking a toll.
The
decline of butterflies, beetles, ants, bees, wasps, flies, crickets and dragonflies
has consequences far beyond their own demise.
"With
insect extinction, we lose much more than species," Cardoso said.
"Many insect species are
vital providers of services that are irreplaceable," including
pollination, nutrient
cycling and pest control.
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