In Sussex scientists have found that
insecticide use has stabilised over the past two decades with an associated
stabilisation of some insect groups, write Dr Julie Ewald and Prof John
Holland of the Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust. Plus Judith
Wright says we should let verges grow
Friday 20 October
2017 18.35 BSTLast modified on Friday 20 October
2017 22.00 BST
It is with great interest that we read about
the long-term decline in the biomass of flying insects on German protected
areas (Scientists tell of alarm at huge fall
in flying insects, 19 October).
The Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust
(GWCT) carries out two long-term surveys of insects on farmland in England –
the Sussex Study (1970 to present) and at our demonstration farm in
Loddington (1992 to present).
In the Sussex Study, which is one of the
first Farmer Clusters in the country, over 100 cereal fields are sampled every
year, which has revealed declines of 35% overall in the total number of
invertebrates compared with the 87% decline in the biomass of flying insects
found by Hallmann et al, with most of the decline in Sussex happening in the
1970s.
However, for insects that are chick-food for
declining farmland birds, we found declines of up to 72% from 1970 to 2015,
with 45% of invertebrate groups declining significantly.
Analysis on a field-by-field basis indicates
that it is insecticide use that is responsible for lower insect numbers,
especially those that provide food resources for declining farmland birds.
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