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From: christian schwägerl, Yale Environment360
Published July 7, 2016 11:11 AM
Insect populations in sharp decline

Every spring since 1989, entomologists have set up tents in the
meadows and woodlands of the Orbroicher Bruch nature reserve and 87
other areas in the western German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. The
tents act as insect traps and enable the scientists to calculate how
many bugs live in an area over a full summer period. Recently,
researchers presented the results of their work to parliamentarians from
the German Bundestag, and the findings were alarming: The average
biomass of insects caught between May and October has steadily decreased
from 1.6 kilograms (3.5 pounds) per trap in 1989 to just 300 grams (10.6
ounces) in 2014.
"The decline is dramatic and depressing and it affects all kinds of
insects, including butterflies, wild bees, and hoverflies," says Martin
Sorg, an entomologist from the Krefeld Entomological Association
involved in running the monitoring project.
Another recent study has added to this concern. Scientists from the
Technical University of Munich and the Senckenberg Natural History
Museum in Frankfurt have determined that in a nature reserve near the
Bavarian city of Regensburg, the number of recorded butterfly and Burnet
moth species has declined from 117 in 1840 to 71 in 2013. "Our study
reveals, through one detailed example, that even official protection
status can't really prevent dramatic species loss," says Thomas Schmitt,
director of the Senckenberg Entomological Institute.
Image credit: 410 × 285
- entomologytoday.org
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