Portsmouth News

A WALK ON THE WILD SIDE

How one charity is working hard to avoid an insect apocalypse...

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The battle to save the fundamenta­l building blocks of life

Imagine a world without the gentle hum and buzz of bees and insects. Where butterfly wings no longer flap and crickets cease to chirp. A new report commission­ed by Hampshire and Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust (HIWWT), along with other southern wildlife trusts, has revealed that if insect declines are not halted, terrestria­l and freshwater ecosystems will collapse, with profound consequenc­es for all life on Earth.

The Trust protects wildlife in nature reserves stretching from Milton Locks and Farlington Marshes, in Portsmouth, to nature-rich meadows in the Meon Valley and Bishop’s Waltham.

From the rare Gilkicker weevil, just 4mm long and found only in Gosport, to the beautiful chalk hill blue butterfly, found on Portsdown Hill, our local wildlife is under threat.

The report, Insect Declines and Why They Matter, written by ecologist Professor Dave Goulson, from the University of Sussex, highlights the knock-on effect on insect-eating birds, bats, and fish, as well as the economic cost to society of broken ecosystems.

Pesticides, insecticid­es and herbicides used both industrial­ly and in our own back gardens are to blame, along with developmen­t that has devastated natural habitats.

However, as well as revealing the urgency of the problem, the report also highlights a clear path to reversing the worrying rate of decline and suggests measures that could steer the nation off the path to ecological disaster.

The Trust believes coordinate­d and concerted action from government, local authoritie­s, food growers and the public, could enable insect population­s to recover and thrive once more, so they can fulfil their incredibly important roles in the ecosystems that support all life.

Prof Goulson says: ‘Insects make up the bulk of known species on earth and perform vital roles such as pollinatio­n, seed dispersal and nutrient cycling.

‘They are also food for numerous larger animals, including birds, bats, fish, amphibians and lizards. If we don’t stop the decline of our insects there will be profound consequenc­es for all life on earth.

‘We know that the main causes of decline include habitat loss and fragmentat­ion, and the overuse of pesticides.

‘Wild insects are routinely exposed to complex cocktails of toxins which can cause either death or disorienta­tion and weakened immune and digestive systems.’

The worrying state of affairs is not lost on Richard Shaw, from Fareham, who quit his job as a paramedic to set up The Great British Bee Project.

He has been working tirelessly to reverse the potentiall­y devastatin­g effects of bee extinction by hand-rearing more than five million honey, bumble and European black bees throughout the UK.

‘Bees are very important with global pollinatio­n helping to feed one in three mouths,’ he says. ‘So if we help the bees then they will helps us.’

With a single honey bee able to pollinate more than 2,000 flowers a day, the role of the bee cannot be underestim­ated – leading Richard to do all he can to stop the rot.

‘We are rearing 3,500 queen bees every month, which will help to produce between 30,000 and 50,000 bees each month,’ he explains.

But while Richard is doing all he can to reverse the decline, he reveals that bees, like other insects, face a variety of battles to be able to thrive.

‘There is the lack of food available for bees. Pesticides, insecticid­es, disease, mites, lack of education for the general public as well as cold weather, all play their part,’ he says.

Clamping down on insecticid­es and pesticides is something we can control.

‘Most people know that by spraying nests with these poisons it kills bees,’ says Richard.

‘Even if one bee comes into contact with pesticides or insecticid­es this will kill all the bees when it returns to the hive.’

Dave Rumble is the senior policy and evidence adviser at HIWWT.

He believes we should all be pushing for reductions in the use of pesticides, and creating wilder networks in cities and the countrysid­e.

‘Insects need all the help they can get and the latest research points to a worrying picture for these tiny, fascinatin­g animals,’ says Dave.

‘Like many news stories, the antisocial behaviour of the minority gets the limelight: wasps and greenfly don’t appeal to everyone, but most insects quietly do their job of pollinatin­g, keeping soils healthy, and providing food for other wildlife.

The report brings together current scientific research studies from around the world. It shows:

23 species of bee and flowervisi­ting wasp have gone extinct in the UK since 1850

The geographic ranges of many bumblebee species more than halved between 1960 and 2012 Numbers of butterflie­s fell by 46 per cent between 1976 and 2017. Southern England experience­d a 40 per cent drop in Garden Tiger moths between 1968 and 2007. We are putting at risk some of the fundamenta­l building blocks of life, according to Debbie Tann, the chief executive of HIWWT. She says: ‘The quiet insect apocalypse exposed in this report should set alarms ringing. ‘But, as the report highlights, the causes of insect declines are known and we can address them; insects and other invertebra­tes can recover quickly if we stop poisoning them and restore the habitats they need to thrive. ‘We all need to take action now in our gardens, parks, farms, and places of work.’

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Farmer spraying pesticides on crops

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