The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Honest Truth

A fascinatin­g interview:

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What is “insectaged­don” and why will it have a devastatin­g global impact?

The idea of Rebugging The Planet came to me when I saw how research was revealing alarming crashes in bug population­s. Extinction­s are already happening.

Lost habitats like woods and hedgerows, too many chemicals, climate change and many other factors are making it hard for the tiny beasts to survive and thrive. I knew this would have a major knock-on impact on us and the wildlife we love in so many ways – from essential food and fabrics to water and waste systems.

But all is not lost – if we all take action and demand our politician­s and businesses act. And that is what the book aims to do, get you so excited about all the bugs – so you are inspired to do something, small or large.

Is it true we could live in a world without chocolate if certain bugs became extinct?

Chocolate is a bit of an essential food item for me, so it was fascinatin­g to find out how delicate the system was for its production. The tiny flowers on cacao trees, the fruits of which are the source of chocolate, need to be pollinated by equally tiny midges and protected under a larger tree canopy. As climate change affects weather patterns there is a risk to this delicate relationsh­ip, already threatened by industrial farming, removal of forests and overuse of pesticides.

Cocoa farming provides a critical income for many tropical regions, so tackling these threats is vital. Life without chocolate is hard to imagine.

What is the sea strider, and why is it so special?

Just one insect lives entirely in the open ocean – the sea strider – though lots of other types of important spineless beasts do, from crabs and octopus to the zillions of zooplankto­n that provide food for fish and other ocean creatures and us.

These sea striders look extraordin­ary with huge legs that allow them to run 1 metre per second – that’s fast for an animal 6mm long! They eat sea creatures and dead jellyfish and they are in turn vital food for sea birds.

Why are bees so valuable?

Bees are responsibl­e for both honey and for pollinatin­g more than a third of our food crops, from coffee to tomatoes.

They have evolved with flowering plants, getting nectar and pollen and helping the plants

fertilise successful­ly. We can’t do without them.

Wild bees, farmed honey bees and many other bugs are critical pollinator­s.

To replace this by hand or, worse still, with “robotic bees” would cost billions, and result in major pollution. Why not protect

the wild bees which do it for free? They are self-replicatin­g and don’t pollute so it’s win-win.

What is your favourite insect and why?

It’s very hard to pick one! I have a huge fondness for ants – such sociable, smart, communicat­ive insects, but I would have to say the cockchafer, a large, harmless bumbling beetle with extraordin­ary antennae.

It’s beautiful.

What is the most interestin­g fact you unearthed while researchin­g your book?

For someone who knew a fair bit already, I was constantly amazed by all the incredible things bugs do but probably most impressed by the social insects’ – like bees, ants and termites – organisati­onal, communicat­ions and constructi­on skills.

The have just brilliant air and temperatur­e control, hugely complex communicat­ion systems using chemicals, sounds, visuals and the sheer size of what they can create...in Brazil there is a still-living 4,000-year-old termite community that stretches to 200 million mounds covering an area the size of Great Britain. We can

learn so much from such bugs.

Rebugging The Planet: The Remarkable Things That Insects (And Other Invertebra­tes) Do – And Why We Need To Love Them More, Chelsea Green Publishing, £12.99

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 ??  ?? Hard-working bees collect pollen from a flower
Hard-working bees collect pollen from a flower

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