A report this morning said butterfly numbers have dropped 50 percent on last years numbers in counts they carry out annually in the same areas of the country, have you gardeners noticed the drop?
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Populations of insects rise and fall all the time. I live in the country and go out at dusk around the country lanes with your headlights on and you’re driving through a dense cloud of insects. The mix and match of what insects make up that cloud may vary…the natural battle between predators and prey will vary from year to year but there are plenty of insects around if you get out of the more sterile town and city areas.
But yes, a few years ago seemed to be loads of butterflies around but not so much in recent years…but then a few years ago the fields around me were filled with rape seed crop which I haven’t seen for many many years, so maybe the lack of rape seed crops had impacted the local butterfly population?
Butterfly Conservation is calling for the government to declare a “nature emergency” and ban insect-killing neonicotinoid pesticides, with no exceptions. Britain and the EU banned neonicotinoids in 2018 but the UK government has authorised an exemption for the pesticides to be used on sugar beet every year since 2021. Before the election, Labour promised to ban all neonicotinoids.
Insect numbers have definitely dropped in the last 20-30 years. I remember having to wash insects off my car window in the past, very rarely have to do that now.
The interesting. Here in 56 we had so many hornets it was impossible to walk through the orchard, let alone pick a few apples; and as for picking up the windfalls, forget it.Last two years actually almost waspless summers. Don't know if the wet winters of the last two years caused that. Butterflies, this year in August had a whole lot, seems they were attracted to the plum tree here (caterpillars seem to be somewhere else).
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