Bees and Butterflies Are Going Extinct, Taking Our Food Supply with Them

three-fifths

searching for the remaining 143,999
Platinum Member
are they saying my equal exchange vegan chocolate is contaminated with bug germs?
According to the report, three-quarters of the world’s food crops (including cacao so take note, chocolate lovers) rely on pollination...
 

The Plutonian

The Anti Bullshitter
BGOL Investor
Humans are the problem to this earth.

Dinosaurs lived in this earth for hundreds if millions of years. They survived on basic instinct. They survived multiple ELEs and was able to still move forward. Humans have only been around a couple of millions of years. While we still have some basic instincts, most of it has been evolved out due to technology. We need the earth, the earth doesn't need us.


Man I love it when the knowledge flows but what's the answer? Soylent Green? Shit we can't afford to lose insects like this
 

The Plutonian

The Anti Bullshitter
BGOL Investor
I remember back in the late 90s we used to have trucks that used to ride down the side streets of Chicago and spray some sort of "smoky gas" into the air. I dont know what it was. It didnt have any type of "raid spray" odor. But they said they used the smoke to kill the mosquito's.

Weather could be a factor....but even during the warm summers it seems as if the mosquito's only hang in certain areas. I dont even see insects flying around streets lights like i used to. Obviously theyre putting something into the air or putting something on the trees. But at some point you have to wonder if the shit that theyre using is affecting humans as well.

You got a lot of mofos walking around the hood...like crazy desensitized zombies. Chemicals in food, chemicals in the air. Your organs can only filter so much before they become overtaxed. I bet if they gave poorer folks toxicology reports..i bet theyd find all sorts of deadly bs; bs that kills you slowly.


I remember that bullshit, all it did was stir em up on the Southside.:hmm: Like fucking flying Dobermans. It increased their bloodlust. Never heard of a mosquitoes truck spraying white hoods:angry: Fuckers dusted us off about four times one night with that bullshit. Probably was Agent Orange:confused:
 

Built4Life

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
99% of all species who have lived on this planet are extinct. What makes us any different that we won't go extinct?
It is because of out ingenuity that the population has boomed.. We basically are living in a time where more people exist now than any time in human history. So, we have more than 10 times the amount of people now than 300 years ago and we are growing. The life expectancy has risen dramatically in the last 100 years. We have the ability to feed everyone and house them. We just lack the will.
So, if bees go completely extinct then perhaps our population will dwindle, but it more likely that climate change and war will do us in.
 

Mentor B

"All literature is protest."
Registered
The WHITE MAN is the CANCER of this world!!!!

For hundreds of thousands of years melanin people lived in harmony with nature!

Let's acknowledge the world wide system created by those that are genetically inferior!

It's the white mans way of living, him imposing his will on the planet that has systematically destroyed it. All for something that is not real aka paper money!
First smart motherfucker in this thread.

Fuck outta here with the human shit.

It ain't the original human. It's fucking WHITE PEOPLE!!!!
 

Texas Catdaddy

the omnipotent one .....
Platinum Member
ran into a small swarm while driving, splatted bout a dozen, one was on my shirt, bee looked lethargic, had some white shit on'em.....

looked like pollen, but maybe it wasn't.
 

TheyCallMeBe

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Humans are the problem to this earth.

Dinosaurs lived in this earth for hundreds if millions of years. They survived on basic instinct. They survived multiple ELEs and was able to still move forward. Humans have only been around a couple of millions of years. While we still have some basic instincts, most of it has been evolved out due to technology. We need the earth, the earth doesn't need us.

Your name is accurate. Your time periods are all fucked up lol
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
Just read how these bees ain't going out like that...

Playing Cypress Hill and attacking innocent hikers killing 'em, even got the cops shook.

Guess the Wu was right.
 

Bluelaser

Rising Star
Registered
Pesticides?


The creation of more "fake food"...more illnesses.....future looks great.

doctor-s-earnings-5646135.jpg

More Illnesses = More Money for the greedy ones in this profession.
:smh:
 

Mr. Met

So Amazin
BGOL Investor
The WHITE MAN is the CANCER of this world!!!!

For hundreds of thousands of years melanin people lived in harmony with nature!

Let's acknowledge the world wide system created by those that are genetically inferior!

It's the white mans way of living, him imposing his will on the planet that has systematically destroyed it. All for something that is not real aka paper money!

^^^^^^^^^^^
@4:20. 1 million lion over 200 years ago down to less than 30k today? That's an average of 13 lions getting KILLED a day!

 

kinglickk

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Humans are the problem to this earth.

Dinosaurs lived in this earth for hundreds if millions of years. They survived on basic instinct. They survived multiple ELEs and was able to still move forward. Humans have only been around a couple of millions of years. While we still have some basic instincts, most of it has been evolved out due to technology. We need the earth, the earth doesn't need us.
Humans have not been around for millions of years. Where did you get that misinformation. Humans about 200,000 years...civilization about 60,000.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Don't remember. Im cool with being corrected. Thanks.

ahh you was right the first time...

they found footprints going way back...

even a shoe print...

these scientist just want to protect their little theory of evolution, which is really how crackers evolved...

they are the ones with the neanderthal dna....


their history only goes back a thousands of years..

we the melanin rich sun people.. been here forever....

Im tryin to tell you cacs stay busy covering up our true

history....
 

D24OHA

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
i read somewhere that when (not if) the bees all die, man will be extinct within a decade after that! :eek:


Nah some corporations will just convince the government that GMOs would be the permanent solution, growing your own food will become illegal..... And produce prices will skyrocket
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member
At this time of the year, bee heaven can look like any of the following. Give nature some space to service wild pollinators in its own way





 

cmac105

Rising Star
Registered
Guess it's like that up north because down south nothing has changed. still look plentiful and fuckers are still stinging. Have a bunch outside my house daily.
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member
Guess it's like that up north because down south nothing has changed. still look plentiful and fuckers are still stinging. Have a bunch outside my house daily.


Overall the numbers are down...certain area might have numbers that didn't drop but that don't mean in other places the didn't change(like you stated)
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member
Conservation efforts must include small animals. After all, they run the world
March 05, 2017


By Michael Samways - Stellenbosch University

1488740989767

Ladybugs stop pests from eating our food and destroying crops. - Image Credit: Flickr/Inhabitat

Humans like to think that they rule the planet and are hard wired to do so. But our stewardship has been anything but successful. The last major extinction event, 66 million years ago, was caused by a meteorite. But the next mass extinction event, which is under way right now, is our fault.

Geologists have even given this era in the history of the Earth a new name to reflect our role: the Anthropocene, the age of humans.


It’s the first time in the history of the Earth in which one species dominates all the others. These “others” numbers are probably around 10 million. The vast majority are the invertebrates, the animals without backbones. Not all are so small – some squids and jellyfish are several metres long or across.

Most, though, are small and unassuming. And they are hidden in plain view. They are busy maintaining the fabric of the world around us. They are the warp and weft of all natural systems. They make the soil, pollinate the flowers, spread seeds, and recycle valuable nutrients back into the soil. They are also food for many birds that are so loved, and keep other small animals in check by eating or parasitising them.

Yet most of us are oblivious of the many roles of these mostly small, even tiny, animals. If all their services were gone tomorrow, many plants would soon go extinct. Crops would be lost overnight. Many birds would die from lack of food, and soil formation would largely halt. The knock-on effects would also be huge as food webs collapse, and the world would quite literally fall apart.

So how can all the small animals be saved?

Saving small animals

Future generations depend on these small animals, so the focus must be on increasing awareness among the young. Research has shown that children are intrinsically interested in what a bee, cricket, butterfly or snail is. Their small world is at the same level as this small world of insects and all their allies without backbones. Yet strangely, while we care about our children, we care so little for all the small creatures on which our children depend on now and into the future.

Children must be shown that the bee is keeping the flowering plant species alive and well, the grasshopper is recycling scarce food requirements for plants, the millipede is making the soil, and the ladybug is stopping pests from eating all our food. Showing children that this miniature world is there, and that it’s crucial, is probably one of the best things to do to help them survive the future in this world of turmoil.


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Children need to be shown that the bee is keeping the flowering plant species alive and well to help them understand the importance. - Image Credti: Flickr/RDPixelShop

Being aware of what the various species actually do for maintaining ecosystems is crucial to understanding how complex the world around us is. Pointing out that a bee is intimately connected with flowers and so seeds are produced, and an ant is the cleaner of the forest floor, taking away all the debris from other small animals, and the caterpillar is feeding the soil by pooing on it. Then we can conceptually jump to the whole landscape, where there are millions of little claws, mandibles and tongues holding, munching and sucking nectar all the time, even though we rarely see it happening.

Natural communities

A good way to understand this complexity is to view a small community of 1000 species. This can lead to potentially half a million interactions between the various species. Yet the natural communities around us are usually much larger than that. This makes understanding this world too mind boggling, and conserving its complexity too unwieldy. What this means is that for conservation, while we use conceptual icons, like the bee and the butterfly, the actual aim is to conserve landscapes so that all the natural processes can continue as they would without humans.


Conservationists have developed approaches and strategies that maintain all the natural processes intact in defined areas. The processes that are conserved include behavioural activities, ecological interactions and evolutionary trends. This umbrella approach is highly effective for conserving the great complexity of the natural world. This doesn’t mean that particular species are overlooked.

Small-creature conservationists in reality work on and develop strategies that work at three levels. The first is at the larger scale of the landscape. The second is the medium scale of the features of the landscape, which includes features like logs, ponds, rock crevices, patches of special plants, among many others. The third is the still smaller scale of the actual species.

The third is really about a conceptual scale because some particular species actually need large spatial areas to survive. At this fine scale of species, conservationists focus attention on identified and threatened species that need special attention in their own right. The beautiful Amatola Malachite damselfly, which is endangered, and lives in the Eastern Cape mountains of South Africa, is a case in point.

The common thought is that it’s only tigers, whales and parrots that need conserving. But there are hundreds, if not thousands, of small creatures that all need special conservation focus like bees for example. And this focus becomes increasingly and critically important every year, if not every day, that passes. It’s crucial to think and conserve all these small animals that make up the platform for our future survival on the planet.

Time is short as the Anthropocene marches on. Putting in place strategies that conserve as many animals as possible, along with the rest of biodiversity, is not a luxury for the future. New strategies are possible, especially in agricultural and forestry areas where the aim is to optimise production yet maximise on biodiversity conservation and the maintenance of natural ecosystem function.
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member
Figured you’d love this type of thread

I'm going to watch the video.

I just wanted to say is that don't worry, bruh. The earth and insects existed long before humans walked this planet.

We are on borrowed time anyway. The earth will give us our comeuppance soon enough and it will be well deserved!

I have a new relationship with bees now. Eventually I want to raise bees.
 
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