Well, it shouldn't be too surprising... Of course like all the other Conspiracy Theories that we have proven - the DS has gone above and beyond to HIDE and Bury the previous research that was exposing these concerns... See the list of studies towards the bottom here.
1 - I had to go to duckduckgo, because google is a major part of the DS PsyOp System...
2 - This first study is the TOP of the List in the search - and it essentially attempts to convince the people that there are just too many contributing factors...
The Great Insect Apocalypse: Why Are Bugs Vanishing?
By Binghamton UniversityApril 27, 2025
3 Comments4 Mins Read
A new paper highlights over 500 interconnected factors contributing to the global decline of insect populations.
Insects are vanishing at a concerning pace across the globe, and scientists are striving to understand why. While agricultural intensification is often cited as the primary cause, new research from
Binghamton University, State University of New York, reveals a far more complex picture involving numerous, interconnected factors.
Interest in insect decline has grown rapidly since a groundbreaking
2017 study reported a staggering 75% drop in insect populations over less than 30 years. This alarming figure has sparked a wave of scientific investigations, each exploring potential causes behind the phenomenon.
“None of the papers mentioned natural disasters,” said Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences Eliza Grames, who was part of a
recent study showing a 20% loss of butterflies in the U.S. “No papers looked at human intrusions and disturbance, or the effects of war on insects, or railroads. So there are these big areas that we know in general are threats to biodiversity, but the insect decline literature is really just focused on a few big stressors, as opposed to getting into the more specific ones, which are a lot more mechanistic.”
The Conversation
https://theconversation.com › insects-worldwide-study-reveals-widespread-decline-since-1925-137089
Insects: worldwide study reveals widespread decline since 1925
Each of these lasted more than ten years and recorded
insects at 1,676 sites in 41 countries on five continents. The earliest record was from 1925, and the most recent from 2018, although most ...
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Smithsonian Magazine
https://www.smithsonianmag.com › smart-news › study-shows-global-insect-populations-have-crashed-last-decade-180971474
Insects Are Dying Off at an Alarming Rate - Smithsonian Magazine
Previous studies have looked at smaller areas, with a 2017 study showing 76 percent of flying insects had disappeared from German nature preserves and a study last fall that showed insect ...
- csmonitor.com
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Christian Science Monitor
https://www.csmonitor.com › Environment › 2018 › 0920 › We-should-worry-about-seeing-fewer-flying-bugs-scientists-say
We should worry about seeing fewer flying bugs, scientists say
Sep 20, 2018There's a big insect trap sheet under black light that decades ago would be covered with bugs. Now, "there's no insects on that sheet," he said. But there's not much research looking at all flying ...
- sciencedaily.com
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ScienceDaily
https://www.sciencedaily.com › releases › 2023 › 04 › 230427173601.htm
The reasons why insect numbers are decreasing | ScienceDaily
Less overall, but more of the same: drivers of insect population trends lead to community homogenization. Biology Letters , 2023; 19 (3) DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2023.0007 Cite This Page :
- futurism.com
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Futurism
https://futurism.com › insects-flying-declined-75-percent
27-Year Study Finds the Amount of Insects Flying in the Air ... - Futurism
At the peak of summer heat, when there are usually more bugs out than in the spring and fall, the drop was even more pronounced, and bug counts were down 82%, — that's 7% more than the average ...